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The
military-petroleum complex
"Prior
to George Bush's Global War on Terror, the U.S. military
admitted to guzzling 4.62 billion gallons of oil per year.
With the Pentagon's post-9/11 wars and occupations, annual
oil consumption has grown to an almost unfathomable 5.46
billion gallons, according to the Pentagon's possibly low-ball
statistics."
In
November 2002, before the invasion of Iraq, then secretary
of defense Donald Rumsfeld told Steve Kroft of CBS that
U.S. saber-rattling toward Iraq had "nothing
to do with oil, literally nothing to do with oil." In 2003, Rumsfeld called
the assertion that the United States had invaded Iraq to get at its oil "utter
nonsense." ("We don't take our forces and go around the world and
try to take other people's . . . resources, their oil. That's just not what
the United States does.") In 2005, speaking to American troops in Fallujah,
Rumsfeld reiterated the point: "The United States, as you all know better
than any, did not come to Iraq for oil." Strong denials for sure, but
were they true?
Rumsfeld's
boss -- and a man who knows a thing or two about addiction
- President George W. Bush, proclaimed, in early 2006, that "America
is addicted to oil." Later that year, Bush almost came
clean about Iraq, admitting (after a fashion), according
to Peter Baker of the Washington Post, that "the war
is about oil." For the first time he used petroleum
as a justification for continuing the occupation of Iraq,
saying, "You can imagine a world in which these extremists
and radicals got control of energy resources." Bush's
acknowledgment was no great revelation. After all, oil is
not only a key driver of the U.S. economy but also a major
source of the nation's energy. As a former oilman (with Dick
Cheney, the former head of oil-services giant Halliburton,
as his vice president), Bush knew this all too well-hence
an invasion of one of the Middle East's key oil lands topped
by an occupation where, initially, looters were allowed to
tear almost every part of the Iraqi capital to pieces, save
for the Oil Ministry.
But
Rumsfeld's military was more than just an armed occupier
sent to lock down the planet's oil lands. It was also a known
petrol addict. In his book Blood and Oil, Michael Klare laid
out the little-acknowledged facts about the Pentagon's oil
obsession:
The
American military relies more than that of any other nation
on oil-powered ships, planes, helicopters, and armored vehicles
to transport troops into battle and rain down weapons on
its foes. Although the Pentagon may boast of its ever-advancing
use of computers and other high-tech devices, the fighting
machines that form the backbone of the U.S. military are
entirely dependent on petroleum. Without an abundant and
reliable supply of oil, the Department of Defense could neither
rush its forces to distant battlefields nor keep them supplied
once deployed there.
And
the deployments DoD has "rushed its forces" to
in recent years - in Afghanistan and Iraq - have sucked
up massive quantities of oil. According to Fuel Line,
the official
newsletter of the Pentagon's fuel-buying component, the
Defense Energy Support Center (DESC), from October 1,
2001, to August
9, 2004, the DESC supplied 1,897,272,714 gallons of jet
fuel, alone, for military operations in Afghanistan.
Similarly,
in less than a year and a half, from March 19, 2003,
to August 9, 2004, the DESC provided U.S. forces with
1,109,795,046
gallons of jet fuel for operations in Iraq. In 2005,
Lana Hampton of the DoD's Defense Logistics Agency revealed
that
the military's aircraft, ships, and ground vehicles were
guzzling 10 to 11 million barrels of fuel each month
in Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere. Yet, while the Pentagon
reportedly burns
through an astounding 365,000 barrels of oil every day
(the equivalent of the entire nation of Sweden's daily
consumption),
Sohbet Karbuz, an expert on global oil markets, estimates
that the number is really closer to 500,000 barrels.
With
such unconstrained consumption, recent U.S. wars have been
a boon for big oil and have seen the Pentagon rise from the
rank of hopeless addict to superjunkie. Prior to George Bush's
Global War on Terror, the U.S. military admitted to guzzling
4.62 billion gallons of oil per year. With the Pentagon's
post-9/11 wars and occupations, annual oil consumption has
grown to an almost unfathomable 5.46 billion gallons, according
to the Pentagon's possibly low-ball statistics.
As
a result, the DoD had some of the planet's biggest petroleum
dealers, and masters of the corporate universe, on its payroll.
In 2005, alone, the Pentagon paid out more than $1.5 billion
to BP PLC - the company formerly known as Anglo-Iranian Oil
Company (on whose behalf the CIA and its British counterpart
covertly overthrew the Iranian government back in 1953) and
then British Petroleum. In 2005, the Pentagon also paid out
over $1 billion to N. V. Koninklijke Nederlandsche Petroleum
Maatschappij -- also known as the Royal Dutch Petroleum Company
(and best known in the United States for its Shell brand
gasoline) - and in excess of $1 billion to oil titan ExxonMobil.
In
2005, ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Petroleum, and BP ranked sixth,
seventh, and eighth on the Forbes magazine's list of the
world's five hundred largest corporations in terms of revenue.
The next year, they bumped their way up to first, third,
and fourth, respectively. They also ranked 29th, 30th, and
31st on the DoD's 2006 list of top contractors, collectively
raking in over $3.5 billion from the Pentagon. The big three
petrogiants are, however, only the tip of a massive, oily
iceberg.Also on the Pentagon’s 2006 list were such
oil services, energy, and petroleum conglomerates as:
Ranking
|
Company name
|
Total take from the DoD
(in dollars)
|
| 6 |
Halliburton |
6,059,726,743 |
| 34 |
Kuwait Petroleum |
1,011,270,194
|
| 45 |
Valero Energy |
661,171,541 |
| 55 |
Refinery Associates of Texas |
576,557,185 |
| 66 |
Abu Dhabi National Oil |
494,286,000 |
| 70 |
Bahrain Petroleum |
477,535,378 |
| 86 |
CS Caltex |
356,313,452
|
| 94 |
Tesoro Petroleum |
310,564,052 |
It's almost impossible to catalog all the companies with at least some ties
to the oil game that are doing business with the Department of Defense,
but if just the most obvious names on DoD's payroll are any indication,
the U.S. military is mainlining petroleum from a remarkable assortment
of places. For instance, in 2005 alone, the Pentagon payroll listed 145
companies (from A & M Oil to Wyandotte Tribal petroleum).
These
145 companies -- far from constituting a complete list of
energy-related firms on the DoD dole - took in more than
8 billion taxpayer dollars in 2005. To put that figure in
perspective, that was more than the army paid out in the
same year to the military-corporate powerhouses Lockheed
Martin, Boeing, Northrop Grumman, General Electric, and the
Bechtel Corporation, combined. Or over $2.7 billion more
than it spent in 2005 on bombs, grenades, guided missiles,
guided missile launchers, unmanned aerial vehicles, bulk
explosives, all guns, rockets, rocket launchers, and helicopters.
No
doubt due to his outfit's penchant for petroleum guzzling,
in 2005, then secretary of defense Rumsfeld issued a memo
calling on DoD staff to develop
plans for employing alternative power sources and energy-saving technologies.
As defense technology expert Noah Shachtman noted in early 2007, while
the "Department of Defense might not care about the environment," it
had met its green goals ahead of schedule. As a result, the Pentagon now
touts itself as environmentally conscious, drawing attention to its use
of wind power at the naval station at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and
its dabblings in "cleaner, 'greener' hybrid fuel." On March 24,
2006, the Pentagon's American Forces Press Service published an article, "Hydrogen
Fuel Cells May Help U.S. Military Cut Gas Usage," speculating that
someday such technology might significantly reduce the military's "dependence
on hydrocarbon-based fuels for transportation needs."
That
day is not yet in sight. In fact, on March 23, 2006, the
day before that article was published, the Pentagon quietly
announced a series of DoD contracts that demonstrated the
degree of its continuing addiction to oil: a $241,265,176
deal with Valero Energy; a $171,409,329 agreement with Shell
Oil; separate contracts of $156,616,405 and $23,923,354 with
ConocoPhillips; a $124,152,364 agreement with Refinery Associates
of Texas; a $121,053,450 deal with Calumet Shreveport Fuels;
a $118,374,201 jet fuel contract with Gary-Williams Energy
Corporation; a $75,094,613 agreement with AGE Refining; a
$43,994,360 deal with Tesoro Refining; and a $29,524,800
contract with Western Petroleum - all of which had a completion
date of April 30, 2007.
Couple
this with the fact that, on Rumsfeld's watch, the Environmental
Protection Agency granted the DoD a "national security
exemption" on trucks that failed to meet current emissions
standards; that the army canceled plans to introduce "hybrid-diesel
humvees" (the current military model gets just four
miles per gallon in city driving and an equally dismal eight
miles per gallon on the highway); and that it similarly dropped
plans to retrofit the fuel-guzzling Abrams tank with a more
efficient diesel engine (the current model, in service in
Iraq, gets less than a mile per gallon), while the air force
deep-sixed plans for the possible replacement of aging "surveillance,
cargo and tanker aircraft engines" - and you're looking
at a Pentagon patently incapable of altering its addiction-addled
ways in any near future.
Since
then, it's been more of the same. In March 2007, the Pentagon,
now under Rumsfeld's replacement, Secretary of Defense Robert
Gates, went on a two-day bender of epic proportions. On March
22 and 23, the DoD announced that it had struck "fixed
price with economic price adjustment" deals, to be fulfilled
by April 30, 2008, with ExxonMobil, Shell, ConocoPhillips,
Valero, Refinery Associates of Texas, and ten other petrogiants
to the tune of $4 billion. Another petro-binge occurred around
the 2007 Labor Day holiday. Over the course of three days,
the DoD acknowledged fuel contracts with BP, Chevron, Tesoro,
and four others worth more than $1.4 billion.
The
Pentagon needs two things to survive: war and oil. And it
can't make the first if it doesn't have the second. In fact,
the Pentagon's methods of mass destruction -- fighters, bombers,
tanks, Humvees, and other vehicles -- burn 75 percent of
the fuel used by the DoD. For example, B-52 bombers consume
47,000 gallons per mission over Afghanistan. But don't expect
big oil (or even smaller petroplayers) to turn off the tap
for peace. Such corporations are just as wedded to war as
their most loyal junkie. After all, every time an F-16 fighter "kicks
in its afterburners and blasts through the sound barrier," it
burns through $300 worth of fuel a minute, while each of
those B-52 missions means a $100,000 tax-funded payout.
According
to retired lieutenant general Lawrence P. Farrell Jr., the
president of the National Defense Industrial Association
("America's leading Defense Industry association promoting
National Security"), the Pentagon is "the single
largest consumer of petroleum fuels in the United States." In
fact, it's the world's largest energy consumer, according
to Shachtman. That, alone, guarantees the military-petroleum
complex isn't going anywhere, anytime soon - just some fuel
for thought next time you head out to a Shell, BP, Exxon,
or Mobil station to fill 'er up.
For
More Information
From
the book The Complex: How the Military Invades Our Everyday
Lives by Nick Turse. Reprinted by arrangement with Metropolitan
Books, an imprint of Henry Holt and Company, LLC. Copyright
(c) 2008 by Nick Turse. All rights reserved.
Published
by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute
for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2008,
Institute for Policy Studies.
Nick
Turse,
a contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus, is the associate
editor and research director of Tomdispatch.com.Petroleumworld
does not necessarily sharethese views.
Editor's
Note:This commentary was originally published by Foreign
Policy In Focus,
Washington, DC: March 24, 2008. Petroleumworld reprint this
article in the interest of our readers.
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04/12/08
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