
“I have sinned in my heart.”MotherJones has a great piece on the “Blood for Oil” story, with a short history of American policy in the Gulf. It starts sounding an awful lot like alarmist petro-conspiracy nonsense, but there’s enough useful information there to make it worth reading. It undermines the antiwar “Blood for Oil” argument, and replaces it with a more far-fetched and creepy argument against American aspirations of global domination.
The article describes U.S. policy in the Persian Gulf after the Oil Crisis of the 1970s. Suddenly concerned with its access to oil, the United States diversified its oil vendors and began a deliberate campaign to assert influence over the oil-producing states in the Gulf. This was either a result of, or was closely harmonized with, some hawkish global dominance thinking and the influence of Kissinger.
The strategy proposed by the conservative think-tanks (and Kissinger, apparently) was not about getting oil but rather controlling access to oil. If the U.S. can reduce its own dependence on Gulf oil, and can prevent others from getting that same oil, they will “control the spigot” and extend its reach to every oil-consuming country in the world. One struggles to imagine President Carter in a black nehru jacket, petting a white persian kitten.
In order to assert this hegemony, the US is supposed to overthrow governments in the region and install friendly regimes… and everyone knows how good a track record we have doing that. In actuality, of course, the US has supported the existing regimes and the alternate oil vendors in the western hemisphere can’t really meet the US demand. This gap between the plan and the actual history is fairly wide, and goes mostly unaddressed by the article.
Near the end of the piece, MoJo cites the opinion of the oil industry commentariat, which indicates that the oil industry is nervous about war in the region and would much rather have the corrupt stability of the existing leadership, instead of the uncertainty of a regional conflict. This is, of course, where the traditional “Blood for Oil” argument breaks down.
The question raised by the article is not whether hawkish portions of the Bush Administration want to control the Persian Gulf — of course they do. The article cites many papers and meetings on the subject. They want America-friendly democracies with American military bases pumping oil to American consumers. Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz has been a vocal proponent of this policy, adding a dash of pro-democracy and human rights reasoning. Instead, the question is whether or not this is a plausible policy that won’t make things worse for both the Gulf and America in the long term. The answers, of course, will make themselves very clear during the purge and reconstruction in Iraq.