Oil War III: The Engineering of Oil Profits Through War
and Arbitrary Monetary Standards
Copyright © 2003 by H. Michael Sweeney and NOILWAR!

This article reveals:
*The historically demonstrable equation: Low oil prices = low oil profits = war      
   = high oil prices = oil/war industry profits
*Who profits by application of this formula
*Identifies and illustrates Oil War I, II, and III
*Why Saddam Hussein was left in power after Desert Storm
*Why Bush MUST have war immediately
*Why Tony Blair's Government MUST go along with Bush when 90% of Brits      
   say NOILWAR!
*Why France and Germany are against the war when some think their doing      
   so illogical
*Why there is an Oil Crises in Argentina, and what George Bush has to do         
   with it
*Illustrates the value and importance of terrorism to that war

I have stated in prior issues of the Professional Paranoid Newsletter that there
is a formula for war in the Middle East, restated for simplicity, here: Low oil
prices = low oil profits = war = high oil prices = oil/war industry profits. The
question is, can a case be made that oil/war industry interests engineer wars in
order to increase oil prices and profits. To answer that, let us first take a look
at who we are talking about when we say oil/war industry interests. For the
most part, they are often the same people/groups. For another way of viewing
the impact of the information presented, here, and for specific references
useful in verifying some of the statements, I suggest a look at the Time Line for
Treason.

The Players: Who makes a buck when there is a war

OPEC - the cartel of oil producing states have an extreme interest in high oil
prices, given that their actual costs to pump the oil out of the ground do not
vary except according to their own nation's rate of inflation, which can impact
on labor costs and replacement parts for machinery. Chief among these are
the Saudi Royal Family, the Fiasals -- many of which are close buddies and
business partners with the Bush Family, partners with American oil industry
firms, and co-investors in CIA proprietaries and military contractors with Bush
and his Administration friends through their investment and leadership roles in
the Carlyle Group, which is a holding company for dozens of military
contractors (and oil industry firms)

Oil Companies (anywhere in the world) get to raise their prices IMMEDIATELY
when any expected shortage of supply exists -- the old supply and demand
formula. So even though they have yet to pay higher costs to the producers,
the price of oil products (heating oil, gasoline, etc.) rises quickly well in
advance of any change in actual expenditures for oil at higher prices. Once the
shortage manifests in actual higher costs, prices would at some point level out
and represent normalized profits (in terms of percentile, but still higher in terms
of net profit volume).

As a rule, war has NOT genuinely suffered a stifled supply in any dramatic way,
because various oil producers (those not directly involved in blockades or
other war induced production roadblocks) simply increase production rates
--further increasing their profits by virtue of a temporarily larger market share.
Of course, once the war goes away, the prices come back down -- but never
seem to come anywhere near their starting point. The overall profit level of the
oil companies is much higher after the war, and the consumer never gains
back what it had lost. We consumers are too dumb to notice that, apparently,
and no one in government seems interested in monitoring on our behalf.

Military Contractors/Suppliers. That one is not very hard to figure out. All those
destroyed weapon systems and platforms, and expended munitions will need to
be replaced. So much the better if selling to both sides, even if your own troops
end up fighting an enemy armed with weapons your country manufactured. It is
an age old story, and no one is better at it than the US Military Industrial
Complex -- which I call MIIM (Military-Industrial-Intelligence-Media Complex). A
great example is the Carlyle company, which is Of course, that brings us to...

The Military and the CIA. The military always wins in a war, its appropriations
going through the roof, and Generals tending to get more stars with victories.
The CIA is itself deeply enmeshed in the oil industry and in bed with military
contractors, having proprietaries in both industries. In fact, two of three Bush
appointees to the US occupied Afghanistan (see next) are actually former CIA
operatives, both recruited and thrust directly into the White House, the
Department of Defense, and oil industry, and back into Afghanistan's new
puppet government at the same times (two for one special, we might presume.)

Individuals important for the purpose: The George Bush family has extensive
holdings in the oil industry at all levels, including the service industry, which are
firms providing services needed by the oil industry, such as Carlyle Groups
Halliburton.  The Bush family further has significant interests in the war
industries through Carlyle Group. James Baker of Baker and Botts who has a
long list of clients in both the oil and war industries. Dick Cheney hails from
Halliburton, and has profited from Caspian region pipeline projects.
Condoleeza Rice hails from Chevron. All three George Bush appointees to US
occupied Afghanistan, John Maresca, Zalmay Khalilzad as Special Envoy and
Hamid Karzai as Interim Prime Minister -- all worked on Unocalís Afghanistan
pipeline project, Maresca as a Unocal Vice President.

The War Formula Revealed: A review of wars vs. crude oil prices over
half a century

Now lets take a brief look at the wars. Oil prices are adjusted for
inflation/recession to reflect constant 1995 $, and come from the US Dept. of
Energy. Their figures are averaged for the year, and thus, the actual highest
prices for the year are not reflected. Despite this, the numbers are still rather
revealing...

WWII (1941-1945) : Oil prices had held between $11.00 and $13.42 for a ten
year period. But in the war years, oil dropped to as low as $9.32. By 1949,
after the shooting war had stopped and the cold war had begun, oil prices had
peaked to above $16, and remained in that strata for some time, and then
slowly started downhill. Clearly, WWII in Europe was not about oil, but the
Pacific war was -- the US was essentially blocking Japan's access to it.
Regardless, it impacted on oil prices and profits.

Vietnam (1964-76): Oil had started to approach to the old $11 strata. The war
in Vietnam started when oil was in the mid $12 range, but by the time the war
had ended, it was an all time high of $20.39. Again, we probably agree this war
was not about oil, but it clearly impacted on oil prices.

Afghanistan-Russia (1979-1991): This war was argued by various experts as
being ideological, religious, political, and oil related. It is largely coincidental to
a larger (in death tolls) war between Iran/Iraq (see below). For this reason, the
data is essentially identical for the two wars, which could be argued as one in
net effect. While Afghanistan was itself not an oil industry player, the bordering
Russian states were extremely oil rich -- the Caspian basin. Further,
Afghanistan had long been identified as a central key to political power in the
region and was often referred to white papers on Grand Game constructs by
the New World Order groups. The Grand Game is control of the oil in the
region, as promoted by such groups as the Council on Foreign Relations. The
CFR and its think tanks, though its primary goals are very much against US
sovereignty in favor of a one world government, is probably the most influential
power group in Washington DC. It virtually dictates US foreign and domestic
policy as well as policy regarding national security (CIA, NSA, FBI, Department
of Defense.)

The Falklands War (1982): This short war between Great Britain (British
Petroleum) and major oil producer, Argentina, should also be combined into
thinking about the Iraq-Iran war, below. Though it was a very short lived war, it
kept prices high (above $44) for the year -- though otherwise representing a
mere hiccup in oil exports from South America. Yet lessons learned from the
'double whammy' effect of wars effecting oil producers on two continents would
prove useful, later.

The Oil Wars: The first wars which revolve almost purely around oil
interests

Oil War I, Iraq-Iran war (1980-1988): This was clearly and ideological war, but
between two major oil producing states, it illustrates to the oil and war
industries where the money comes from. When combined with the Falkland war
and the more localized impact of the Soviet-Afghanistan conflict, which
bordered both Iraq and Iran, the impact on oil supply and demand is significant.
Oil prices had slipped from the $20 level to near $19 when war talk started to
send oil prices back upward. By the second year of the war, prices had peaked
at $52.42, a new all time high. It remained above $30 until the war started to
die down and other oil producers had taken up the slack. As the war ended,
however, there was a glut on the market from the increased production and the
renewed access to Iraqi and Iranian oil, and oil immediately plunged to a low of
$16.81. The first gas lines were in this period.

Oil War II, Iraq-Kuwait/US war (1990-1991): Iraq is feeling a financial bind, and
oil prices are not what they used to be. Further, other OPEC nations seem
bent on pumping a lot of oil which means both a low profit to Saddam Hussein
and a low market share. That may be, in part, why he invaded Kuwait.
Regardless, all experts agree that he was after their oil fields, if not their oil
customers -- and better seaport access for oil exports, Iraq being largely land
locked. From a low of $15.76 entering the period, oil shoots up as Desert
Storm looms to a high of $23.01. This war is definitely about oil, and I call it Oil
War I.

The Fall of the Soviet Union (1991-1997): This was not exactly a war, but the
Soviets had fallen victim to the Cold War. The date of the actual collapse (Dec
1991) is not as important as are the dates shown in parenthesis, which are the
dates representing a flood of US oil company investments in Soviet oil
resources. These involved a series of bribes in order to gain control at
ridiculously low investment costs. This resulted in roughly a 75% ownership or
control of all Caspian region oil and gas reserves (a trillion dollar value.)  It is
mentioned here because it helps explain why George Bush the Fist did not
take control of Iraq when the chance existed. To do so would have adversely
effected the oil companies attempts to get good prices for ownership of Soviet
oil. Oil prices needed to drop as quickly as possible and it would not do to have
the Soviets see America as owning the region at that time.

Oil War III, the War on Terrorism (2001 - current): By 1994, oil prices had
dropped to $13.49, facilitating reasonable prices for Soviet oil fields to
American oil companies. But now, they needed a way to export the oil -- and to
get prices back up. The only viable way was the pipeline project through
Afghanistan. But the Taliban and their civil war were in the way. So, per other
NOILWAR! articles, Osama bin Laden became terrorist, and was moved to
Afghanistan to befriend the Taliban. While there, 911 happens and the US
immediately associates bin Laden and the Taliban as one. Retaliation
commences and, soon enough, attention swings to Iraq and 'Weapons of Mass
Destruction.'

Simultaneous to all this, we have the Argentina oil shortage going on, which
forces South America and countries relying upon Argentine oil to get it from the
Middle East -- putting more demand on oil from that quarter and sending prices
even higher. Guess what? It turns out that the labor dispute and political
disruption in Argentina seems to be getting its cue from the George Bush
White House and the CIA. The effort to overthrow the Democratic government
through labor revolt is being secretly stimulated by George Bush for no
apparent reason. There is no fit to US foreign policy -- but it is a fit to oil
industry profit motives. For more on this, take a look at an article by W. Clark at
the Independent Media Center.  

This all sends oil prices skyward, steadily. As of this writing, they have eclipsed
$30 a barrel - that being in 2003 dollars, not 1995 dollars. Using the gold
standard as a guide, 1995 to 2003 conversion is ten to one (it takes ten times
as many dollars to buy an ounce of gold - $35 vs. $350); making it $300 a
barrel equivalent. Ergo, gasoline is predicted to be $2 a gallon by spring,
perhaps $3 by summer. Now that's a lube job! But it gets worse. What we are
looking at is another 40% potential boost due to arbitrary manipulation of
monetary standards...

The Euro Gold Standard, OPEC Black Gold Standard, and worthless
I.O.U.s from Uncle Sam

We could name this section "Why War Can't Wait." If we do go in and take
control of Iraq "temporarily on behalf of freedom loving Iraqis", what impact will
that have on oil profits?  Well, as it happens, it will significantly impact on them.
It will, in fact, represent a whole new formula. This new formula has to do with a
kind of "wild card" situation which has never before existed -- the creation and
emergence of a dominant new monetary standard in the world, the Euro Dollar.
As it happens, the US dollar is dwindling rapidly against the Euro. Currently,
they are almost at parity (1 Euro = $1), though when the Euro first came out, it
was worth much less than a dollar. This has a significant role in American oil
company profits -- and indeed, all major US corporations doing business
abroad (megacorps.) It even effects certain "allies" of George Bush in his war
efforts in the same ways and for exactly the same reasons:

************************************

As it happens, Iraq had been forced by the US embargo and other pressures
to switch Iraq from US dollar (pretend money -- Federal Reserve I.O.U. notes)
trade to Euros (based on a real Gold standard). This involved not only his oil
sales but his $10 billion in cash reserves held in European banks from oil sales
-- a fund established as part of the embargo in order to provide food and
medical supplies for Iraqi civilians. Seems that instead of buying those goodies,
he is borrowing Euros against it, and spending that wherever he pleases. But
the real story is that this has strengthened Iraq's financial picture significantly,
by up to 30% over what it would have been with US dollars. The rest of OPEC
has eyed this and is considering switching, too -- or perhaps establishing their
own money standard based on oil (black gold.)

And this brings us to why Tony Blair is such a staunch Oil War III supporter,
and the Germans and French are not. Blair, like Bush, is not really worried
about weapons of mass destruction... he and those in British Petroleum's
Boardroom are worried about the same thing the American oil companies are
worried about. If the exchange standard for oil changes, economic experts
predict a virtual recession for the US, and American oil companies may stand
to loose another 30-40% in attempting to convert US dollars for Euros in order
to buy oil. Great Britain is in the same fix, because they refused the Euro in
favor of the English Pound which is also failing against the Euro almost as
badly as the American I.O.U.s.

France and Germany, on the other hand, use the Euro, and thus, hope the war
is a bust. That means a strong Euro and better buying power -- especially for
oil.  But if the US invades Iraq and takes control, one of the first things
expected of George Bush's puppet government officials installed there is to
revert Iraq back to US Dollars for petro -- especially in sales to Europeans. In
such a move, OPEC would be hard pressed to move ahead to any conversion
strategy, because it might result in a production war which sends prices low (for
both standards.) In addition, George Bush is in a key position to blackmail
select OPEC leaders (especially the Saudi Royals) for their funding of Osama
bin Laden... "Play ball, Faisal, or you might be next in line for Americaís New
War!" It ís that same old carpet of gold or carpet of bombs argument, all over
again.

Thus it is no coincidence that virtually every country in favor of war with Iraq is
not using the Euro standard (i.e., all those Slavic/former Soviet states)... or is
partnered with America in oil ventures in the Caspian (i.e., Turkey...) and every
country which has come out publicly against the war is a Euro nation. The only
noted exception is the Soviet Union, which while both partnered with the US
and not on the Euro, has non the less opposed the war. This may be because
they view with alarm and suspicion the series of Oil Wars for profiteering in the
region, and the ultimate price they may have to pay if the US controls the bulk
of the entire world's supply of oil short of the Argentines. And perhaps they
know about Bush and friends adventures there and fear more trickery is afoot
akin to that used against the Soviets, resulting in loss of control of their own oil
reserves.

So the new formula is War = Euro x 0 = (US$ and £) x 1.7 x Oil Profits x
Caspian Reserves. Perhaps a million people will die before it is over, but the
equation does not factor that in. Boardroom math is like that; better to spill red
blood and have black ink on the bottom line than to save lives and have red ink
at the bottom line. So every one but Bush and friends gets it in the end. So, I
guess there is only one last thing to say: Please pass the Vaseline. On second
thought, I probably can't afford it, since it is petroleum based. I'll use butter.
Government Conspiracy
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      We're here to help..."
Oil War III: Oil Profits Through War
"If the impulse
and opportunity
be suffered to
coincide, we well
know that neither
moral nor
religious motives
can be relied on
as an adequate
control."--
James
Madison,
The
Federalist Papers
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