[Vision2020] Parade magazine -10 Worst Living Dictators
Ted Moffett
ted_moffett@hotmail.com
Tue, 18 Feb 2003 15:36:43 +0000
Dale, et al.
Your argument it seems tends to assume nations are functioning in some sort
of isolation from each other in terms of what nations provide their source
of oil influencing their foreign policy. In fact, US economic interests are
solidly linked to assuring oil from the middle east can reach many other
countries in the world due to the impact the economies of these countries
have on our economy. And besides this, multinational corporations see the
entire world economy as their domain and do not necessarily function as
though they are loyal to one nation. These corporations influence US
foreign policy. You have heard of Halliburton and know what member of our
current US government was once a critical player in that corporation?
Even assuming your facts on percentages of sources for oil for different
nations are correct, more direct US access to the Iraq oil fields could
still represent an economic boost to US economic interests, which of course
are critically linked to Europe anyways.
Your statement that Europe is currently more involved in Iraq oil than the
US actually bolsters the argument that this war is about oil. Thus we have
European nations France and Germany resisting the US invasion of Iraq, which
they might view as the US stealing their economic advantage because of the
US obtaining more influence over Iraq oil resources if we can install a new
government in Iraq friendly to US economic and petroleum interests.
Ted
>From: "Dale Courtney" <dale@courtneys.us>
>To: "'Vision 2020'" <vision2020@moscow.com>
>Subject: RE: [Vision2020] Parade magazine -10 Worst Living Dictators
>Date: Tue, 18 Feb 2003 06:51:12 -0800
>
>Ted wrote:
> > Does anyone really think that if Iraq had zero oil, Israel
> > was removed from
> > the equation, and Iraq really represented a military force that could
> > inflict mass causalities against US forces, instead of this
> > pending "war"
> > being more like shooting fish in a barrel, that we would be
> > so eager to
> > invade rather than adopt a strategy of containment?
>
>I'll preface my remarks by saying that I'm no fan of this war. However, I
>really don't believe that this is about oil.
>
>At present, oil companies from France, Russia, and China have contracts to
>help develop Iraqi oil fields. Europe depends far more upon oil from Iraq
>than America (only about 6% of U.S. oil comes from Iraq). Oil from Iraq,
>indeed oil from the entire Middle East, ranks higher among European
>national
>interests than American.
>
>For some years, the United States has been moving to draw the preponderance
>of its oil from our own hemisphere, mostly from Canada, Mexico, and
>Venezuela, and to cut back steadily on its use of Middle Eastern oil, to
>the
>level now of 26 percent of its annual. Europe is far more dependent on
>Iraqi
>oil, and far more involved with the Iraqi oil industry.
>
>Dale Courtney
>Moscow, Idaho
>
>
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