Untitled Document
"Iraqi oil…will be a legitimate and a permanent target of the
armed resistance plans to liberate Iraq and defeat the invaders.
The armed resistance will use every possible means militarily and technically
to prevent the occupier from stealing Iraq’s oil and use its revenues
with anyone, under any circumstances, on the national and international levels.
On this basis, every one who collaborates with the occupier, such as employees,
merchants, middlemen, whether Iraqis, Arabs or non-Arabs will be watched and
targeted without any hesitation."
Baath Arab Socialist
Party Communiqué
Iraq May 13th 2004
A war is raging in Iraq that will determine the outcome of the present
occupation as well as the shape of future conflicts. It is the war for control
of Iraqi oil.
Currently, America is losing the conflict in stunning fashion with little hope
for change in the near future. This week the Iraqi Oil Ministry announced that
oil production "has reached a post-war low" and that the "exports
of crude, which had run at an average of about 1.6 million barrels per day since
the end of the 2003 war, dropped to 1.2 mbpd in November and 1.1 mbpd in December."
(Al Jazeera) All the indicators point to continuing difficulty with production
due to the escalating violence.
At times, the export of oil has been completely cut off in both the northern
and southern regions making it impossible to benefit from Iraq’s prodigious
natural wealth. The Iraqi resistance has grown increasingly skillful in sabotaging
pipelines and facilities despite the extraordinary efforts to protect them from
attack.
This is truly the face of 21st century warfare; disparate cells of armed guerillas
disrupting critical energy supplies that sustain the global economy.
Currently, the resource war is concealed behind a propaganda smokescreen created
by the establishment media. Their task is to characterize the conflict as a
war on terror and to limit their coverage to the random incidents of violence
by fanatical jihadis. It’s rare when the media reports on the guerilla
war that has subsumed Iraq and which threatens a worldwide economic downturn.
There’s simply no way that the Bush administration can prevail in its
original intention of controlling Iraq’s oil if a small army of guerillas
focus their energies on disrupting production. Millions of dollars of infrastructure
can be destroyed in a flash by one determined fighter with a bomb or a Kalashnikov.
The success of the armed resistance is quantifiable in terms of the reduction
in oil exports. In 1990, Saddam was exporting 3.5 million barrels per day. During
the 1990s, there was a gradual decline due to sanctions and neglect. Since the
invasion of 2003, the oil sector has taken a nosedive directly attributable
to the blowing up of pipelines. Production is now at an all time low, less than
half of what it was just prior to the invasion. The development of oil fields
and the transport of petroleum are proving to be incompatible with the unpredictable
outbursts of violence.
Oil Production: "Heading backwards"
"The general integrity of Iraqi infrastructure appears to us to be heading
backwards rather than forwards," London-based Barclay’s Capital said
in a report issued last month. (Jim Krane Associated Press)
Gone are the optimistic predictions, like those of Paul Wolfowitz and Dick
Cheney, who expected that Iraq would pay for its own reconstruction with its
lavish oil revenues. Instead, what we see is the chilling rictus of new type
of warfare that is likely to sweep across the region swallowing up vital resources
in columns of black smoke.
The attacks on facilities have discouraged foreign investors from committing
to long-term investment or development. Many of the major players remain skeptical
that the US-led occupation will be able to stabilize the situation in the near
future. Industry analysts expect little change in the overall security situation
in 2006.
Additionally, the IMF has demanded that the Oil Ministry remove price-supports
for the highly-subsidized Iraqi domestic supplies. This has only increased the
public’s outrage with the ongoing occupation. The IMF authorized a loan
of $685 million to Iraq in December with the predictable "vice-like"
provisions that require Iraq to follow its structural adjustment programs. In
effect, these provisions put Iraqi resources under the direct control of transnational
corporations who can then decide the terms under which those resources are sold.
The growing opposition to the occupation and the increasingly adept Iraqi resistance
provide the foundation for a long and costly conflict. Iraq is the first clear
example of asymmetrical warfare in the new century; small groups of rebels who
target crucial energy supplies, wreaking havoc and crippling industry.
As America continues to tighten its grip on the world’s dwindling
hydrocarbon resources, we can expect that the successes of the Iraqi resistance
will offer a model to the other disparate groups who have no chance of beating
the United States in open battle, but hope to bring the empire to its knees
by making the costs of war too great to sustain.