Quote:
Originally Posted by Claire ex-ax McCain has said differently during his campaign: "My friends, I will have an energy policy that we will be talking about, which will eliminate our dependence on oil from the Middle East. That will prevent us from having ever to send our young men and women into conflict again in the Middle East."
And Iraq was invaded after it announced its oil bourse would change to euros - I'm not saying there is a reason of course because the US (with help from Blair) had another excuse in its pocket but it was another nail in Iraq's coffin. The first thing the "liberators" did was to reverse the petroeuro; it made sure the Oil Ministry wasn't bombed to facilitate this. OK, technically this point isn't directly about oil but about the US protecting its currency and the petrodollar. |
I am breaking up with laughter. That is how the GOP spinmeisters will spin this war and linking it to the higher costs of gas (oil) - an issue dear to the hearts of every American with a car/truck/bus.
You want to know how dummies like Bush get elected? You surround yourself with people who know how to develop and work a message box which that kind of message is.
The reality is this. Despite Iraq's oil wealth and "peak oil" past us there are/were far cheaper ways to explore and develop oil flields than spending $9 billion per month in Iraq fighting a war.
Iraq like the middle east has cheap easy to get at oil which yes, under Saddam were clearly not available to US or British companies like it would have been to friendlier nations like France, China and Russia but for the embargo on Iraq's oil. You don't need to fight a war to get to the oil. There is no creditable source to make that claim but examine what McCain is doing with that statement they entered Iraq for oil. I dislike Bush and this war and I know it has its origins in the cabal of Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Cheney who all wanted a supreme American century. Yes, Jeb Bush signed that document too!!!
I will grant you that the US foreign policy in the Middle East has an oil interest in it, yes, but toppling Saddam and oil was not top of mind when Dubya sent the troops to Iraq.
Mr. Bush senior - also a POTUS- made it clear in his book that he didn't let the troops chase Iraqi's to Baghdad in the Gulf War as he knew there was no exit strategy.
McCain has to take care to not overly criticize the war or he will alienate the GOP base he needs. So what does he do? He links it to the higher costs of gas and says he will have an energy policy to avoid relying in Middle East oil.
Bush could have incented energy/oil exploration with a 1/10 of that money and major oil companies would be finding oil all over the place. Oil fields today don't put out the oil like the good old days but today's drilling methods are vastly improved but that is another debate.
About.com
"The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has estimated the cost of "prosecuting" a war against Iraq at up to $9 billion per month, on top of an initial outlay of up to $13 billion for the deployment of troops to the Persian Gulf region.
In a letter to the House and Senate budget committees, CBO provided Congress with cost estimates for an armed conflict with Iraq, based on recent similar U.S. military operations including those in the Balkans, Afghanistan, and the 1990 Gulf War.
Summary of Iraq War Cost Estimates
CBO estimated the following costs for an Iraq war:
* Initial deployment of troops: $9 billion to $13 billion
* Conducting the war: $6 billion to $9 billion per month
* Returning forces to US: $5 billion to $7 billion
* Temporary occupation of Iraq: $1 billion to $4 billion per month