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Dave Lindorff: Want Cheaper Gas and Oil? End the Damned Wars!

Americans are in a panic over rising gas and heating oil prices, and with reason. For months, the price of a barrel of crude oil has been rising steadily, hovering around $127.

Analysts keep getting trotted out on TV and in print, attributing the dramatic price rise to everything from "peak oil" -- the idea that producing countries have reached their peak of productive capacity, and that the only direction for oil supplies looking forward is down, while demand continues to rise -- to increasing demand in China and India, to supply bottlenecks, to specific news events, such as a pipeline break in Nigeria or a closed refinery in California.

Politicians, such as Republican presidential candidate John McCain and Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, have called for a two-month moratorium on federal gas taxes, but with taxes running at something on the order of 18 cents a gallon, this is not going to do much to bring prices down -- in fact it might do nothing, since retailers would be free to just raise prices to match the tax break and pocket the profits.

One analyst, economist Ismael Hussein-Zadeh, a professor of economics at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, has a different explanation for the price rise, and American motorists and homeowners should pay close attention.

"Oil prices have gone from the mid $20 range in the fall of 2002 to $127 yesterday -- a rise of $100/barrel in just over five years," he says. "And the bulk of that increase can be attributed to the U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and to the threats of war against Iran."

Hussein-Zadeh's analysis looks at a number of ways that the Bush/Cheney wars have contributed to rising oil prices. Chief among these are two factors: the threat to supplies, particularly from the Persian Gulf region from which 20 percent of the world's oil supplies come, and a falling dollar, because oil is priced in dollars, and as it loses value, oil producing countries raise their prices to compensate.

In an article titled "Worried About the Price of Gas? End U.S. Wars," Hussein-Zadeh writes, "Soon after the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq the price of oil began to escalate in tandem with the escalation of war and political turbulence in the Middle East." Furthermore, he says, "Anytime there is a renewed U.S. military threat against Iran, fuel prices move up several notches." If the U.S. were to actually make good on Bush's and Cheney's threats to attack Iran, in Hussein-Zadeh's view, "the sky would be the limit" to oil prices, with $200/barrel being a starting point.

The dollar's fall, too, is significantly a result of the wars -- particularly the Iraq War, he says. That war has been costing the U.S. $200 billion a year, all in borrowed funds. That in itself is a huge hole that has to be funded by borrowing from China, Japan, Saudi Arabia, and other nations. But as Nobel economist Joseph Stiglitz has pointed out, the true cost of the Iraq War, when interest on debt, health costs of injured veterans and other long-term costs are factored in, is more like $3 trillion and rising. And when currency speculators and traders -- the ones who really set the value of the dollar -- make their bets, they're looking at that bigger number, not the little one.

Moreover, it's not just oil that has been driven up in price because of the war. As energy costs have gone up, so has the cost of food, in no small part because most fertilizer is oil-based, and because transportation costs are also largely a reflection of oil prices. As well, to the extent that Americans' food is imported, they are paying in shrinking dollars, whose value is being driven down because of the war.

Hussein-Zadeh says the Bush/Cheney Administration and its neoconservative war promoters have worked hard to offer other more benign explanations for the crippling rise in energy prices and food prices. As he puts it:

"Neoconservative forces in and around the Bush administration and beneficiaries of war dividends -- wishing to deflect attention away from war as the main culprit for the skyrocketing energy prices -- tend to blame secondary or marginally relevant factors: OPEC, China and India for their increased demand for energy, or supply-demand imbalances in global markets. Whatever the contributory role of these factors, the fact remains that the current oil price hikes started with the beginning of the Bush administration's wars against Iraq and Afghanistan. Furthermore, a closer examination of these factors reveals that their roles in the current price inflation of oil have been negligible."

Common sense bears him out here. China's and India's economies have indeed been growing rapidly, and with them, demand for oil, but over the past five years, oil prices have risen 400%, and the same cannot be said for demand. Even if Chinese and Indian growth figures of 7-9 percent per year were accurate (and there is reason to believe they are grossly inflated), that at best would amount to perhaps a 50% increase in economic activity over five years. In fact, during this time, more efficient energy use in the developed countries has largely offset much of the increasing demand for oil in China and India, and even in China and India, much of the energy growth has involved replacing inefficient vehicles and power plants with more efficient ones, so oil consumption isn't rising in lock step with economic growth.

The answer then, to rising oil prices, is obvious then. It is not some silly two-month moratorium on federal taxes -- what Sen. McCain referred to, in a candid moment, as a "little gift" to American vacationers. Nor is it opening up the Arctic refuge to drilling -- a move that would take years to lead to any significant new supply, and which in any case would have minimal impact on overall supply, or on prices. Nor is it opening up the Strategic Oil Reserve -- another drop in the barrel. Nor is it hammering OPEC to boost production -- something they have already done. No, it is much simpler. As Hussein-Zadeh puts it:

"The political implications of this discussion are clear: to bring down the prices of fuel and food requires bringing home the troops. By lowering the energy costs of production and transportation this will help save our own and many other economies from the plagues of inflation and stagnation. It will bring relief to hundreds of millions worldwide who are burdened by crippling energy bills and the crushing costs of feeding their families."

Got that people? If you want to see gasoline drop back below $3.89/gal, get Congress to end the war!

It's that simple.

DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-based journalist. His latest book is "The Case for Impeachment" (St. Martin's Press, 2006 and now available in paperback edition). His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net.

High Oil Prices

Fuck Bush, Cheney, and all the rest of their crooked oil buddy's! They should have all been sent to prison long ago, instead of being allowed to rip off the American people, and bankrupt the country! These criminals will continue with their agenda as long as they are in power! You want cheaper gasoline and heating oil prices? If so, then round up all these crooks! Throw them in prison! Throw away the key! Read the Greg Palast article at the link below. When you do, you'll finally understand how the oil companies are screwing everyone. You'll also be able to figure out why that scumbag Cheney, didn't want any information about his energy policy to go public! http://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/obamas-secret-war-profiteering-tax

Cheaper Gas?

Dave,

You are wrong. There is no oil shortage, there is no gasoline shortage. The prices are totally artificial. It's the latest version of Enron.

Read
http://www.star-telegram.com/ed_wallace/story/651928.html

and be educated as to the depths that journalism has sunk. Ed is honest and truthful and ignored. Have you seen this article referenced on Buzzflash or any of the other sites?

Besides, we don't need a reason to STOP THE WAR!!!

The Old Hippy