Weekend
Edition
April 21 / 22, 2007 Showdown
at Chevron [Photos] [More Photos] [Still More Photos]
On April 19th in San Francisco, activists,
protesting what they called moves by U.S. and British petroleum
corporations to take greater control of Iraq's oil, staged a
mock celebration which began at a downtown Chevron station.
In front of a banner reading "Mission (Nearly) Accomplished/
Iraq Oil Theft Law," anti-war protestors wearing facemasks
of oil company executives took turns explaining to the assembled
press why they were toasting the impending passage of a law in
Iraq's parliament that would "liberate" the country's
oil to British and U.S. companies.
Antonia Juhasz, visiting scholar
at the Institute for Policy studies and author of the excellent
history "The Bush Agenda: Invading the World, One Economy
at a Time," recently wrote that if passed, "the new
law would go a long way toward helping the oil companies achieve
their goal... transforming Iraq's oil industry from a nationalized
model closed to American oil companies except for limited (although
highly lucrative) marketing contracts, into a commercial industry,
all-but-privatized, that is fully open to all international oil
companies."
Demonstrators wearing cut-out
faces of CEOs Rex Tillerson of Exxon Mobil and John Browne of
BP exulted in the war helping their companies secure access to
more petroleum. Nearby, a seemingly over-caffeinated Dick Cheney
waved a sign with a large Chevron logo which said "This
War Has Nothing to Do With Oil" and danced to appropriate
numbers blaring from a nearby boombox, including "Celebration,"
"Money (That's What I Want)," and "Fight For Your
Right (to Party)." (In a 1999 speech to the Institute of
Petroleum in London, Cheney, then CEO of oil services company
Halliburton, said: "By 2010 we will need on the order of
an additional fifty million barrels a day. So where is the oil
going to come from? [] The Middle East, with two thirds of the
world's oil and the lowest cost, is still where the prize ultimately
lies.")
Dancing next to the snarling
Cheney were two members of local guerrilla theatre troupe The
Ronald Reagan Home for the Criminally Insane, their faces covered
by oversized head shots of Condoleeza Rice and George W. Bush.
Ms. Rice's stand-in was also carrying a sign with a Chevron
insignia, this one reading "Thanks For the Record Profits,
Sorry About Your Kids."
San Francisco resident Jim
Morrison, who was sporting the visage of Chevron CEO David O'Reilly
on his mask, told me, "listening to Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales testifying before Congress today about his role in the
dismissal of eight U.S. attorneys left me upset that the firing
of attorneys is scandal, while the much more disturbing scandal
for me, Gonzales's role in diluting our historical antipathy
to torture, is no longer talked about. That's one of the reasons
I came out today, that our continued misappropriation of Iraq's
resources is being facilitated by a military occupation which
employs torture, and I think we as U.S. citizens are complicit
in that torture unless we speak out."
A gas station employee taking
money from behind bulletproof glass told an activist, "I
don't think my manager will be happy, it appears to be discouraging
many customers from coming in."
Mock chants from protestors
as they marched to San Francisco's Federal Building included
"More Blood for Oil!" (an ironic inversion of the standard
"No Blood for Oil!"), "Whose Oil? Our Oil!"
and "How Did Our Oil Get Under Their Soil?"
Once at the Federal Building,
site of San Francisco congresswoman and Speaker of the House
Nancy Pelosi's local office, activist David Solnit told the assembled
activists and passersby that Pelosi shared responsibility for
the potential oil giveaway since the supplemental spending bill
Democrats just united behind contains Iraqi approval of the oil
law as a "benchmark" for a belated U.S. departure from
the occupied country. Toby Blome of the anti-war group CODEPINK
encouraged Pelosi's constituents to step up grassroots pressure
on Pelosi to drop that "benchmark." Jeff Grubler,
co-founder of the The Ronald Reagan Home for the Criminally Insane
then told the crowd, "The proposed Hydrocarbon Law is supposed
to go before Iraq's Parliament next week. The Hydrocarbon Law,
which we prefer to call the 'Iraq Oil Theft Law,' has its origins
in the U.S. State department and was drafted and written in English
by the U.S. contractor BearingPoint. There apparently was no
rush to translate it into Arabic. Most members of the Iraqi parliament
only saw the draft of the law after it was leaked to the press
months after the Bush Administration, the big oil companies and
the International Monetary Fund had all viewed it."
As the anti-war protestors
began putting away props and heading to the nearby weekly peace
vigil sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee, I
asked Grubler how he felt Iraqis would fare if this law passes.
Grubler said, "If that happens, the law will give the Iraq
National Oil Company exclusive control of only 17 of Iraq's 80
known oil fields, leaving two-thirds of known reserves and all
of its as yet undiscovered reserves open to foreign control for
at least a generation. Iraq will lose hundreds of billions of
dollars in oil revenue and tens of thousands of much-needed jobs.
Most Iraqis have been kept in the dark about this law and, possibly,
if protestors in the U.S. and England make enough of a stink
the people of Iraq will finally hear about it through international
media."
Iraq's five trade union federations,
representing hundreds of thousands of workers, have opposed the
law via a statement rejecting "the handing of control over
oil to foreign companies, which would undermine the sovereignty
of the state and the dignity of the Iraqi people."
Ben Terrall is a freelance writer based in San
Francisco. He can be reached at bterrall@igc.org
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