Baghdad
Snubs Biden over Oil 'Diplomacy'
24
June, 2012
That
Washington was willing to set Vice-President Joe Biden up to be
snubbed by Baghdad demonstrates how serious the north-south war over
Iraqi oil and gas is and how the country is being carved up into the
Iranian-controlled south and the Western- and Turkish-controlled
north.
Absorbing
diplomatic snubs is perhaps largely what US vice-presidents are for,
but nonetheless there is much to be read into this.
The
White House will attempt to downplay the snub, but sources from the
office of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki told reporters on
Tuesday (19 June) that they had cancelled Biden’s visit, which was
to take place in the coming days, as Baghdad was not “ready” for
him.
Biden
was purportedly Iraq-bound largely to diffuse tensions between some
aggressive big oil deals that have culminated in a game-changing
standoff between the central authority in Baghdad and the Kurdish
Regional Government (KRG) in Erbil, in northern Iraq.
Maliki
has seen how this power struggle is playing out, and views Biden as
the KRG’s henchman at this point. It did not help that Biden was
scheduled to visit Erbil and meet with KRG head Massoud Barzani as
well.
Parroting
concerns structured by Iran, Maliki is accusing the US’ Arab
partners, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, of scheming to topple the central
authority in Baghdad, in a “Syria-like” plot. "Qatar and
Saudi Arabia which are meddling to topple the Syrian government are
now doing the same meddling to topple the Iraqi regime. Their goal is
overthrowing the Iraqi ruling system and not overthrowing me,"
Maliki said in an interview with Lebanese-based al-Mayadeen satellite
network, carried by Iranian state-run media.
While
oil and gas are the underlying causes of the Biden snubbing, the
standoff between the KRG’s Barzani and Baghdad has been broiling
for months and involves a number of simultaneous political crises,
not the least of which is the KRG’s refusal to hand over fugitive
Iraqi vice-president Tariq al-Hashemi to Baghdad to stand trial for
heading death squads that targeted Shi’ites. In December 2011,
Hashemi fled Baghdad to seek shelter in northern Iraq. This situation
is causing very serious sectarian tensions in Iraq and combined with
other political crises of a sectarian nature, could help bring down
the government. At the same time, Barzani is attempting to weaken the
government by withdrawing support from Maliki and aligning himself
with the Iraqi List and the Sadrists.
The
US has spent over $1 trillion on the war in Iraq essentially to lay
the foundation for Iran to wield the majority of influence over the
central authority in Baghdad. Left to Washington is largely
Turkish-influenced northern Iraq and a growing alliance with the KRG.
This chunk of Iraq is still a gem, especially for international oil
giants and Western gas pipeline ambitions that bypass Russia.
At
the heart of Maliki’s ire is a sizable oil exploration deal the KRG
unilaterally signed with ExxonMobil, cutting out the middle man
(Baghdad). An issue extensively covered by Oilprice.com, ExxonMobil
signed a deal in October last year for six exploration blocks, two of
which lie outside the KRG’s region and infringe on “Baghdad’s
territory”. Regardless, Baghdad says all oil deals must go through
the central government and hence views the ExxonMobil deal as
illegal. Baghdad’s response has been unequivocal: The US oil giant
must choose between the KRG and Baghdad, but if it chooses the former
there will be no more deals with Iraq’s central authority.
A
key aspect in this power struggle is Ninevah, whose governor has
recently indicated that he might come out in support of the KRG on
the deal, despite the fact that Ninevah is in the south.
Last
week, Maliki sent a letter to Barack Obama requesting that Washington
intervene on behalf of Baghdad and thwart the KRG-ExxonMobil deal.
Washington, of course, has not been forthcoming, hence the snubbing
of Biden. Washington will not intervene. The ExxonMobil deal is part
and parcel of the new geopolitical fault line running through Iraq.
The
KRG is now doing everything in its power to convince ExxonMobil and
other international oil giants that they’ve made the right choice
and that while they might lose Baghdad, Erbil has more to offer in
terms of pricing, profits, security and business atmosphere. This is
behind the media flurry of stories about oil discoveries and
increased output predictions in northern Iraq.
By.
Jen Alic of Oilprice.com
Jen
Alic is a geopolitical analyst, co-founder of ISA Intel in Sarajevo
and Tel Aviv, and the former editor-in-chief of ISN Security Watch in
Zurich.
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