Articles of Interest
Blood and Oil on All Our Hands
BLOOD IN BEIRUT: $75.05 A BARREL
The failure to stop the bloodletting in the Middle East, Exxon's record second-quarter
profits and Iran's nuclear cat-and-mouse game have something in common -- it's the oil.
By Greg Palast
July 26, 2006
I can't tell you how it started -- this is a war that's been fought since the Levites clashed
with the Philistines -- but I can tell you why the current mayhem has not been stopped. It's
the oil.
I'm not an expert on Palestine nor Lebanon and I'd rather not pretend to be one. If you want
to know what's going on, read Robert Fisk. He lives there. He speaks Arabic. Stay away from
pundits whose only connection to the Middle East is the local falafel stand.
So why am I writing now? The answer is that, while I don't speak Arabic or Hebrew, I am
completely fluent in the language of petroleum.
What? You don't need a degree in geology to know there's no oil in Israel, Palestine or
Lebanon. (A few weeks ago, I was joking around with Afif Safieh, the Palestinian Authority's
Ambassador to the US, asking him why he was fighting to have a piece of the only place in the
Middle East without oil. Well, there's no joking now.)
Let's begin with the facts we can agree on: the berserkers are winning. Crazies discredited
only a month ago are now in charge, guys with guns bigger than brains and souls smaller
still. Here's a list:
-- Israel's Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's approval rating in June was down to a Bush-level of
35%. But today, Olmert's poll numbers among Israeli voters have more than doubled to 78% as
he does his bloody John Wayne "cleanin' out the varmints" routine. But let's not forget:
Olmert can't pee-pee without George Bush's approval. Bush can stop Olmert tomorrow. He
hasn't.
-- Hezbollah, a political party rejected overwhelmingly by Lebanese voters sickened by their
support of Syrian occupation, holds a mere 14 seats out of 128 in the nation's parliament.
Hezbollah was facing demands by both Lebanon's non-Shia majority and the United Nations to
lay down arms. Now, few Lebanese would suggest taking away their rockets. But let's not
forget: Without Iran, Hezbollah is just a fundamentalist street gang. Iran's President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad can stop Hezbollah's rockets tomorrow. He hasn't.
-- Hamas, just days before it kidnapped and killed Israeli soldiers, was facing certain
political defeat at the hands of the Palestinian majority ready to accept the existence of
Israel as proposed in a manifesto for peace talks penned by influential Palestinian
prisoners. Now the Hamas rocket brigade is back in charge. But let's not forget: Hamas is
broke and a joke without the loot and authority of Saudi Arabia. King Abdullah can stop these
guys tomorrow. He hasn't.
Why not? Why haven't what we laughably call "leaders" of the USA, Iran and Saudi Arabia
called back their delinquent spawn, cut off their allowances and grounded them for six
months?
Maybe because mayhem and murder in the Middle East are very, very profitable to the sponsors
of these characters with bombs and rockets. America, Iran and Saudi Arabia share one thing in
common: they are run by oil regimes. The higher the price of crude, the higher the profits
and the happier the presidents and princelings of these petroleum republics.
This Thursday, Exxon is expected to report the highest second-quarter earnings of any
corporation since the days of the Pharaoh, $9.9 billion in pure profit collected in just
three months -- courtesy of an oil shortage caused by pipelines on fire in Iraq, warlord
attacks in Nigeria, the lingering effects of the sabotage of Venezuela's oil system by a 2002
strike... the list could go on.
Exxon's brobdingnagian profits simply reflect the cold axiom that oil companies and oil
states don't make their loot by finding oil but by finding trouble. Finding oil increases
supply. Increased supply means decreased price. Whereas finding trouble -- wars, coup
d'etats, hurricanes, whatever can disrupt supply -- raises the price of oil.
A couple of examples from today's Bloomberg newswire are:
"Crude oil traded above $75 a barrel in New York as fighting between Israeli and
Iranian-backed Hezbollah forces in Lebanon entered its 14th day... Oil prices rose last month
on concern for supplies from Iran, the world's fourth largest producer, may be disrupted in
its dispute with the United Nations over its uranium enrichment ... [And, said a trader,] 'I
still think $85 is likely this summer. I'm really surprised we haven't seen any
hurricanes.'''
In Tehran, President Ahmadinejad may or may not have a plan to make a nuclear bomb, but he
sure as heck knows that hinting at it raises the price of the one thing he certainly does
have -- oil. Every time he barks, 'Mad Mahmoud' knows that he's pumping up the price of
crude. Just a $10 a barrel "blow-up-in-the-Mideast" premium brings his regime nearly a
quarter of a billion dollars each week (including the little kick to the value of Iran's
natural gas). Not a bad pay-off for making a bit of trouble.
Saudi Arabia's rake-in from The Troubles? Assuming just a $10 a barrel boost for Middle
Eastern mayhem and you can calculate that the blood in the sand puts an extra $658 million a
week in Abdullah's hand.
And in Houston, you can hear the cash registers jing-a-ling as explosions in Kirkuk, Beirut
and the Niger River Delta sound like the sleigh-bells on Santa's sled. At $75.05 a barrel,
they don't call it "sweet" crude for nothing. That's up 27% from a year ago. The big
difference between then and now: the rockets' red glare.
Exxon's second-quarter profits may bust records, but next quarter's should put it to shame,
as the "Lebanon premium" and Iraq's insurgency have puffed up prices, up by an average of 11%
in the last three months.
So there's not much incentive for the guys who supply the weaponry to tell their wards to put
away their murderous toys. This war's just too darn profitable.
We are trained to think of Middle Eastern conflicts as just modern flare-ups of ancient
tribal animosities. But to uncover why the flames won't die, the usual rule applies: follow
the money.
Am I saying that Tehran, Riyadh and Houston oil chieftains conspired to ignite a war to boost
their petroleum profits? I can't imagine it. But I do wonder if Bush would let Olmert have an
extra week of bombings, or if the potentates of the Persian Gulf would allow Hamas and
Hezbollah to continue their deadly fireworks if it caused the price of crude to crash. You
know and I know that if this war took a bite out of Exxon or the House of Saud, a ceasefire
would be imposed quicker than you can say, "Let's drill in the Arctic."
Eventually, there will be another ceasefire. But Exxon shareholders need not worry. Global
warming has heated the seas sufficiently to make certain that they can look forward to a
hellacious -- and profitable -- season of hurricanes.