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June 7, 2007 at 10:31:00

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Iraq Occupation Coming to a Head Over Oil

by Kevin Zeese     Page 1 of 2 page(s)

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Oil Law Brings Theft of Resources Out in the Open, Oil Workers Strike Forces Maliki to Choose Between Iraqis and the Occupiers   

The situation in Iraq is coming to a head.  Oil workers have been on strike for three days and are being threatened by the Iraqi government and surrounded by the Iraqi military. The Parliament passed a resolution urging an end to the U.S. occupation and has refused to act on the oil law the U.S. is demanding.  Both the Democrats in Congress and the Bush Administration have united around the passage of the oil law as the top benchmark for the Iraqi government.

 

If these trends continue it will become evident to the world what this war was about all along – oil.  Even the U.S. media will have to publish an honest analysis of the Iraq oil law and why Iraqis are resisting it.

Perhaps the greatest threat to the U.S. occupation came this week when the Iraq Parliament passed a law opposing the continuation of the presence of U.S. forces in Iraq. The law requires the parliament's approval of any future extensions of the mandate, which have previously been made by Iraq's prime minister. Law makers say they plan on blocking the extension of the coalition's mandate when it comes up for renewal six months from now.  The last time the UN mandate was extended Prime Minister Maliki acted without consultation with the parliament and they reacted angrily.  Now, they are acting before the mandate can be extended to make their voices heard.

The parliament has not acted on the oil law submitted to them on February 26th despite aggressive U.S. pressure.  The Democratic leadership in Congress joined with President Bush to make passage of the law the top benchmark to show success of the government.  Both Vice President Cheney and Defense Secretary Gates have made recent trips to the region to urge passage of the law.  But, the parliament is resisting – even threatening to take a vacation rather than pass the oil law.

In Congress, Dennis Kucinich has tried to raise the issue of the unfairness of the oil law in a Democratic caucus meeting. Rep. David Obey erupted in anger and name calling at Kucinich’s suggestion that the benchmark requiring passage of the oil law was part of the theft of Iraq’s primary resource.  Kucinich did not respond to Obey’s angry name calling but instead made an hour long speech describing the Iraq oil law and how it would result in U.S. oil companies controlling their market and reaping most of the profits from Iraqi oil.

Iraq oil workers seeing this U.S. pressure have taken their own action.  Members of the union have been on strike since Monday 4th June. Among the union’s demands is consultation on the proposed oil law, which the union opposes. On Tuesday, al-Maliki warned that he would meet threats to oil production “with an iron fist.”  Maliki issued arrest warrants for leaders of the union on a charge of “sabotaging the economy.”  The warrant specifically names Hassan Juma’a Awad, the leader of the 26,000-strong Federation of Oil Unions, and three other leaders of the Federation.

If Maliki follows through on his “iron fist” promise and uses the military against the oil workers it will be evident to all Iraqi’s that he puts the demands of U.S. occupation forces ahead of the needs of the oil workers. It will also become obvious that he is willing to turn over Iraq’s oil to western oil companies rather than meet the needs of the Iraqi people.  His already fragile government will lose support and may fall presenting the occupation forces with new political problems. The dividing line between the government and the people, with the government on the side of the occupation will also become evident and violence will likely escalate against the U.S. and Iraqi army and police. The oil law may unite the resistance and focus their energy on the occupation.

U.S. Labor Against the War has been hosting a tour for two Iraqi oil worker leaders.  Their visit has been pretty much ignored by the U.S. media but has been reported by David Swanson on AfterDowningStreet.org.   Swanson reports a visit to Capitol Hill where one congressman seemed unable to listen to her views. Rep. Dennis Moore (D-KS), said what many members of Congress believed – violence would escalate if the U.S. left Iraq and the civil war between Sunni and Shia’a has been going on since before the U.S. occupation. Iraqi Electrical Utility Workers Union President Hashmeya Muhsin Hussein tried to explain that the civil war began after the occupation and that violence would be reduced if the U.S. withdrew from Iraq.  But Moore seemed unable to grasp this.  There was very little media in attendance, Swanson reports that a reporter from Telesur (the only large camera in the room) asked why Hashmeya believes the U.S. is still in Iraq. She cited oil and other resources, and the creation of large military bases.  “I don't mean that the American people want these things, I mean the administration. We consider the American people friends.” 

The recent comments by representatives of the Bush administration that the U.S. presence in Iraq will be much like the U.S. presence in South Korea – which has lasted 50 years – is relevant to the oil law because U.S. oil companies are seeking 30 year contracts in Iraq.  Thus, having a strong U.S. military presence in Iraq will help to assure enforcement of those contracts. 

The “coming out” of oil as the central goal of the invasion and occupation of Iraq is going to make the occupation more difficult.  And, coming at a time when Bush is escalating the number of troops to approximately 200,000 it is going to assure more violence, and more death.  The chant, mocked at the beginning of the invasion by many, “no war for oil” is now becoming to be seen for what it is – the truth.  And it will be a truth seen by the entire world. 

For more information: 

U.S. Labor Against the War, http://www.uslaboragainstwar.org/, includes more information on the Iraq oil workers tour from June 4 to June 29 in many U.S. cities.

Iraq Law Makers Pass Law to End the Occupation, http://democracyrising.us/content/view/943/164/ 

Better than Calling Congress, (David Swanson’s report on Iraq oil worker visit to Congress), http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/?q=node/23375. 

Iraqi Troops Face Off Against Striking Oil Workers, UPI,  http://www.alternet.org/waroniraq/53379/ 

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Kevin Zeese is Executive Director of the Campaign for Fresh Air and Clean Politics (www.FreshAirCleanPolitics.net) whose projects include Voters for Peace (www.VotersForPeace.US., Prosperity Agenda (www.ProsperityAgenda.US), True Vote (more...)
 

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5 comments


I doub it

At first blush, this looks like a hicup in the process, but it's not.

What are there, about 500 or so members of the Iraq Parliment?  Even if Exxon/Mobil, Shell, BP and the others gave EACH MEMBER OF THE IRAQ PARLIMENT and a few hunded other INTERESTED PARTIES a bag with $1,000,000 in US dollars, it would be a pittence compared to what they will make.  Oh heck, they could give them $10,000,000 million each, it's STILL a tiny fraction of the massive profits they will make.

The problem for the oil companies is just one of SHIPPING and LOGISTICS.  That's a lot of $100 bills to move around, and it takes time to hand it all out.

The oil of Iraq, and eventually Iran, Sudan, and other places will all belong to the multi-national oil companies soon enough, have no fear.

ALL YOUR OIL WILL BELONG TO US.

by Charlie L (2 articles, 4 quicklinks, 1 diaries, 747 comments [2 recommended, 0 rejected]) on Thursday, Jun 7, 2007 at 12:25:49 PM

Recommend  (0+)

Thank you Kevin

I live in Maryland, and followed your campaign with great interest.

Thank you for helping keep us up to date on the Iraq oil agreement. It has been practically ignored by the corporate media.

How can we do something as citizens? I write my representative and Senators in Congress all the time (at least once a week, so they know to ignore me), and it has zero effect on anything. I don’t even get form letters back anymore.

What can we do?

Thanks again.

by John R Moffett (89 articles, 18 quicklinks, 3 diaries, 697 comments [14 recommended, 0 rejected]) on Thursday, Jun 7, 2007 at 2:32:11 PM

Recommend  (0+)

Reply: Organized Efforts to End the War

Thanks John.

We've organzed a Maryland statewide effort to end the war.  If you want to participate contact me at KZeese@DemocracyRising.US.  Tomorrow we are supporting a demonstration at Sen. Mikulski's house from 4:30 to 6:30.  She is located at 3704 N. Charles St., Baltimore, MD. North of University near Johns Hopkins. This will be a weekly demonstration to let her neighbors know she is voting to provide Bush more funds for the war.

My organization, DemocracyRising.US, is also organizing a national list of local congressional district-level organizers. We are seeking peace and accountability. If you are interested in participating contact me so you can be added to it.

Thanks for your efforts to end the war.

Kevin

by Kevin Zeese (102 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 62 comments [13 recommended, 0 rejected]) on Thursday, Jun 7, 2007 at 3:19:14 PM

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Reply: Excellent

I have been getting absolutely no response from Senator Mikulski recently. I have been writing her continuously.

I work at Uniformed Services University (Bethesda), so I know that she cares about the veterans, but something is wrong. She seems to be getting bad information from somewhere. I have other contacts who have access to her, but there seems to be a problem with getting things right. Hopefully, protests will help. I wish that citizens had the same access to and influence on representatives that corporations have. But that's not going to happen anytime soon.

Thanks again. 

by John R Moffett (89 articles, 18 quicklinks, 3 diaries, 697 comments [14 recommended, 0 rejected]) on Thursday, Jun 7, 2007 at 6:41:51 PM

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GREAT WORK, KEVIN

Supports my comments from mid 2002 and ever since. Now the Dems want a part of the loot-how utterly disgusting and frightening. This solidifies my vote in 2008-Independent, for the 1st time in my life!

by Professor Emeritus Peter Bagnolo (144 articles, 1 quicklinks, 95 diaries, 1317 comments [5 recommended, 0 rejected]) on Thursday, Jun 7, 2007 at 7:53:25 PM

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