IRAQ AND THE POLITICS OF OIL
From University Press of Kansas:
Was the Iraq war really about oil? As
a senior oil advisor for the Office for Reconstruction and Humanitarian
Assistance (ORHA) and briefly as minister of oil, Gary Vogler thought he knew.
But while doing research for a book about his experience in Iraq, Vogler
discovered that what he knew was not the whole story—or even the true story.
The Iraq war did have an oil agenda underlying it, one that Vogler had
previously denied. This book is his attempt to set the record straight.
Iraq and the Politics of Oil is a fascinating behind-the-scenes
account of the role of the US government in the Iraqi oil sector since 2003.
Vogler describes the prewar oil planning and the important decisions made
during hostilities to get Iraqi oil flowing several months ahead of schedule.
He reveals how, amid the instability of 2006 (largely fueled by the arrogance
of early US decisions), the fixing of the Bayji Refinery contributed
significantly to the success of the oil sector in the Sunni part of northern
Iraq during and after the surge. Vogler gives us an expert insider’s view of
the largest oilfield auctions in the history of the international oil industry,
and his account shows how US Forces’ focus on a single Iraqi point of failure
in 2007 was a primary factor in the record productions and exports of 2012
through 2017.
But under the successes so deftly
chronicled here, a darker political narrative finally emerges, one that reaches
back to the decision to go to war with Iraq. Uncovering it, Vogler revises our
understanding of what we were doing in Iraq, even as he gives us a critical,
close-up view of that fraught enterprise.
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