Blood, Oil, and Iran
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Michael T. Klare
by Tom Engelhardt and
Michael Klare
While
our media is filled with stories on the Bush administration and
Iran, they almost invariably focus on the Iranian nuclear program
(or European negotiations and U.S. non-negotiations about the same).
You could read our press for weeks at a time if you didn't
stray onto the business pages and not be aware that Iran
sits on a sea of oil and natural gas. In fact, I don't think it's
an exaggeration to say that, for long stretches, a typical newspaper
reader or prime-time TV news viewer, or, for that matter, an NPR
listener, would have just about no way of knowing that our world
runs on oil. Of course, our local gas stations are informative enough
on the subject these days, so this reality is lost on few people.
Still, the sort of piece that hit the front page of the British
Financial Times the other day IMF
warns on risk of "permanent oil shock" is
not normally a front-page commonplace for us.
This has a certain importance when, in the
British and Israeli
press and on
the Internet, rumors and reports abound that either the Bush
administration or the Israeli government (in coordination with Bush
officials) or both are planning air attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities
as early as this June (with hopes of an oil-regime change in Tehran);
or when the
Washington Post reports on months of Iranian air-space
infringement and air-defense testing on the part of American unmanned
aircraft, and Seymour
Hersh reports on American Special Forces (or Kurdish agents)
moving in and out of Iran, again possibly in preparation for future
attacks. (By the way, an interesting counter-argument against the
likelihood of an Israeli attack on Iran appeared in
the Asia Times recently.)
It's strange that, when it comes to news articles on Iran, oil plays
just about no role whatsoever; that, as was true with Iraq before
the invasion of 2003, it is little short of a taboo subject. Fortunately,
we have Michael Klare, whose book Blood
and Oil: The Dangers and Consequences of America's Growing Dependency
on Imported Oil (as I've said
before) is an indispensable volume for understanding our moment.
Below, Klare does what should be done in our mainstream press
he seriously considers the role of Iran's oil and natural gas reserves,
and other energy-related matters in the Bush administration's Iran
planning. ~ Tom
Oil,
Geopolitics, and the Coming War with Iran
By
Michael T. Klare
As the United States gears up for an attack on Iran, one thing is
certain: the Bush administration will never mention oil as a reason
for going to war. As in the case of Iraq, weapons of mass destruction
(WMD) will be cited as the principal justification for an American
assault. "We will not tolerate the construction of a nuclear weapon
[by Iran]," is the way President Bush put it in a much-quoted 2003
statement. But just as the failure to discover illicit weapons in
Iraq undermined the administration's use of WMD as the paramount
reason for its invasion, so its claim that an attack on Iran would
be justified because of its alleged nuclear potential should invite
widespread skepticism. More important, any serious assessment of
Iran's strategic importance to the United States should focus on
its role in the global energy equation.
Before proceeding further, let me state for the record that I do
not claim oil is the sole driving force behind the Bush administration's
apparent determination to destroy Iranian military capabilities.
No doubt there are many national security professionals in Washington
who are truly worried about Iran's nuclear program, just as there
were many professionals who were genuinely worried about Iraqi weapons
capabilities. I respect this. But no war is ever prompted by one
factor alone, and it is evident from the public record that many
considerations, including oil, played a role in the administration's
decision to invade Iraq. Likewise, it is reasonable to assume that
many factors again including oil are playing a role in the
decision-making now underway over a possible assault on Iran.
Just exactly how much weight the oil factor carries in the
administration's decision-making is not something that we can determine
with absolute assurance at this time, but given the importance energy
has played in the careers and thinking of various high officials
of this administration, and given Iran's immense resources, it would
be ludicrous not to take the oil factor into account and yet
you can rest assured that, as relations with Iran worsen, American
media reports and analysis of the situation will generally steer
a course well clear of the subject (as they did in the lead-up to
the invasion of Iraq).
One further caveat: When talking about oil's importance in American
strategic thinking about Iran, it is important to go beyond the
obvious question of Iran's potential role in satisfying our country's
future energy requirements. Because Iran occupies a strategic location
on the north side of the Persian Gulf, it is in a position to threaten
oil fields in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, and the United Arab Emirates,
which together possess more than half of the world's known oil reserves.
Iran also sits athwart the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway
through which, daily, 40% of the world's oil exports pass. In addition,
Iran is becoming a major supplier of oil and natural gas to China,
India, and Japan, thereby giving Tehran additional clout in world
affairs. It is these geopolitical dimensions of energy, as
much as Iran's potential to export significant quantities of oil
to the United States, that undoubtedly govern the administration's
strategic calculations.
Having said this, let me proceed to an assessment of Iran's future
energy potential. According to the most recent tally by Oil and
Gas Journal, Iran houses the second-largest pool of untapped
petroleum in the world, an estimated 125.8 billion barrels. Only
Saudi Arabia, with an estimated 260 billion barrels, possesses more;
Iraq, the third in line, has an estimated 115 billion barrels. With
this much oil about one-tenth of the world's estimated total
supply Iran is certain to play a key role in the global energy
equation, no matter what else occurs.
It is not, however, just sheer quantity that matters in Iran's case;
no less important is its future productive capacity. Although Saudi
Arabia possesses larger reserves, it is now producing oil at close
to its maximum sustainable rate (about 10 million barrels per day).
It will probably be unable to raise its output significantly over
the next 20 years while global demand, pushed by significantly higher
consumption in the United States, China, and India, is expected
to rise by 50%. Iran, on the other hand, has considerable growth
potential: it is now producing about 4 million barrels per day,
but is thought to be capable of boosting its output by another 3
million barrels or so. Few, if any, other countries possess this
potential, so Iran's importance as a producer, already significant,
is bound to grow in the years ahead.
And it is not just oil that Iran possesses in great abundance, but
also natural gas. According to Oil and Gas Journal, Iran
has an estimated 940 trillion cubic feet of gas, or approximately
16% of total world reserves. (Only Russia, with 1,680 trillion cubic
feet, has a larger supply.) As it takes approximately 6,000 cubic
feet of gas to equal the energy content of 1 barrel of oil, Iran's
gas reserves represent the equivalent of about 155 billion barrels
of oil. This, in turn, means that its combined hydrocarbon reserves
are the equivalent of some 280 billion barrels of oil, just slightly
behind Saudi Arabia's combined supply. At present, Iran is producing
only a small share of its gas reserves, about 2.7 trillion cubic
feet per year. This means that Iran is one of the few countries
capable of supplying much larger amounts of natural gas in the future.
What all this means is that Iran will play a critical role in the
world's future energy equation. This is especially true because
the global demand for natural gas is growing faster than that for
any other source of energy, including oil. While the world currently
consumes more oil than gas, the supply of petroleum is expected
to contract in the not-too-distant future as global production approaches
its peak sustainable level perhaps as soon as 2010 and then
begins a gradual but irreversible decline. The production of natural
gas, on the other hand, is not likely to peak until several decades
from now, and so is expected to take up much of the slack when oil
supplies become less abundant. Natural gas is also considered a
more attractive fuel than oil in many applications, especially because
when consumed it releases less carbon dioxide (a major contributor
to the greenhouse effect).
No doubt the major U.S. energy companies would love to be working
with Iran today in developing these vast oil and gas supplies. At
present, however, they are prohibited from doing so by Executive
Order (EO) 12959, signed by President Clinton in 1995 and renewed
by President Bush in March 2004. The United States has also threatened
to punish foreign firms that do business in Iran (under the Iran-Libya
Sanctions Act of 1996), but this has not deterred many large companies
from seeking access to Iran's reserves. China, which will need vast
amounts of additional oil and gas to fuel its red-hot economy, is
paying particular attention to Iran. According to the Department
of Energy (DoE), Iran supplied 14% of China's oil imports in 2003,
and is expected to provide an even larger share in the future. China
is also expected to rely on Iran for a large share of its liquid
natural gas (LNG) imports. In October 2004, Iran signed a $100 billion,
25-year contract with Sinopec, a major Chinese energy firm, for
joint development of one of its major gas fields and the subsequent
delivery of LNG to China. If this deal is fully consummated, it
will constitute one of China's biggest overseas investments and
represent a major strategic linkage between the two countries.
India is also keen to obtain oil and gas from Iran. In January,
the Gas Authority of India Ltd. (GAIL) signed a 30-year deal with
the National Iranian Gas Export Corp. for the transfer of as much
as 7.5 million tons of LNG to India per year. The deal, worth an
estimated $50 billion, will also entail Indian involvement in the
development of Iranian gas fields. Even more noteworthy, Indian
and Pakistani officials are discussing the construction of a $3
billion natural gas pipeline from Iran to India via Pakistan ¬ an
extraordinary step for two long-term adversaries. If completed,
the pipeline would provide both countries with a substantial supply
of gas and allow Pakistan to reap $200$500 million per year
in transit fees. "The gas pipeline is a win-win proposition for
Iran, India, and Pakistan," Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz
declared in January.
Despite the pipeline's obvious attractiveness as an incentive for
reconciliation between India and Pakistan nuclear powers that
have fought three wars over Kashmir since 1947 and remain deadlocked
over the future status of that troubled territory the project
was condemned by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice during a recent
trip to India. "We have communicated to the Indian government our
concerns about the gas pipeline cooperation between Iran and India,"
she said on March 16 after meeting with Indian Foreign Minister
Natwar Singh in New Delhi. The administration has, in fact, proved
unwilling to back any project that offers an economic benefit to
Iran. This has not, however, deterred India from proceeding with
the pipeline.
Japan has also broken ranks with Washington on the issue of energy
ties with Iran. In early 2003, a consortium of three Japanese companies
acquired a 20% stake in the development of the Soroush-Nowruz offshore
field in the Persian Gulf, a reservoir thought to hold 1 billion
barrels of oil. One year later, the Iranian Offshore Oil Company
awarded a $1.26 billion contract to Japan's JGC Corporation for
the recovery of natural gas and natural gas liquids from Soroush-Nowruz
and other offshore fields.
When considering Iran's role in the global energy equation, therefore,
Bush administration officials have two key strategic aims: a desire
to open up Iranian oil and gas fields to exploitation by American
firms, and concern over Iran's growing ties to America's competitors
in the global energy market. Under U.S. law, the first of these
aims can only be achieved after the President lifts EO 12959, and
this is not likely to occur as long as Iran is controlled by anti-American
mullahs and refuses to abandon its uranium enrichment activities
with potential bomb-making applications. Likewise, the ban on U.S.
involvement in Iranian energy production and export gives Tehran
no choice but to pursue ties with other consuming nations. From
the Bush administration's point of view, there is only one obvious
and immediate way to alter this unappetizing landscape by inducing
"regime change" in Iran and replacing the existing leadership with
one far friendlier to U.S. strategic interests.
That the Bush administration seeks to foster regime change in Iran
is not in any doubt. The very fact that Iran was included with Saddam's
Iraq and Kim Jong Il's North Korea in the "Axis of Evil" in the
President's 2002 State of the Union Address was an unmistakable
indicator of this. Bush let his feelings be known again in June
2003, at a time when there were anti-government protests by students
in Tehran. "This is the beginning of people expressing themselves
toward a free Iran, which I think is positive," he declared. In
a more significant indication of White House attitudes on the subject,
the Department of Defense has failed to fully disarm the People's
Mujaheddin of Iran (or Mujaheddin-e Khalq, MEK), an anti-government
militia now based in Iraq that has conducted terrorist actions in
Iran and is listed on the State Department's roster of terrorist
organizations. In 2003, the Washington Post reported that
some senior administration figures would like to use the MEK as
a proxy force in Iran, in the same manner that the Northern Alliance
was employed against the Taliban in Afghanistan.
The Iranian leadership is well aware that it faces a serious threat
from the Bush administration and is no doubt taking whatever steps
it can to prevent such an attack. Here, too, oil is a major factor
in both Tehran's and Washington's calculations. To deter a possible
American assault, Iran has threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz
and otherwise obstruct oil shipping in the Persian Gulf area. "An
attack on Iran will be tantamount to endangering Saudi Arabia, Kuwait,
and, in a word, the entire Middle East oil," Iranian Expediency
Council secretary Mohsen Rezai said on March 1st.
Such threats are taken very seriously by the U.S. Department of
Defense. "We judge Iran can briefly close the Strait of Hormuz,
relying on a layered strategy using predominantly naval, air, and
some ground forces," Vice Admiral Lowell E. Jacoby, the director
of the Defense Intelligence Agency, testified before the Senate
Intelligence Committee on February 16th.
Planning for such attacks is, beyond doubt, a major priority for
top Pentagon officials. In January, veteran investigative reporter
Seymour Hersh reported in the New Yorker magazine that the
Department of Defense was conducting covert reconnaissance raids
into Iran, supposedly to identify hidden Iranian nuclear and missile
facilities that could be struck in future air and missile attacks.
"I was repeatedly told that the next strategic target was Iran,"
Hersh said of his interviews with senior military personnel. Shortly
thereafter, the Washington Post revealed that the Pentagon
was flying surveillance drones over Iran to verify the location
of weapons sites and to test Iranian air defenses. As noted by the
Post, "Aerial espionage [of this sort] is standard in military
preparations for an eventual air attack." There have also been reports
of talks between U.S. and Israeli officials about a possible Israeli
strike on Iranian weapons facilities, presumably with behind-the-scenes
assistance from the United States.
In
reality, much of Washington's concern about Iran's pursuit of WMD
and ballistic missiles is sparked by fears for the safety of Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, other Persian Gulf oil producers, and Israel
rather than by fears of a direct Iranian assault on the United States.
"Tehran has the only military in the region that can threaten its
neighbors and Gulf security," Jacoby declared in his February testimony.
"Its expanding ballistic missile inventory presents a potential
threat to states in the region." It is this regional threat that
American leaders are most determined to eliminate.
In
this sense, more than any other, the current planning for an attack
on Iran is fundamentally driven by concern over the safety of U.S.
energy supplies, as was the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq. In the most
telling expression of White House motives for going to war against
Iraq, Vice President Dick Cheney (in an August 2002 address to the
Veterans of Foreign Wars) described the threat from Iraq as follows:
"Should all [of Hussein's WMD] ambitions be realized, the implications
would be enormous for the Middle East and the United States....
Armed with an arsenal of these weapons of terror and a seat atop
10 percent of the world's oil reserves, Saddam Hussein could then
be expected to seek domination of the entire Middle East, take control
of a great portion of the world's energy supplies, [and] directly
threaten America's friends throughout the region." This was, of
course, unthinkable to Bush's inner circle. And all one need do
is substitute the words "Iranian mullahs" for Saddam Hussein, and
you have a perfect expression of the Bush administration case for
making war on Iran.
So,
even while publicly focusing on Iran's weapons of mass destruction,
key administration figures are certainly thinking in geopolitical
terms about Iran's role in the global energy equation and its capacity
to obstruct the global flow of petroleum. As was the case with Iraq,
the White House is determined to eliminate this threat once and
for all. And so, while oil may not be the administration's sole
reason for going to war with Iran, it is an essential factor in
the overall strategic calculation that makes war likely.
April
12, 2005
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture.
Michael
T. Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire
College and the author of Blood
and Oil: The Dangers and Consequences of America's Growing Dependency
on Imported Oil (Metropolitan Books).
Copyright
© 2005 Michael T. Klare
Tom
Engelhardt Archives
|