Lobbyist Group For American Oil Companies Opposes Obama’s Sanctions On Libya
<http://thinkprogress.org/2011/03/04/oil-lobbyist-sanctions-libya/>

<http://thinkprogress.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/m-Qaddafi.jpg>Last
week, CAP’s John Norris and Sarah Margon
suggested<http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2011/02/qaddafi_last_stand.html>that
President Obama respond to the crisis in Libya by engaging Libyan
business leaders to convince them that leader Muammar Qaddafi “is a
liability they can no longer afford” and since Libya is Africa’s largest oil
producing country, a good place to start would be the oil
industry<http://thinkprogress.org/2011/02/24/white-house-oil-libya/>
:

*One doesn’t normally look to oil companies to do the right thing*. But they
now have an enormous vested interest in helping push Qaddafi out. Libya has
Africa’s largest crude oil reserves and the uncertainty in that country has
already started to rattle markets. If Qaddafi stays on his current course
and remains Libya’s leader, there will invariably be calls for an oil
embargo from Libya, a proper U.N. war crimes investigation, and possibly a
civil war. *The oil business will be disrupted for a considerable period
under all of those scenarios*.

However, it doesn’t seem that U.S. oil companies are eager to do the right
thing. Earlier this week, the President announced that the U.S. would
unilaterally impose sanctions on Libya because the continued violence there
poses an “unusual and extraordinary
threat<http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/02/25/501364/main20036667.shtml>”
to U.S. national security.* Mother Jones
**reports*<http://motherjones.com/politics/2011/03/libya-qaddafi-usa-engage-sanctions>
* that the business coalition USA*Engage, which reportedly lobbies for oil
giants ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips, called that approach a “failed
strategy.”*

USA*Engage — which has also called for the U.S. to remove the travel ban and
trade embargo with Cuba — feels that unilateral sanctions put U.S. business
at a disadvantage. And even though the coalition called Qaddafi’s violent
crackdown “profoundly depressing,” co-chair Bill Reinsch told Mother Jones
that its partners, including Big Oil, play RealPolitik when operating abroad
in countries like Libya:

“The reality is that the oil in all the nice countries has been exploited
already, we can’t drill anymore in Norway,” Reinsch said. “*I don’t detect
any abiding affection for the Libyan government. In the [oil] business, you
don’t have any choices*.”

USA*Engage won’t officially disclose its membership and among large U.S. oil
industry corporations, only Halliburton has confirmed that it is a member.
Mother Jones notes that the group “has also made an effort to shield its
powerful members from criticism,” which is perhaps why Reinsch tried to
disuade<http://motherjones.tumblr.com/post/3638246827/i-think-it-would-be-better-for-the-story-never-to>Mother
Jones from publishing the report. “
*I think it would be better for the story never to come out*,” he said.


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