News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinewar-on-terroriraqoil — Viewing Item


Russia iraq oil { September 30 2002 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A20618-2002Sep29.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A20618-2002Sep29.html

The U.S., Russia And Iraqi Oil


By Eugene Rumer
Monday, September 30, 2002; Page A19

Giants of the American and Russian oil industries will come together in Houston this week for the first U.S.-Russia Commercial Energy Summit. The event will bring together Cabinet members, top corporate executives, legislators and financiers and could lead to a breakthrough. It will be an opportunity for the United States and Russia to lay the foundation for a genuine global energy partnership.

As officials, executives and legislators discuss ways to bring more Russian oil to U.S. and global markets, they should not lose sight of oil as a strategic commodity and of the truly historic opportunity before the United States and Russia to form a partnership that could bring stability and security to the global oil market. That means they need to discuss the future of Iraq, the nature of U.S. and Russian interests there and the opportunity a post-Saddam Hussein Iraq would present to the U.S. and Russian oil industries.

The Russian oil executives attending the Houston summit, including some holding contracts with Hussein's government, have been watching U.S. policy toward Iraq with a wary eye. They are concerned that the post-Hussein oil sweepstakes will be rigged against them. They have used a variety of surrogates to let it be known that when Iraq's future leaders award new oil contracts, Russian oilmen want a seat at the table.

With two U.S. Cabinet secretaries in attendance -- Commerce's Donald Evans and Energy's Spencer Abraham -- as well as scores of other senior officials, Russia's oilmen will be looking for clues about the direction of U.S. Iraq policy. After all the talk in the media recently about the need for the United States to forge an anti-Hussein coalition, about Russia's pivotal role in this effort and about Russian stakes in Iraq, their interest in the Houston summit is understandable.

The summit will be an opportunity for U.S. policymakers to engage some of the most powerful people in Russia, a country in which oil and gas account for 40 percent of the exports. When Russian oilmen speak, President Vladimir Putin listens.

But for all their wealth and influence at home, these oilmen have had to pursue recognition and respect abroad. Their reputations suffered badly in the 1990s, first when insider privatization schemes landed them billion-dollar assets for pennies on the dollar, then as a frenzy of asset-stripping in the aftermath of the financial collapse of 1998 left many of their creditors, both at home and abroad, holding the bag.

In recent years, the performance of Russia's oil industry has improved; several privately controlled Russian companies have made important steps toward greater transparency, better corporate governance and more efficient operations.

Yukos, Russia's second biggest oil company, has been especially active in an effort to spruce up the tarnished image of the Russian business community by donating money to charities, reaching out to Wall Street and courting the political establishment in Washington. The message of Yukos and its chairman, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, is that the bad old days of Russian capitalism are over and that Russia's new business elite is ready for a long-term partnership with the United States.

Russian oil companies want better access to international capital markets and cutting-edge technology, both of which they need to sustain and expand oil production vital to Russia's growth and financial stability. But that is not all. The best and brightest among Russia's oilmen crave international acceptance because it is their best guarantee against the vagaries of the Russian domestic political scene, where, despite a decade of capitalist reforms, the specter of re-nationalization still lurks. With this kind of domestic uncertainty likely to be a fact of life in Russia for years to come, the oil tycoons' best insurance is in business and political alliances outside their country. The latest Iraq crisis is an opportunity these Russian oilmen must have been praying for -- a chance to sell out Hussein in exchange for a piece of Iraqi oil and a new partnership with Washington.

As tensions in the Persian Gulf escalated in recent months, Russian oil barons telegraphed -- repeatedly and with unprecedented clarity -- the price of their acquiescence to regime change in Baghdad. All along they have made clear that they are not asking for guarantees, merely reasonable assurances of Washington's goodwill and influence to back up their claims, possibly in partnership with U.S. companies.

Regardless of whether war in Iraq can be avoided, these oil tycoons can be critical to American efforts to isolate Hussein and undercut Moscow's residual support for him. And if war in Iraq is imminent, Russian oil companies -- in partnership with U.S. companies -- could help lay the foundations for a true U.S.-Russian energy partnership. Russia's 5 million barrels of oil a day in exports, combined with Iraq's projected capacity of 4 million barrels, could match Saudi Arabia's daily output of 8 million barrels and become an unprecedented force for stability in the global oil market. That's why it is very much worth watching what comes out of Houston this week.

The writer is a senior fellow at the National Defense University's Institute for National Strategic Studies. The views expressed here are his own.




© 2002 The Washington Post Company


After 36 years oil giants return to iraq { June 19 2008 }
Blair advisor says war for oil
Bp shell gets bulk iraqi crude oil
Bush funds shift to oil production and security { September 13 2004 }
Cheney 2001 energy task force { July 18 2003 }
Cheney eyes iraq before 911
Cheneys oil map { July 19 2003 }
Iran US stooge chalabi takes over oil { January 2 2006 }
Iraq agreements with major oil companies fail { May 2008 }
Iraq government to allow oil privitization { December 11 2006 }
Iraq oil ministry control { April 20 2003 }
Iraq oil mission successful says reporter { March 20 2006 }
Iraq producing less oil than under saddam
Iraq unions against oil privatization { November 2006 }
Iraqi union protesters fear loss of oil control { June 3 2007 }
Iraqi union workers protest oil privatization { June 5 2007 }
Iraqi war oil { September 15 2002 }
Iraqis fights over foreign oil rights { April 2007 }
Iraqis protest theft of sovereignty oil { June 2007 }
Iraqis want un control oil cash { May 9 2003 }
Israel eyes iraqi oil { April 9 2003 }
Israeli firm awarded oil tender in iraq { February 25 2004 }
Its the oil { September 23 2002 }
Last pipeline oil peak
Law keeps central control over oil in iraq { January 20 2007 }
Maybe 100 barrel
Oil advisor conflict interest { May 16 2003 }
Oil output plunges to lowest levels { January 3 2006 }
Post war iraq lags in oil production { May 2 2005 }
Pre 911 oil contracts { July 18 2003 }
Protect oil { January 23 2003 }
Re engages oil { September 17 2002 }
Russia iraq oil { September 30 2002 }
Tricle could become gusher { May 10 2003 }
US advised iraqi ministry on oil deals { June 30 2008 }
Us asks israel explore reopening pipeline
Us wants oil industry control { May 9 2003 }
US written iraqi oil law opposed by iraqis
War oil stability { February 1 2003 }
Western companies to get 75 perc of iraqi oil profits

Files Listed: 40



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple