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The White House Plan: Tap Iraq's Oil
http://www.truthout.org/docs_02/011203E.wh.plan.oil.htm

Plan: Tap Iraq's Oil
U.S. Considers Seizing Revenues to Pay for Occupation, Source Says
By Knut Royce
Newsday Special Correspondent

Friday 10 January 2003

Washington - Bush administration officials are seriously considering
proposals that the United States tap Iraq's oil to help pay the cost of a
military occupation, a move that likely would prove highly inflammatory in
an Arab world already suspicious of U.S. motives in Iraq.

Officially, the White House agrees that oil revenue would play an
important role during an occupation period, but only for the benefit of
Iraqis, according to a National Security Council spokesman.

Yet there are strong advocates inside the administration, including in the
White House, for appropriating the oil funds as "spoils of war," according
to a source who has been briefed by participants in the dialogue.

"There are people in the White House who take the position that it's all
the spoils of war," said the source, who asked not to be further
identified. "We [the United States] take all the oil money until there is
a new democratic government [in Iraq]."

The source said the Justice Department has urged caution. "The Justice
Department has doubts," he said. He said department lawyers are unsure
"whether any of it [Iraqi oil funds] can be used or has to all be held in
trust for the people of Iraq."

Another source who has worked closely with the office of Vice President
Dick Cheney said that a number of officials there too are urging that
Iraq's oil funds be used to defray the cost of occupation.

Jennifer Millerwise, a Cheney spokeswoman, declined to talk about
"internal policy discussions."

Using Iraqi oil to fund an occupation would reinforce a prevalent belief
in the Mideast that the conflict is all about control of oil, not rooting
out weapons of mass destruction, according to Halim Barakat, a recently
retired professor of Arab studies at Georgetown University.

"It would mean that the real ... objective of the war is not the
democratization of Iraq, not getting rid of Saddam, not to liberate the
Iraqi people, but a return to colonialism," he said. "That is how they
[Mideast nations] would perceive it."

The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the cost of an occupation
would range from $12 billion to $48 billion a year, and officials believe
an occupation could last 1 1/2 years or more.

And Iraq has a lot of oil. Its proven oil reserves are second in the world
only to Saudi Arabia's. But how much revenue could be generated is an open
question. The budget office estimates Iraq now is producing nearly 2.8
million barrels a day, with 80 percent of the revenues going for the
United Nations Oil for Food Program or domestic consumption. The remaining
20 percent, worth about $3 billion a year, is generated by oil smuggling
and much of it goes to support Saddam Hussein's military. In theory that
is the money that could be used for reconstruction or to help defer
occupation costs.

Yet with fresh drilling and new equipment Iraq could produce much more. By
some estimates, however, it would take 10 years to fully restore Iraq's
oil industry. Conversely, if Hussein torches the fields, as he did in
Kuwait in 1991, it would take a year or more to resume even a modest flow.
And, of course, it is impossible to predict the price of oil.

Laurence Meyer, a former Federal Reserve Board governor who chaired a
Center for Strategic and International Studies conference in November on
the economic consequences of a war with Iraq, said that conference
participants deliberately avoided the question of whether Iraq should help
pay occupation or other costs. "It's a very politically sensitive issue,"
he said. "... We're in a situation where we're going to be very sensitive
to how our actions are perceived in the Arab world."

Meyer said officials who believe Iraq's oil could defer some of the
occupation costs may be "too optimistic about how much you could increase
[oil production] and how long it would take to reinvest in the
infrastructure and reinvest in additional oil."

An administration source said that most of the proposals for the conduct
of the war and implementation of plans for a subsequent occupation are
being drafted by the Pentagon. Last month a respected Washington think
tank prepared a classified briefing commissioned by Andrew Marshall, the
Pentagon's influential director of Net Assessment, on the future role of
U.S. Special Forces in the global war against terrorism, among other
issues. Part of the presentation recommended that oil funds be used to
defray the costs of a military occupation in Iraq, according to a source
who helped prepare the report.

He said that the study, undertaken by the Center for Strategic and
Budgetary Assessments, concluded that "the cost of the occupation, the
cost for the military administration and providing for a provisional
[civilian] administration, all of that would come out of Iraqi oil." He
said the briefing was delivered to the office of Paul Wolfowitz, the
deputy secretary of Defense and one of the administration's strongest
advocates for an invasion of Iraq, on Dec. 13.

Steven Kosiak, the center's director of budget studies, said he could not
remember whether such a recommendation was made, but if it was it would
only have been "a passing reference to something we did."

Asked whether the Pentagon was now advocating the use of Iraqi oil to pay
for the cost of a military occupation, Army Lt. Col. Gary Keck, a
spokesman, said, "We don't have any official comment on that."

NSC spokesman Mike Anton said that in the event of war and a military
occupation the oil revenues would be used "not so much to fund the
operation and maintaining American forces but for humanitarian aid,
refugees, possibly for infrastructure rebuilding, that kind of thing."

But the source who contributed to the Marshall report said that its
conclusions reflect the opinion of many senior administration officials.
"It [the oil] is going to fund the U.S. military presence there," he said.
"... They're not just going to take the Iraqi oil and use it for Iraq's
purpose. They will charge the Iraqis for the U.S. cost of operating in
Iraq. I don't think they're planning as far as I know to use Iraqi oil to
pay for the invasion, but they are going to use it to pay for the
occupation."

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is
distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.)

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