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Playing Politics With Iraqi Oil Money

by: Matt Renner, t r u t h o u t | Report

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(Illustration: thejunction.net)

    Washington, DC - Republicans and Democrats have been in an uproar over a new report that examines the amount of money the government of Iraq has been taking in and where they have been spending it. However, according to a leading Iraq economy scholar, the report is being misinterpreted and the political fall-out could be extremely harmful.

    The Government Accountability Office (GAO) report (.pdf), released on Tuesday, shows that the government of Iraq has spent less money than the United States in reconstructing vital infrastructure despite a growing surplus in Iraq's treasury. Focusing on raw dollar figures, the report estimates that the government of Iraq has spent $3.9 billion since 2005 on security, oil, water and electricity projects.

    Because of high oil prices, the government has been taking in more money than it's spending, accumulating billions of dollars during this same time period. Currently Iraq's budget surplus is estimated at $29 billion, with a possible surplus of an additional $50 billion in 2008.

    In statements, senators from both parties compared the seemingly paltry Iraqi expenditures with the $23.2 billion spent by the US government in these specific reconstruction areas since the 2003 invasion.

    "The Iraqi government now has tens of billions of dollars at its disposal to fund large-scale reconstruction projects. It is inexcusable for US taxpayers to continue to foot the bill for projects the Iraqis are fully capable of funding themselves," Senator Carl Levin (D-Michigan) said. Levin is chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. "Despite Iraq earning billions of dollars in oil revenue in the past five years, US taxpayer money has been the overwhelming source of Iraq reconstruction funds," Senator John Warner (R-Virginia), ranking member on the committee, said.

    Antonia Juhasz, a fellow with Oil Change International and author of the forthcoming book "The Tyranny of Oil," takes issue with many conclusions being drawn from the GAO report.

    "Pinning the failure of reconstruction and the poor functioning of the Iraqi government on the Iraqi government is obscene," Juhasz told Truthout. Instead, she blames reconstruction failures on the Bush administration's Iraq policy, adding, "It is politically expedient and an obscene rewriting of history to say that the US should not be giving the Iraqis any more money for reconstruction because the Iraqis have plenty of money of their own."

    Much of the money that was spent by US taxpayers on Iraq's initial reconstruction went directly into the pockets of private US corporations under the direction of L. Paul Bremer, former head of the Coalition Provisional Authority, which ruled Iraq in the months following the invasion. His decision to fire the roughly 120,000 Iraqi government workers and completely privatize the country's reconstruction has been blamed for much of the political chaos that has gripped the country since the invasion.

    According to Juhasz, the amount of money spent by the US government on reconstruction does not accurately reflect the amount of actual work done. "The US gave the reconstruction money to US corporations. The corporations took the money and failed to do the reconstruction," Juhasz said.

    Juhasz views the report very differently from those who are trying to make political hay out of the anger over the ongoing occupation of Iraq and extraordinary gas prices - in fact, there are bright spots contained in the GAO data that give Juhasz hope for Iraq's future.

    The GAO report points out that Iraq has been increasing oil exports every year since the invasion and profiting greatly as a result.

    "The Iraqis are essentially doing fine on their own running their oil industry. They are making money and increasing production and exports. Because oil is so expensive, Iraqis will have the money to invest and rebuild their oil infrastructure without investment from US oil companies," Juhasz said.

    The need for oil infrastructure investment has been the main argument pushed by the Bush administration and some Democrats who favor passage of a law that would give foreign oil companies access to Iraq's oil for the first time since Iraq's oil industry was nationalized in 1973. Proponents of such a law argue that the companies would provide the infrastructure investment needed to increase productivity, without which Iraq's oil-based economy would sputter.

    However, the proposed law has been held up in Iraq's parliament because it does not have popular support. Iraq's oil industry is a source of great national pride, and attempts to privatize it have met with fierce resistance. Iraqi and international activists have been working to educate foreign governments and the press about the state of oil politics in Iraq and the ongoing negotiation with foreign companies over Iraq's oil. According to Juhasz, these efforts have helped to slow down the rush to privatize the oil fields.

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Matt Renner is an editor and Washington reporter for Truthout. He can be reached at Matt@truthout.org.

Comments

This is a moderated forum.  It may take a little while for comments to go live. Be civil and on-topic, don't threaten or advocate violence, please keep it under 300 words. Thanks for participating.

"Pinning the failure of

"Pinning the failure of reconstruction and the poor functioning of the Iraqi government on the Iraqi government is obscene," Absolutely! The US and its allies should pay the entire cost of reconstruction, since it is they that did the destruction. Why should the victims have to pay the cost. The US is not seriously doing any reconstruction anyway. That money is just being transferred from the taxpayers to war profiteers like Halliburton, KBR, and Blackwater.

Companies such as

Companies such as Halliburton / KBR should never be allowed to work on any federally funded jobs again. What they have done is nothing less than treason.

Politics, not government,

Politics, not government, reduces our quality of life when misapplied to benefit narrow interests. Americans must elect candidates that will stand up for a sustainable future as well as government accountability. Sustainability is the only ethic which can bring the world's people together toward a common goal of using local resources to build local wealth to sustain local populations. Using the US military as a political tool to establish and maintain corporate global hegemony does not benefit most Americans, and is not in Americans' interest to allow it to continue. Voter apathy and misunderstanding of the issues are two significant causes of a continued degradation of our quality of life, and the environment, for the benefit of a few. Setting an example of sustainability could be America's great new contribution to the world and change the current grim view the world has of America as an uncompassionate stealer and waster of the planet's resources. Barack Obama uses the correct words about creating and attracting what we want, rather than focusing on the perception that it cannot be changed. Whether he can put his words into action remain to be seen. But none of it will happen without the resolve and dedication of ordinary Americans to see it through.

Other than the fact that WE

Other than the fact that WE are the ones who destroyed their infrastructure, there is the fact that it was a deliberate act of vandalism. As new informatiion appears on almost a daily basis that the Bush administration knew beyond a doubt that its excuses for invading Iraq were bogus, pure lies, dishonest, fabrications, you can fill in the blanks, we see that we were responsible for the total destruction of a whole society. The article makes a point that anyone who has worked in overseas development work knows already, the money stays in the US in the pockets of the head honchos. There was an investigation of where AID money to Mali was going and they found that the Malians were stealing refrigerators while the people in charge back home were making off with millions of dollars that never got to Mali. So when you talk about all the money we spend on rebuilding the destruction we have done in Iraq, that figure needs to subtract the amounts that stayed in the pockets of Halliburton, General Dynamics, Blackwater and all the many other war profiteers.

Yes, by all means, blame the

Yes, by all means, blame the Iraqis because the Republicans gleefully handed out billions in cash of US taxpayer funds to their cronies and fellow felons in those heady, mad early days of Operation RAPEYOU. Seldom has a war accomplished such utter devastation of treasury, such crass cruelty, such blatant criminality, both at home AND in the theater of battle. Not only is the Iraqi financial system in shreds, the US has the same pecuniary problem, delivered by the same people - the "good guys" who are supposed to be spreading freedom and democracy throughout the world. Too bad, it looks as though the price of installing democracy in Iraq is the systematic dismantling of the democratic rights guaranteed in OUR Constitution and ratified by every single state in the union. Democracy in our homeland is becoming more and more a thing of the past. Deliver us from the warmongers!

Let's take into

Let's take into consideration just who is making money from this Iraq war, and shift the burden of losses to them. That would include the military industrial complex with all its Halliburton/KBR companies et al. But let's also include all the people who are investing in these companies who stand to gain profits from their gamble. If we could only make an example of them by making the profits of war be also the losses of war especially when that war is deemed to be illegal with the fabrication and attempted false flag antagonism to draw nations into a war to profit from their resources. This was clearly the case. The thing that obscures it is the heavy handed politics, big money bullying, threatening with laws that can ruin people with impunity. And it happens at all levels of society. Let's make the war investors pay. You can edit out this part, but when I worked in a high school office near the beginning of the war, I received dozens of faxes a day from companies poised to make huge profits from the upcoming mayhem. There were opportunities to invest in every aspect of the war from military companies to communications and everything in between. These are the people who should be paying for the cost of the war as they were investing in it for profit without conscience. Or at least they were ignoring their responsibility to find out the effect of their investing.

Not only should Halliburton,

Not only should Halliburton, KBR & other contractors that actively participated in the outright theft of billions of taxpayer $$$ no longer have the privilage of working for US, they should be forced to PAY BACK the money that they stole & the people who approved the payments should be held accountable as well.

Why should Iraq spend a dime

Why should Iraq spend a dime of their own oil revenues reconstructing infrastructure that the US Government destroyed. Cheney should pick up the bill.

looking down the long road

looking down the long road of anglo-american activities in the last one hundred years it is not surprising to see what these ire works have produced. when Obama speaks, all i can see is the broken hearts of the millions of americans ready to put their faith in him. the two party system in the united states was constructed by banking interests, as such, america will never enjoy the freedom it preaches so religiously under a republican or democratic candidate.

deaner- Agreed. The

deaner- Agreed. The political system we have is designed to favor the rich, and to do it's bidding. It was Big Oil that "suggested" that an oil pipeline from Azerbaijan to the Persian Gulf would be a good thing. Then BushCo set about to make it happen. I don't know, perhaps Clinton's role was to "soften up" Iraq to make way for the coming occupation. Obama is tapping into the near-despair of Americans having their noses shoved in this. But he will never deliver us from it. The only chance America has is to wake up, first. Then elect an independent candidate over the stiff opposition of the moneyed interests. Imagine the din. If there is a hell, I imagine there would be a similar background noise to what those collective voices of opposition would produce. Of course it would be preferable to the hell created in places like Iraq and Afghanistan.

"A republic s a government

"A republic s a government fit only for an informed electorate" (or words to that effect). So now we find one more way the power elite has bamboozled us into allowing them to steal not only trillions form the Us citizenry, they are staling billions from the Iraqis too. Why not? It is there for the taking? The power elite have all the controls in their hands. Except for the few who read this kind of stuff and follow it, the vast bulk of the populace are either fast asleep or so easily led by Big Media, there really is no hope for change. Things must get much worse before Americans rise out of their torpo0r and actually force their representatives to represent them. For now, the power elite appears quite safe from harm or from accountability for their crimes. I hope this is false. I fear that it is not.

If my grandchildren know

If my grandchildren know anything about the history that we are now living through, I want them to be aware that critics called the Iraq War "Operation Rape You." This should be passed on, my friends.

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