A history of meddling
For more than a half-century, American foreign policy dealing with oil has typically been manipulative and misguided,
often both at the same time. The pattern of intrigue has ranged from US officials' secretly writing tax laws in the
1950s (so the Saudi royal family could collect more money from the sale of its oil and American companies could write
off the added payments on their tax returns) to overthrowing a government that showed too much independence in
handling its oil sales.
To illustrate the dark side of American oil policy, we offer two tales, stitched together from declassified
government documents and oil-industry memos, involving a pair of Iraq's neighbours, Iran and Afghanistan.
The first one begins with the rise of a member of Iran's parliament, Mohammed Mossadegh, an impassioned speaker and
popular politician who had long chafed at British domination over his country's oil. The Anglo-Iranian Oil Co.,
partly owned by the British government and a predecessor of today's British Petroleum, held the concession for all of
Iran.
It set production rates and prices as well as Iran's token share of the proceeds. Mossadegh sought a fifty-fifty
sharing agreement, which was then becoming the common arrangement between other oil-producing countries and US
companies. The British refused. In 1951 Mossadegh successfully pushed to nationalize Anglo-Iranian, became Iran's
Premier and established the National Iranian Oil Co.
The British boycotted Iranian oil, and the US joined them. No international oil company would buy Iran's oil. The
Iranians had no independent system for delivering it. They had no technical skills to produce it, since the British
had long relegated Iranian workers to menial jobs. Even when Mossadegh threatened to flood the world with half-price
oil, he was able to deliver only a trickle because of the economic blockade.
As the Iranian government withered, the Eisenhower Administration cut off foreign aid. Unrest followed, and angry
citizens took to the streets. This prompted suggestions that the communists were coming, even though Mossadegh was as
anti-Soviet as he was anti-British.
On Aug. 19, 1953, after the deaths of about 300 people in street riots, the 71-year-old Premier was overthrown. He
was replaced by a retired army general, Fazollah Zahedi. The American-friendly Shah, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, who had
earlier fled the country, returned triumphantly, resumed the throne and reasserted his control.
Media accounts of the coup were seemingly straightforward. It was reported that Iran had been saved from falling into
communist hands and that the communists were blaming Brigadier General H. Norman Schwarzkopf "for alleged complicity
in the coup." The paper said Schwarzkopf, whose namesake son would lead US forces nearly a half-century later as they
drove the Iraqi military out of Kuwait, had visited Iran "but only to see friends, the State Department said."
Another paper said: "This was no military coup, but a spontaneous popular uprising."
It was anything but. When Mossadegh delayed settling with Anglo-Iranian on the takeover of the company, the British
approached the CIA with a plan to remove the Premier and get Britain's oil back. The British could not do it alone,
since they had left Iran. Allen Dulles, the CIA director, and his brother John Foster Dulles, the Secretary of State,
agreed. The Dulles brothers assigned the task of overseeing the clandestine venture to Kermit Roosevelt, a long-time
intelligence operative and the grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt.
In the months leading up to the coup, Roosevelt spent much of his time in Tehran, coordinating efforts of CIA agents
and Iranian sympathizers. To ensure the cooperation of a then indecisive Shah, the CIA turned to one of his old
friends, General Schwarzkopf, who in 1942-48 worked with an internal-security force under palace command that helped
the Shah maintain rule.
The CIA's fingerprints were everywhere. Operatives paid off Iranian newspaper editors to print pro-Shah and
anti-Mossadegh stories. They produced their own stories and editorial cartoons and published fabricated interviews.
They secured the cooperation of the Iranian military. They spread antigovernment rumours. They prepared phoney
documents to show secret agreements between Mossadegh and the local Communist Party. They masqueraded as communists,
threatened conservative Muslim clerics and even staged a sham fire-bombing of the home of a religious leader. They
incited rioters to set fire to a pro-Mossadegh newspaper. They stage-managed the appearance of Mossadegh's successor,
General Zahedi, whose personal bank account they fattened.
With Mossadegh gone, British Petroleum returned to the Iranian oil fields. Some newcomers tagged along. They included
five American companies, the ancestors of today's ExxonMobil and ChevronTexaco. Meanwhile, the US government opened
the foreign-aid spigot. Over the next 25 years, more than $ 20 bn in US taxpayers' money would pour into a decidedly
undemocratic Iran, most of it military aid and subsidized weapons sales for the Shah's armed forces and SAVAK, his
secret police.
As for American oil companies, they would extract 2 bn barrel. of oil from their new Iranian fields. But the access
came with a stiff price tag in US government dollars and Iranian lives. And the Shah's oppression led to the
establishment of the first American-hating Islamic republic, when the Shi'ite Muslim clerics duped by the CIA
overthrow of Mossadegh masterminded their own takeover in 1979, installing the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. For two
decades and counting, American oil companies have been barred by the US government from doing business with Iran. Now
the Shi'ites are seeking to turn Iraq into an Islamic republic.
But all this was merely the overture to the next US foreign-policy decision rooted in oil. This time the players were
the Soviet Union and Afghanistan. In 1977 the CIA sounded an alarm on the Soviets' faltering energy prospects in a
secret 14-page memo titled "The impending Soviet oil crisis." The agency concluded that the Soviet Union, which had
been self-sufficient in oil, was running out and would soon become a major importer.
"During the next decade," the report said, "the USSR may well find itself not only unable to supply oil to Eastern
Europe and the West on the present scale, but also having to compete for OPEC oil for its own use."
Two years later, the Soviets invaded Afghanistan. President Jimmy Carter, concluding that the Soviet army was passing
through Afghanistan to seize the Middle East oil fields, sounded a warning: "An attempt by any outside force to gain
control of the Persian Gulf region will be regarded as an assault on the vital interests of the United States of
America, and such an assault will be repelled by any means necessary, including military force."
When Ronald Reagan replaced Carter in the White House a year later, he turned up the heat. Administration officials
insisted that the Soviet Union's interest in Afghanistan was a prelude to a communist takeover of the Middle East oil
fields. The CIA report on the Soviets' running out of oil gave the Reagan Administration the ammunition to secure
more money from Congress to arm Afghan insurgents and establish a permanent military presence in the Persian Gulf.
Soon after Reagan took office, Defence Secretary Caspar Weinberger announced that it was essential for the US to
establish bases in the Persian Gulf region "to act as a deterrent to any Soviet hopes of seizing the oil fields." The
Reagan Administration began building those bases, sold sophisticated AWACS planes to Saudi Arabia, and conducted
joint military exercises with Egypt and other countries.
And the CIA began one of its longest and most expensive covert operations, supplying billions of dollars in arms to a
collection of Afghan guerrillas fighting the Soviets. The arms shipments included Stinger missiles, the
shoulder-fired, antiaircraft weapons that were used with deadly accuracy against Soviet helicopters and that are now
in circulation among terrorists who have fired such weapons at commercial airliners. Among the rebel recipients of US
arms: Osama bin Laden.
At the same time the US was moving into the Persian Gulf militarily and supplying Afghan rebels, all based on a
faulty CIA oil assessment, it was also secretly supporting Saddam Hussein. The Reagan Administration remained neutral
after Iraq's invasion of Iran in September 1980, but as the war progressed and it appeared that Iran might emerge
victorious, the US secretly backed Iraq, according to declassified government documents.
That began in 1982, when the State Department removed Iraq from its list of countries supporting terrorism. According
to a General Accounting Office report, this "made Iraq eligible to purchase aircraft, helicopters, and national
security controlled items for military end use." Yet another declassified State Department document makes clear that
the Reagan Administration intended to implement regulations that would lift restrictions on exports "to both Iran and
Iraq of five chemicals that could be used in chemical weapons production." This made sense, as the US was peddling
arms to Iran as well via the Iran-contra conduit.
The root of all this folly was the US government's officially sanctioned version of faltering Soviet oil production,
which was at odds with reality. To be sure, Soviet oil production was trailing off. But the Soviets were not running
out of oil. Nor would they become dependent on imports. Rather, they were using primitive technology and needed to
make investments in their infrastructure. In fact, Russia today is the world's second largest producer, after Saudi
Arabia. Instead of becoming a major buyer of middle east oil, as the CIA had warned, Russia ships 3 mm barrel. A day
to other countries, including the US.
As all this makes clear, the former Soviet Union was not running out of oil. Neither is the world. The one exception:
the US, which was the Saudi Arabia of the first half of the 20th century, is finally running out. As a result, thanks
in part to American policy that put an emphasis on foreign intervention rather than domestic conservation, Americans
are more dependent than ever on imported oil.
