'Obscene Attempt' To Steal Iraq
Oil.
In a nationally televised (C-SPAN) speech on May 23, Democratic
Congressman and presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich said the US
Congress, under intense pressure from the Bush administration, was on
the verge of approving "an obscene attempt to steal the oil
resources of Iraq". In an impeccably documented, point-by-point
analysis of a little-known provision buried in the Iraq war-funding
appropriation under consideration by the US House of Representatives,
Kucinich challenged other House members to strip the provision from the
bill, or, agree with him that the entire bill should be defeated. The
latter option, embodied in Kucinich-sponsored H.R. 1234, would cut off
additional funding for the war and almost immediately begin the process
of bringing US troops home. It would, Kucinich said, send a strong and
clear message to the White House: "This war is over, Mr.
President".
In an unprecedented, televised hour-long address on the floor of
the House, Kucinich, the only presidential candidate who voted against
the original war authorisation in 2002 and every war-funding measure
since, cited scores of unimpeachable sources and documents supporting
his position that the current war appropriation might put up to 80% of
Iraq's estimated $21 trillion in oil resources into the hands of
IOCs. He said: "I would like to believe that this war wasn't
about oil. But I know better". He said his colleagues in the House
and the Senate had access to the same "million" sources of
information he had, but failed to recognise the implications of the
petroleum law benchmark, in part because of intense lobbying and
pressure from the administration.
The administration-sponsored language in the current appropriations
bill couches Iraq's passage of a "broadly accepted"
petroleum law as a way of ensuring that oil revenues are shared
equitably among the country's regions. Instead, Kucinich charged:
"It's not about sharing revenues equitably". The real
goal, he said, referencing documents which pre-date the 2003 invasion,
was to turn over up to 80% of Iraq's oil reserves to IOCs. He
provided documentation, some dating back to 1999, showing that IOCs and
representatives of the administration, notably Vice President Dick
Cheney, had been strategising for years about how to open up Iraq's
petroleum industry to exploitation by the world's major oil
corporations.
Kucinich provided what he called evidence that, for years, top IOC
executives had been advising the US government and the evolving
government of Iraq on ways to end Iraq's state-controlled oil
industry and to facilitate "foreign investment". Those
powerful executives, Kucinich said, had been coveting Iraq's oil
reserves since the country nationalised its oil industry in 1972.
Kucinich quoted US officials, oil industry leaders and analysts,
Iraqi officials, and independent policy and research groups to
corroborate his long-standing position that "it's always been
about oil". As he closed his message to the House, Kucinich said:
"Let's take a stand for truth and justice. Let's take a
stand for what's right. The war in Iraq is a stain on American
history. Let us not further besmirch our nation by participating in the
outrageous exploitation of a nation which is in shambles due to US
intervention. The truth is what I've told this Congress
today".
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