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So now here we are after years of oppression, invasion, and wholesale slaughter of a nation of people - who have been put in a terrible position by the "powers that be." After the wholesale rape of the country, and now the continued occupation, they want to remove the entire future of Iraq to coddle their overfed crooked corporate children - the oil companies. After all, they have the "approval" of their puppet government that invites them to do so. This situation is nothing new, it comes about because of not only the crimes I mentioned above, but because the entire global economic system and mode of commerce and trade are corrupt. With a dominant few holding the technologies and materials necessary to make Iraqi oil a productive and profitable enterprise. Allowed to strangle building resources, the movement of both materials and product, and the closure of markets to whom they wish to rule by both occupational presence and tyrannical proxies. So, if you are thinking that it is a set of circumstances out of the control of the hands of humanity that has befallen the Iraqis, and it "has" to be this way - YOU WOULD BE WRONG! This is because this entire global system, which is not wrong because it is merely "global," but because it posits the wealth of the many in the hands of the few (which is not true globalism), has caused this collapse that you see today. This is why it is time for a new global vision, where all of humanity may grow, thrive, prosper and not a few corrupt individuals from a few dominant countries that "rule" the world. SHALL i NAME THAT SYSTEM AND ITS FEW BLOODY ADHERENTS? "Furious protests threaten to undermine the Iraqi government's controversial plan to give international oil companies a stake in its giant oilfields in a desperate effort to raise declining oil production and revenues. In less than two weeks, on 29 and 30 June, the Iraqi Oil Minister, Hussain Shahristani, will award service contracts to the world's largest oil companies to develop six of Iraq's largest oil-producing fields over 20 to 25 years. Senior figures within the Iraqi oil industry have denounced the deal. Fayad al-Nema, the director of the South Oil Company, which comes under the Oil Ministry and produces most of Iraq's crude, said on the weekend: "The service contracts will put the Iraqi economy in chains and shackle its independence for the next 20 years. They squander Iraq's revenues." Mr Nema is reported to have since been fired because of his opposition to the contracts, which he says is shared by many other officials in Iraq's state-owned oil industry.
The government maintains that it is not compromising the ownership of Iraq's oil reserves – the third largest in the world at 115 billion barrels – on which the country is wholly dependent to fund its recovery from 30 years of war, sanctions and occupation. But the fall in the oil price over the past year has left the government facing a financial crisis; 80 per cent of its revenues go to pay for salaries, food rations and recurrent costs. Little is left for reconstruction and the government is finding it hard to pay even for much-needed items such as an electrical plant from GE and Siemens. The development of Iraq's oil reserves is of great importance to the world's energy supply in the 21st century. They may be even larger than Saudi Arabia's, as there was little exploration while Iraq was ruled by Saddam Hussein. International oil companies are desperate to get their foot in the door.
"Everyone wants to be in Iraq," says Ruba Husari, an expert on Iraqi oil. "Together with Iran, this is the only oil province in the world that has great potential. It is a great opportunity for oil companies because nobody knows the size of Iraq's reserves. Iraq itself needs to know what is under its soil." But Iraqis are wary of the involvement of foreign oil companies in raising production in super giant fields like Kirkuk and Bai Hassan in the north and Rumaila, Zubair and West Qurna in the south. They suspect the 2003 US invasion was ultimately aimed at securing Western control of their oil wealth. The nationalisation of the Iraqi oil industry by Saddam Hussein in 1972 remains popular and the rebellion against the service contracts has been gathering pace all this week. Parliament is demanding that bidding be delayed. MPs summoned Mr Shahristani, a nuclear scientist imprisoned and tortured under Saddam Hussein, to answer questions about the service contracts and the fall in Iraq's oil production and exports. Jabir Khalifa Kabir, the secretary of parliament's oil and gas committee, says the contracts will "chain the government with complex contractual terms" and will abort South Oil Company's own plans to raise production. The government says the bidding must go ahead.
The contracts are not particularly favourable to the international oil companies. They are rather the outcome of the companies' extreme eagerness to get into Iraq and the government's attempt to obtain expertise and investment without ceding control. The companies will be paid a fee linked to first restoring and then increasing oil output. They will, however, have greater control when there is a second round of bidding for oilfields which have been discovered but not yet developed. Separate again is the question of exploration for as yet undiscovered oil reserves. Critics of the deal in parliament say that Iraq has already invested $8bn (£4.9bn) in developing its super giant fields. But Mr Shahristani needs $50bn over the next five or six years to raise current production levels from 2.5 million barrels a day of crude and knows the money and expertise can only come from outside Iraq. The government in Baghdad may be near broke but Iraqis ask whose fault that is. The Oil Ministry, like much of the government, is dysfunctional when it comes to carrying out long-term projects. Mr Shahristani is blamed for poor management skills, though he eloquently defends himself by saying that when he took over the ministry in 2006, he had to cope with attacks by guerrillas who once were blowing up a pipeline every day.
This explains Mr Shahristani's problems in northern Iraq, where the Sunni Arab insurgency of 2003-08 was strong, but not in the far south, where the Shia community is dominant and there was no uprising. Jabbar al-Luaibi, the former head of the South Oil Company, who battled to maintain oil production in these years, gave a devastating interview detailing the failings of the Oil Ministry to provide the most basic equipment needed to monitor the oil reservoirs. "It's like driving your car without any indicators on the dashboard," he said, adding that if mismanagement continued in the same way as in the past "who knows, we might have to start importing crude oil". The Iraqi government made two other mistakes for which it is now paying. It optimistically believed the price of oil would stay high at $140 a barrel. Instead of investing extra revenues by paying for outside expertise and equipment to raise production in the oilfields, it spent the money on raising the pay of government employees and increasing their number.
This increased Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's popularity in the provincial elections in January but left the government short of cash when oil prices collapsed. Prices have risen since then, but not nearly enough to solve the government's problems. In June 2008 the Iraqi oil industry seemed poised to receive foreign help by signing two-year technical support contracts with oil companies. Control would have remained with Iraq. However, at the last minute, the contracts were cancelled despite being supported by Mr Shahristani and the council of ministers. The reason why this happened explains much about why the state machine is unable to carry out long-term policies. Jobs are allocated to members of political parties regardless of their experience or abilities. After 2003 the Oil Ministry had been the fief of the Fadhila, a Shia Islamic party strong in Basra, and, though it left the government, it never wholly accepted Mr Shahristani as minister.
Showing a certain cheek, Fadhila members – having sabotaged the plan to acquire foreign expertise when money was available to buy it last year – now criticise the government for being forced to accept worse terms because it cannot invest itself. Many Iraqis will be angered to see their historic oilfields being partially run by foreign companies. But the government believes it has no choice." (thanks Datta, I fogot to mention this originally) ADMINISTRATIONS CHANGE BUT THE MEGALOMANIACS REMAIN THE SAME DANCING ON THE BACKS OF THE BRUISED WHERE HAS YOUR MONEY GONE? IN THE POCKETS OF A FEW |
| V June 24, 2009 09:48 PM PDT These are good assessments Datta, what it causes me to ask is - why did they expect anything else to occur? It is plain whose lap Obama lays in, the real question is - how do we propose a way to permanently break these traitorous acts towards the people? | ||
| Datta June 24, 2009 12:18 PM PDT On the economy and Obama's (i.e. the bankster's) new plan: http://www.motherjones.com/bailout/2009/06/financial-regulation-good-bad-very-ugly http://www.counterpunch.org/hudson06222009.html | ||
| Datta June 24, 2009 08:01 AM PDT They are probably working furiously on how to hyper-exponentialize our hypocrisy as we speak! ; ) | ||
| Datta June 24, 2009 07:11 AM PDT V, we americans are bigger and better at everything, even with our hypocrisy! It's Exponential! ; ) | ||
| V June 24, 2009 06:43 AM PDT Yes I read Hedges piece, DJ posted it on the AACS, it went over every detail of why we have no rights to say or do anything in the region. The height of our hypocrisy knows no end. | ||
| Datta June 24, 2009 04:44 AM PDT Just like that link you provided talked about all the things we could spend the war money on instead, this interview mentions what we could have done with all of that money that was used to bailout the evil fucking banksters. http://www.democracynow.org/2009/6/22/report_goldman_sachs_on_pace_to JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, I think you’ve made the point that the $780 billion-odd TARP money is only a small portion, that the actual federal support for the banking industry is about $13 trillion? NOMI PRINS: That’s exactly right. The media has constantly focused, and Wall Street has been very happy about this focus, on this measly—and I say “measly”—$700 billion worth of TARP money that Congress allowed to be allocated last October. And that money has gone out to a number of banks, including Goldman and JPMorgan and Bank of America, Citigroup and other banks. But in addition to that, there have been over two-and-a-half trillion dollars’ worth of guarantees and other types of subsidies from the Treasury Department; over seven-and-a-half trillion from the Federal Reserve, which a lot has gone through the bank at—the New York Federal Reserve during the Tim Geithner period, when he was running it, as well as the Federal Reserve component in Washington; and then all these extra FDIC guarantees, which have the backing of the Fed and the Treasury Department. So we’re talking about almost 13.6, actually, now—the count keeps going up every time I look at it—trillion dollars’ worth of subsidization of the banking industry. $700 billion is a part—it’s a big part, but there are so many more trillions, that just do not get the right coverage and the right perspective from the media, that exists, that are secret. Some are not. But it’s a lot, a lot of money. It could basically pay for every single mortgage in this country and healthcare and subsidizing student loans. So when it wants to, the government can come up with a way to subsidize what it wants to subsidize. It chose to subsidize the banking industry." Hey V, besides being a very decent person of integrity and brilliance, it sure doesn't hurt that Nomi Prins is so lovely as well. ; ) You may want to watch the video to help it "sink in deeper" comrade. ; ) | ||
| Datta June 23, 2009 06:52 PM PDT See Hedges latest on Iran? By Chris Hedges Iranians do not need or want us to teach them about liberty and representative government. They have long embodied this struggle. It is we who need to be taught. It was Washington that orchestrated the 1953 coup to topple Iran’s democratically elected government, the first in the Middle East, and install the compliant shah in power. It was Washington that forced Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh, a man who cared as much for his country as he did for the rule of law and democracy, to spend the rest of his life under house arrest. We gave to the Iranian people the corrupt regime of the shah and his savage secret police and the primitive clerics that rose out of the swamp of the dictator’s Iran. Iranians know they once had a democracy until we took it away. The fundamental problem in the Middle East is not a degenerate and corrupt Islam. The fundamental problem is a degenerate and corrupt Christendom. We have not brought freedom and democracy and enlightenment to the Muslim world. We have brought the opposite. We have used the iron fist of the American military to implant our oil companies in Iraq, occupy Afghanistan and ensure that the region is submissive and cowed. We have supported a government in Israel that has carried out egregious war crimes in Lebanon and Gaza and is daily stealing ever greater portions of Palestinian land. We have established a network of military bases, some the size of small cities, in Iraq, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Kuwait, and we have secured basing rights in the Gulf states of Bahrain, Qatar, Oman and the United Arab Emirates. We have expanded our military operations to Uzbekistan, Pakistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Egypt, Algeria and Yemen. And no one naively believes, except perhaps us, that we have any intention of leaving. We are the biggest problem in the Middle East. We have through our cruelty and violence created and legitimized the Mahmoud Ahmadinejads and the Osama bin Ladens. The longer we lurch around the region dropping iron fragmentation bombs and seizing Muslim land the more these monsters, reflections of our own distorted image, will proliferate. The theologian Reinhold Niebuhr wrote, “Perhaps the most significant moral characteristic of a nation is its hypocrisy.” But our hypocrisy no longer fools anyone but ourselves. It will ensure our imperial and economic collapse. The history of modern Iran is the history of a people battling tyranny. These tyrants were almost always propped up and funded by foreign powers. This suppression and distortion of legitimate democratic movements over the decades resulted in the 1979 revolution that brought the Iranian clerics to power, unleashing another tragic cycle of Iranian resistance. “The central story of Iran over the last 200 years has been national humiliation at the hands of foreign powers who have subjugated and looted the country,” Stephen Kinzer, the author of “All the Shah’s Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror,” told me. “For a long time the perpetrators were the British and Russians. Beginning in 1953, the United States began taking over that role. In that year, the American and British secret services overthrew an elected government, wiped away Iranian democracy, and set the country on the path to dictatorship.”(cont.) http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20090622_iran_had_a_democracy_before_we_took_it_away/ | ||
| Datta June 23, 2009 03:11 PM PDT That link was so mindblowingly tragic. History will judge us more harshly than the Nazis by far IMO. Check this out V. It's about the heavy hitters behind the scenes in the military industrial complex. He says guys like Rumsfeld are mere pups, and schoolboys compared to these war pig kingpins!: http://antiwar.com/radio/2009/06/13/winslow-t-wheeler/ http://dissentradio.com/radio/09_06_12_wheeler.mp3 | ||
| V June 23, 2009 05:36 AM PDT Try this link - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wnq6cD5jk1Q | ||
| V June 23, 2009 05:34 AM PDT Datta, it showed 720,000,000 per day spent on the Iraq war, and what it could be spent on in the states instead. | ||
| Datta June 23, 2009 04:22 AM PDT That leak didn't work for me V. What was the gist? | ||
| V June 22, 2009 10:39 PM PDT TGIA put this link up - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aGeyH2S0NDs | ||
| Datta June 22, 2009 08:15 PM PDT Did you see this new fresh hell? The war machine doesn't stop for even a zillion zillionth of a moment. EVER. The madness is growing exponentially, and that is some bad news bigtime. http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/breaking-news/world/north-america/obama-says-us-is-prepared-for-north-korean-attack-14352967.html Thanks for the blue giant goddess link. | ||
| V June 22, 2009 05:06 PM PDT Here is a direct link for you Datta - http://i240.photobucket.com/albums/ff115/deadringer_01/MOAS.jpg | ||
| Datta June 22, 2009 04:08 PM PDT HEY V, I DIG THAT GIANT BLUE GODDESS PICTURE BIG TIME. THAT IS REALLY MY KIND OF GAL! COULD YOU EMAIL THAT TO ME? datta23@gmail.com THANKS ; ) | ||
| Datta June 22, 2009 08:06 AM PDT Yeah, I hear you 100% V, but if a reporter was like us, they wouldn't keep their jobs at a big paper very long!!! ; ) | ||
| V June 21, 2009 11:08 PM PDT You know what always amazes me about all this reporting, and don't get me wrong I appreciate Cockburns reporting - but they never go into length as to why Iraq and other countries are at the mercy of this imperial economic system. It is as if all of this history, and the current oppressive system mean nothing - or, it is never mentioned. Don't you get tired of these gaping omissions? | ||
| Datta June 21, 2009 07:42 PM PDT Follow up piece by Cockburn on the oil situation in Iraq. Oil rush: Scramble for Iraq's wealth Critics said the war was all about the nation's lucrative fuel industry. Are they now being proved right? Patrick Cockburn reports from Baghdad http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/oil-rush-scramble-for-iraqs-wealth-1711570.html For many Iraqis, the reason the US invaded their country in 2003 was to get control of their oil. I never believed this at the time. I thought that the US overthrew Saddam Hussein and occupied Iraq primarily because it wanted to reassert its power after 9/11 and believed the war in Iraq would be easily won. It is only now, six years after the American invasion, that the battle for the control of Iraqi oil production is moving to the centre of politics in Baghdad. On 29 and 30 June, the Iraqi government will award contracts under which international oil companies will take a central role in producing crude oil from Iraq's six super-giant oilfields over the next 20 to 25 years. By coincidence, 30 June is also the date on which the last American troops will be leaving Iraqi cities. On the very day that Iraq regains greater physical authority over its territory, it is ceding a measure of control over the oilfields on which the future of the country entirely depends. The contracts have been heavily criticised inside Iraq as a sell-out to the big oil companies, which are desperate to get back into Iraq – oil was nationalised here in 1972, and Iraq and Iran are the only two places in the world where immense quantities of oil might still be discovered. Several of those criticising the contracts work in the Iraqi oil industry. "The service contracts will put the Iraqi economy in chains and shackle its independence for the next 20 years," said Fayad al-Nema, head of the state-owned South Oil Company, which produces 80 per cent of Iraq's crude. "They squander Iraq's reserves." | ||
| V June 21, 2009 01:04 AM PDT Good rap on the introduction to his book. Goes quite deep into the framework of education today in regard to origins. Definitely a part of breaking the chains that bind humanity. | ||
| V June 20, 2009 09:29 PM PDT Yes, I am familiar with Gatto, specifically on his expose of "education" in the states. I will look at this material. | ||
| Datta June 20, 2009 02:13 PM PDT Yeah, DJ has taken off the gloves with Anand. You should see what she did to him at IM! Yet she also has immense compassion and pity for Anand because she considers him thoroughly brainwashed and programmed and propagandized and hypnotized by different kinds of ideologies(religious, political, economic, cultural,etc). In that sense, he is LITERALLY IN A TRANCE, and not acting or thinking freely at all. This was a GREAT segue to what I wanted to post! ; ) I am assuming you know John Taylor Gatto, but if you don't, you gotta check him out. One of my main living heroes, or better, inspirations, along with Chomsky, Parenti,etc. His stuff is ultra mindblowing and explains alot, especially about why a large percentage of the people are obedient, clueless, fearful, not free thinking and independent, uncreative lemmings who will do WHAT THEY ARE TOLD NOW! : ) Enjoy. A recent rap: http://www.booktv.org/Program/10280/Weapons+of+Mass+Instruction+A+Schoolteachers+Journey+Through+the+Dark+World+of+Compulsory+Schooling.aspx And his previous magnum opus "The Underground History of American Education". full online text at link below: http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/chapters/index.htm (He also recently released a great new book:"Weapons of Mass Instruction: A Schoolteacher's Journey through the Dark World of Compulsory Schooling") You are gonna dig it V, if you were unfamiliar with him. Just check out the first 20 minutes of the rap and you'll see what I mean, especially the quotes by Fichte and Spinoza. BLOODCURDLING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | ||
| V June 19, 2009 11:25 PM PDT Yes, there was a similar subject about frauds broached on AACS (subject Anand), by DJ - I quoted your comment here for comparison Datta. Indeed, you not only have them traveling abroad and doing these things, but they haunt sites with disinformation - a totally disingenuous and reprobate individual or group. "Birds of a feather stick together" therefore you have sites like IM's, and those who are fellow low class traitorous and dishonorable individuals. | ||
| Datta June 19, 2009 08:09 PM PDT V, an Arab friend out of this country has been following this story and says the protests are furious. This Iraqi oil minister, says my friend, and all the other peeps in Iraq's puppet parliament have dual citizenship in both Iraq and usually Britain. They fly in from their zillion dollar penthouses in Britain. Work in Iraq until they fulfill their evil deed, and then simply go back to Britain where they actually live, and finish out their lives in high style. They are hardly "Iraqis" at all. | ||
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