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In These Times By Dave Lindorff | 3.27.03 Is the war all about oil after all? The Bush administration has come up with many excuses
for attacking IraqSaddam Hussein used poison gas, he possesses
or is developing weapons of mass destruction, he is a brutal tyrantbut
the one thing it insists the war is not about is oil. As Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld stated in November: There are certain
things like that, myths that are floating around. It has nothing to
do with oil, literally nothing to do But a new study by three researchers at the Institute
for Policy Studies, based upon previously unpublished documents, shows
not only that oil is at the root of the conflict, but Rumsfeld was
in the thick of the effort to get that oil. A sort of mini-Pentagon
Papers account of the history of American diplomatic and economic
relations with Iraq since the early days of the Reagan administration,
the study (available in full at www.ips-dc.org/crudevision/crude_vision.pdf)
shows that a whole host of Reagan administration officials, together
with the Bechtel Corporation, spent years trying to win Saddam Husseins
approval for a new oil pipeline to run west from the Euphrates River
oil fields to Jordan and on down to the Gulf of Aqaba. The goal was
to establish an alternate route for shipping Arab oil that would avoid
the Persian Gulf and Straits of Hormuz, In an effort to win Husseins approval for this
multibillion-dollar pipeline, which was to be built by the Bechtel
Corporation with the help of Export-Import Bank funding, Rumsfeld
met with Saddam and Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz on December
20, 1983. Rumsfeld, then CEO of the Searle pharmaceutical company,
had been named by President Reagan as a special peace envoy. At the
time of his visit, Iraq was in its bitter war with Iran, and was suspected
of using chemical weapons against Iranian While Rumsfeld has insisted that his visit to Iraq was
related to a peace mission, a State Department communication about
the meeting quotes Rumsfeld as saying: I raised the question
of a pipeline through Jordan. [Aziz] said he was familiar with the
proposal. ... However, he was concerned with the proximity to Israel
as the pipeline would enter the There was no mention of Iraqs use of chemical
weapons. On March 5, 1984, the State Department issued a public statement
condemning Iraqs use of poison gas against Iran, but records
obtained by IPS show that the government was continuing to promote
the pipeline in private. On March 20, Bechtel executives met with
Jordanian and Iraqi officials in Jordan about the pipeline. Then on
March 26, Rumsfeld returned to Iraq a second time to meet with Aziz.
That same day, the United Nations provided public Again, documents relating to that visit show that the pipeline, not Iraqs use of weapons of mass destruction, was the issue. Two days earlier, before his trip, Rumsfeld had been briefed by Secretary of State George Schultz, who noted that U.S.-Iraq relations had been harmed by the departments earlier public condemnation of Iraq. U.S. diplomat James Placke was dispatched to meet with Iraqi diplomat Kizam Hamdoon on April 6. At that session, Placke reportedly asked his Iraqi counterpart to make sure that Iraq did not embarrass the United States by purchasing its chemical weapons from U.S. suppliers. In a memo about that meeting, Schultz, a former president of Bechtel, wrote: We would ask the Government of Iraqs cooperation in avoiding situations that would lead to a difficult and potentially embarrassing situation. The IPS details how negotiations over the Aqaba pipeline
continued through 1986, while Iraq continued to use chemical weapons
in its brutal war with Iran. (Between 1983 and 1988, Iraq reportedly
dropped more than 13,000 chemical bombs on Iran.) The deal was finally
rejected by Iraq that year, in favor of cheaper pipelines through
Turkey and Saudi Arabia. But as the IPS authors write, The fallout
from Bechtels failed pipeline initiative They describe the rejection of the plan as a turn
in U.S.-Iraq relations and note that many of the projects
promoters became architects of the present Bush-Cheney campaign against
Iraq. This list includes Roger Robinson, co-founder of the Center
for Strategic Policy, a think tank which has hatched numerous plans
for invading Iraq, and Lawrence Eagleburger, the former Secretary
of State who now serves on the boards of With Bechtel and Vice President Dick Cheneys former company Halliburton in line for major contracts in the planned rebuilding of Iraq at the end of the current war, its a fair bet that the once-canceled Aqaba pipeline will be back on the drawing board again. Dave Lindorff, a regular contributor to In These Times, is the author of Killing Time, a new book on the case of Mumia Abu-Jamal. Return to top |
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