-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Podur / The Things We Do For Oil / Jan 08
Date:   Mon, 8 Jan 2007 19:02:00 -0800 (PST)
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Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-01/08podur.cfm

==================================

ZNet Commentary
The Things We Do For Oil January 08, 2007
By Justin Podur 

Review of Garry Leech, "Crude Interventions: The United States, Oil and the New 
World Disorder", Zed Books 2006.

 Garry Leech's book is not a book about oil so much as what the United  States 
does in the world in order to control it. Using oil as a window,  Leech 
explores US foreign policy since 2001 in five regions: Iraq,  Central Asia, 
West Africa, Colombia, and Venezuela. In doing so, Leech  provides a useful 
basic primer on US military, economic, and corporate  interventions in the 
world. His book, like his previous work ("Killing  Peace: Colombia's Conflict 
and the Failure of US Intervention") and his  online journal 
(www.colombiajournal.org) is clearly written and very  useful in getting up to 
speed. He also provides detailed references and  footnotes for those who want 
to pursue matters further.

On Iraq, Leech provides background necessary to understanding what is  
happening now, as the US presents an image of ancient hatreds tearing  the 
place apart. He starts with the rise of Saddam, US support for him  through the 
period of the Iran-Iraq war, the first destruction of Iraq  in Gulf War I, 
through the sanctions and the re-destruction and ongoing  occupation. Using oil 
as the unifying theme through the book leads Leech  to emphasize some aspects 
of the Iraq occupation that are common to US  interventions throughout the 
world: the neoliberal restructuring of  Iraq's economy, the looting of Iraq's 
resources to provide profits for  the US government's friends, the cynical use 
of propaganda, and the  flouting of international law and human rights.

The emphasis on oil also makes elements of US foreign policy clearer.  The 
seeming inconsistency, for example, between supporting Saddam  against Iran in 
the 1980-1988 war, and destroying Iraq when Saddam  invaded Kuwait in 1990, 
disappears when oil enters the picture: "In  actuality, the United States did 
respond in much the same way it had  when Iraq invaded Iran: it defended its 
oil interests. In 1990, Saudi  Arabia was exporting 1.3 billion barrels of oil 
a day to the United  States, almost three times as much as Iraq. As it had done 
a decade  earlier, the United States sided with its most important oil 
supplier."  (pg. 23)

On Central Asia, Leech provides useful background on a part of the world  where 
the US has been moving very fast without much attention. The  Central Asian 
republics, Leech reminds us, had their borders drawn at  the behest of Stalin, 
who "created the five republics (Uzbekistan,  Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, 
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan) based on the  demographics of different ethnic groups 
with the objective of making  people self-identify with their particular 
ethnicity rather than as  Muslims." (pg. 57) But in the 1990s, after the end of 
the USSR and as  the republics became independent, control passed into the 
hands of  authoritarian governments who repressed dissent, gave basing rights 
to  the US military and resource rights to US corporations. 

Leech tells the  story of Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.  
Uzbekistan's dictator, Karimov, is one of the world's worst human rights  
violators - and a valued ally in the US Terror War. Azerbaijan suffered  a long 
civil war between the majority Azeri and minority Armenian  community. 
Kazakhstan's officials gave oil contracts to US corporations,  making personal 
fortunes that became bribery scandals, conducting IMF  restructuring, and 
imposing poverty and deprivation on the population.  In all three of these 
cases, the beneficiaries - of repression, civil  war, and restructuring - are 
the US and its oil interests, who end up  with the resources and the basing 
rights in spite of (or more aptly  because of) these violations. Turkmenistan 
refused to open its economy,  freezing the US out, which has led to slower 
economic decline - though  political freedom fares no better than in US-allied 
states.

Leech visits another under-reported region in his chapter on West  Africa. He 
tells the story of Shell and Chevron in Nigeria, and how that  country's 
military has repressed minority communities like the Ogoni and  the Ijaw in the 
service of the oil companies. He provides a succinct  discussion of Angola's 
convoluted civil war and the even more convoluted  role of foreign powers, 
including Cuba, South Africa, France, and the  United States, in it. Here too, 
war and repression have facilitated  lucrative contracts by the likes of 
ExxonMobil, ChevronTexaco, BP-Amoco,  Shell and Total.

Leech's book is at its strongest in his final chapters on Colombia and  
Venezuela, places where he has extensive experience. Here he  demonstrates his 
knowledge and skill in explaining Colombia's civil war  and the US interest in 
it. Because he has already discussed Iraq,  Central Asia, and West Africa in 
the context of oil, much of the fog  preventing a sober understanding of the 
real logic of Colombia's war has  already been dispelled by the time the 
discussion of Colombia arises.  Colombia's war, like so many others Leech 
discusses, has the effect of  displacing people from resource-rich territories 
and destroying social  opposition to the seizure of the country's resources by 
multinational  corporations. The drug war, the terror war, function as cover 
stories  for this basic logic: "In order to secure the flow of Colombian oil to 
 the United States, Washington has used the wars on drugs and terror to  
justify providing vast amounts of aid to a military apparatus closely !
  linked to right-wing paramilitaries on the State Department's foreign  
terrorist list." (pg. 166)

Venezuela, meanwhile, provides an alternative to the oil-fueled  nightmares 
suffered by the populations of the regions Leech has  discussed in previous 
chapters. Here, a democratic regime uses revenues  from oil to fund social 
programs and a foreign policy of international  solidarity. As with the other 
regions, Leech provides necessary  background and recent political history: 
with Venezuela, a history of  events leading up to the election of Venezuela's 
current president Hugo  Chavez, the repeated attempts by US-backed opposition 
movements to oust  him from power, and the popular redistributive policies 
Chavez's  government has been able to pass in recent years.

Leech's clear and succinct style could have been brought to bear on a  number 
of other, important, and oil-related conflicts and regions where  the US is 
involved and that badly need some clear explanation. Iran, the  Sudan, Egypt, 
North Africa, the Arabian peninsula, and Southeast Asia  all come to mind. Also 
interesting are questions of oil policy in the  North itself: Alberta, Texas, 
and Norway all come to mind. Leech's  global approach starts to tempt the 
reader to make global connections  and see oil in the big picture, but leaves 
so many connections for the  reader to follow up. While he alludes to climate 
change in his  conclusion (noting on pg. 220 that "continued burning of fossil 
fuels is  proving increasingly devastating to the environment") , more 
discussion  of the consequences, and potential consequences, of US oil policy 
for  the people of the planet would have been highly appropriate in a book on  
this subject coming at this time. Still, one can always fault !
 the author  of a short book for leaving the reader wanting more. In truth the  
important task Leech takes on, he does well: opens the door to seeing  one of 
the world's most urgent issues in context, and from the point of  view of some 
of those who suffer the most.

Justin Podur is a Toronto based writer. He can be reached at  [EMAIL PROTECTED]





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