Thursday 25th of April 2024

beyond pollution .....

beyond pollution .....

No mercy. There, in two words, you have the White House game plan for BP. It's no use Mayor Boris Johnson bleating about the "huge exposure of British pension funds to BP" and it being "a matter of national concern if a great British company is being continually beaten up on the airwaves". It's worse than useless for Lord Tebbitt to splutter about "a crude, bigoted, xenophobic display of partisan, political, presidential petulance against a multinational company."

We're talking about something infinitely more important to Barack Obama than the possible bankruptcy of BP, the ruin of BP investors on both sides of the Atlantic, or an eventual takeover of the reeling company by Petro-China. We're talking about the political survival of Obama and his party across the next four years, starting with the midterm elections this coming November.

Two weeks ago the president and his advisors realised that they were headed for the rocks. The Great Reconciler of 2008 was being reclassified in the popular mind as the Great Wimp of 2010.

No mercy for BP from Obama the cagefighter

meanwhile .....

Boris Johnson and Lord Tebbit have rallied to the defence of BP after the oil giant's share price fell to a 13-year low and investors took fright at Barack Obama's increasingly hostile rhetoric. Tebbit used his website to denounce Obama's "presidential petulance".

BP shares fell 15 per cent on the New York Stock Exchange last night - a sell-off which encouraged an 11 per cent fall in London in early trading today, although they later recovered to a mere 6 per cent deficit by 11.30am.

BP said in a statement before London opened: "The company is not aware of any reason which justifies this [New York] share price movement."

But the reason is obvious to everyone else. BP shares have been falling ever since April 20, when the Deepwater Horizon exploded, breaching the Macondo well and causing oil to spill into the Gulf of Mexico.

The most recent falls come after an announcement yesterday by the White House that it wants BP to pay the salaries of staff the oil company was forced to lay off after Obama introduced a moratorium on oil exploration in the Gulf of Mexico following the oil spill.

It is only the latest in a string of aggressive statements against BP, which are designed to help Obama combat accusations of wimpishness in the run-up to November's mid-term elections, but which have become a drag on the BP share price.

Earlier this week, Obama suggested he'd fire BP CEO Tony Hayward if he could, and there are ongoing attempts to prevent BP paying a dividend to its shareholders. US politicians have taken to pejoratively describing BP as 'British Petroleum' - a name the company has not used since the 1990s.

BP oil spill: Tebbit and Boris Johnson attack 'bigoted' Obama

 

oily futures .....

The grim video feed of oil pouring into the Gulf of Mexico got even worse on Wednesday after BP had to remove the containment cap because a robotic submarine collided with a vent.

Even before this setback to contain the massive flow of oil into the gulf, online speculation has fueled fears that the leaks could be much greater than what's been shown.

According to these theories, such leaks at the bottom-that is, below the sea floor-could present a new "worst-case scenario" for the disaster, which has now stretched past its second month. 

It's possible that hydrocarbons are leaking out the bottom or sides of the well. If so, they might erode surrounding sediments and undermine the foundation upon which the 450-ton blowout preventer sits.

If such leaks aren't sealed off in time, the entire structure could topple over. "After that, it goes into the realm of 'the worst things you can think of,'" writes a commenter on the oil- and energy-focused website The Oil Drum. It was this commenter's post that has become the subject of wider speculation. "The well may come completely apart as the inner liners fail. There is still a very long drill string in the well that could literally come flying out ... at the very least we are stuck with a wide open gusher blowing out 150,000 barrels a day of raw oil or more."

a prize from fairyland .....

To understand BP and its contempt for environmental and human rights, we have to go back to the company's origins, in British efforts to dominate Iran and its natural resources.

BP Imperialism

BP's original name was the Anglo-Persian Oil Company. It owes its existence to the corruption of Iran's monarchs, who over several decades sold off the country's resources to foreigners to support their own lavish lifestyles. The reigning Shah of Iran in 1891 sold Iran's entire tobacco industry to the British Imperial Tobacco Company for £15,000; the Tobacco Revolt, a mass boycott by the Iranian people, forced him to cancel the deal. In 1902 his son, the next shah, sold exclusive rights to Iran's oil and natural gas to a London financier, William Knox D'Arcy. A group of British investors formed the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (APOC) to exploit what was called the D'Arcy concession. By 1913, Anglo-Persian was extracting huge amounts of Iranian oil and had built the world's largest oil refinery at Abadan. With World War I imminent, at the urging of Winston Churchill the British government bought a 51 percent share of the company. (In the 1980s Margaret Thatcher privatized the government's BP holdings.)

The terms of the D'Arcy concession were obscenely one-sided. Churchill called it "a prize from fairlyland beyond our wildest dreams." Iran was promised a 16 percent royalty, but the Brits cheated on the calculation and in 1920 paid Iran a pitiful £47,000, while they made millions from its oil.

"The standard of living that people in England enjoyed all during the 1920s and '30s and '40s was due to Iranian oil," says journalist Stephen Kinzer." But at the same time, Iranians were living in some of the most miserable conditions of any people in the world."

Oil workers at the Abadan refinery - whose labor was largely responsible for Britain's prosperity - were paid 50 cents a day with no benefits. They lived in a shantytown called Kaghazabad (Persian for "Paper City") with no running water or electricity, surrounded by mud, stagnant water, and biting flies.

The monarchy's sell-off of Iran's patrimony fueled popular opposition to the Qajar dynasty, which had ruled Iran since 1794. A rebellion in 1905 forced the Shah to accept a parliament (the Majlis) and constitution. But the monarchy and the British reversed many of the democratic reforms. In 1919 the British imposed the Anglo-Persian Accord, giving them control of Iran's army, treasury, transport and communications - making Iran a virtual British colony. In a final revolt against the Qajars, the Majlis in 1925 deposed the hated Ahmad Shah and offered the Peacock Throne to an uneducated but ruthless military officer named Reza.

Reza Shah ruled with an iron fist - he allowed no labor organizing nor press freedom - but enacted some modernizing reforms and pushed back against the British. In 1928 he demanded a better deal for Iran's oil. Anglo-Persian stalled negotiations for four years. Only when the Shah angrily declared the D'Arcy concession cancelled did the company yield a little - it gave up claim to some territory, agreed to pay a minimum annual royalty of £975,000, and changed its name to Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC) because the Shah did not like the name Persia.

Reza's pro-Nazi sympathies led the British to overthrow him in 1941, placing his 21-year-old son Mohammad Reza on the throne. But removing the strongman had unintended consequences.

In March, 1946, oil workers at the Abadan refinery arose in an unprecedented strike, demanding better housing, healthcare, and AIOC's compliance with Iran's labor laws. The British refused to negotiate, stirred up divisions between majority Persian workers and ethnic Arabs, and arranged for two British warships to show up just off shore. They ended the strike with promises to obey the labor laws, which they never did.

With Reza Shah gone, the Majlis also came back to life. The movement in parliament and in the nation for democracy and freedom from British domination soon centered around Mohammad Mossadegh, long one of the country's most principled and incorruptible politicians.

"The Iranian George Washington"

In early 1951, the Shah and the British lost control of Iranian politics. On March 15, with overwhelming popular support, the Majlis voted unanimously to nationalize AIOC's assets, creating the National Iranian Oil Company. On April 28 the Majlis overwhelmingly elected Mossadegh - Anglo-Iranian's strongest opponent- as prime minister.

The British sought revenge. Anglo-Iranian removed all of its managers and technicians (it had refused to train Iranians for such positions.) It refused to ship Iran's oil in its tankers (Iran owned none) and organized a global boycott of Iran's oil. The British navy even seized an Italian tanker carrying Iranian oil. The British position was that Iran had "stolen" its oil. They wanted U.S. help, but President Harry Truman was sympathetic to Iran and demanded that the British negotiate with Mossadegh - something they had no intention of doing. Truman, however was unwilling to buck the British economic blockade of Iran, which was strangling its economy and tightening the screws on its democracy.

Anglo-Iranian wanted a British military invasion of Iran. Not only did Truman object, but Labor Party Prime Minister Clement Attlee had no stomach for it.

Not so Winston Churchill, who returned to power in the 1951 British election. In the campaign, the Conservative Churchill attacked the Labor Party for lack of aggressiveness against Iran. Spies operating out of the British embassy worked to overthrow Mossadegh. When Mossadegh learned of this, he broke off diplomatic relations, closing Britain's embassy and expelling its spies as well as its diplomats.

Mossadegh came to New York in October 1951 for a UN Security Council debate on a British resolution condemning Iran's oil nationalization. Mossadegh, a skilled lawyer and parliamentary debater, clearly beat the British UN ambassador, and increased public support for Iran in the U.S. and worldwide. He went to Washington to meet President Truman, stopping in Philadelphia to visit the birthplace of American democracy, Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell. Time magazine put him on its cover as "Man of the Year," calling him "the Iranian George Washington."

Over many years, Britain developed a network of Iranian agents and bribed officials. But with its Secret Intelligence Service kicked out of Iran, it couldn't do much. The 1952 election of Republican President Dwight Eisenhower revived British hopes, and the two brothers chosen to run Eisenhower's foreign policy - John Foster Dulles as secretary of state and Allen Dulles as CIA director - signed on to British coup plans even before the new administration took office. President Eisenhower resisted, but the Dulleses won him over, not on the basis of British oil interests, but with Cold War fears of an imagined Soviet takeover of Iran.

Kermit Roosevelt, a top CIA operative and grandson of Theodore Roosevelt, ran "Operation Ajax" from the U.S. embassy in Teheran. He took up where the British left off, bribing generals, newspaper publishers, street gang leaders and Muslim clergy. Stories planted in newspapers and riots by hired mobs painted a false picture of Mossadegh as an ally of Russia and an enemy of Islam.

Killing Democracy for Oil

Iranians overwhelmingly supported Mossadegh and his policies. He advanced the rights of women, enacted sick pay and unemployment compensation for workers, and freed peasants from forced labor for landlords. But with the cooperation of the Shah and key military leaders, a few CIA agents in August 1953 overthrew Mossadegh and killed democracy in Iran. The new regime arrested the 71-year-old Mossadegh, tried and convicted him of treason, and sentenced him to three years in prison and life under house arrest. He died in 1967.

The coup installed General Fazlollah Zahedi as prime minister, but he lasted only two years. The Shah regained the absolute power of earlier shahs, and he hired and fired prime ministers at will. Officers loyal to Mossadegh were shot, as were other democrats and dissidents, and for the next 26 years the Shah ruled through the terror of his secret police, the Savak.

Iranian democracy died so the British could own Iran's oil. But because the U.S. government overthrew Mossadegh, the British lost their monopoly. AIOC - renamed British Petroleum in 1954 - got 40 percent control of Iran's oil. Another 40 percent went to the five major American oil companies, and the remaining 20 percent to Royal Dutch Shell and the French Petroleum Company, now known as Total.

In 1963 the Shah gained a resolute enemy when his police arrested Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who as a young Shiite cleric had opposed Mossadegh. But the 1979 Iranian Revolution that overthrew the Shah included much more than Islamic fundamentalists. In the mass demonstrations of 1978 and '79, many carried pictures of Mossadegh. This was both a protest against his overthrow and a call for the kind of secular democracy he had represented.

The first post-revolution governments were dominated by people associated with Mossadegh and his principles, including Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan and President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr. But when President Carter allowed the ex-Shah to come to the U.S. for medical treatment, many Iranians feared a repeat of 1953 - a U.S. coup to restore the Shah. A group of Islamic militants seized the U.S. embassy - the place from which the 1953 coup had been organized - and held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days. The hostage crisis doomed Carter's re-election, and enabled Islamic fundamentalists around Khomeini to consolidate power.

The past 31 years of bad U.S.-Iranian relations have their roots in the CIA overthrow of Mossadegh, on behalf of an arrogant British oil company. Few Americans remember what happened in Iran in 1953, but nearly all Iranians do. When U.S. presidents preach about the virtues of democracy, it sounds like hypocrisy to millions of people around the world who know that Iran once had the beginnings of a democracy, but the U.S. government killed it.

Long before BP poisoned the Gulf of Mexico, our government's support for that company poisoned our foreign relations. Perhaps it is time for us to do what Prime Minister Mossadegh and the Iranian people did in 1951, and declare that BP is unfit to control our resources - and that our oil, our environment, and our government should belong to us.

Learn More

A highly-readable account of the 1953 coup and its impact is All the Shah's Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror by Stephen Kinzer, a veteran New York Times foreign correspondent (2003, 296 pages, paperback).

BP's Long, Bloody History of Reckless Greed

Those who do not learn from history are bound to repeat it.

Good one John. And I quote the last para....

"Long before BP poisoned the Gulf of Mexico, our government's support for that company poisoned our foreign relations. Perhaps it is time for us to do what Prime Minister Mossadegh and the Iranian people did in 1951, and declare that BP is unfit to control our resources - and that our oil, our environment, and our government should belong to us."

How prophetic?  Another indication that the "people" of a “democratic” nation are invariably subjugated by their US controlled media and the Military Corporate.

I note today John, that the misnamed "The Australian" reported….

In an exclusive interview with The Australian, Commodore Bainimarama said his "Engagement with the Pacific" summit was a meeting of the Melanesian Spearhead Group plus other island nations -- the summit he originally sought, on which "we'd spent a lot of money" ($170,000) -- in all but name.

After all of these years we are now learning that the Howard “my way or the highway” so-called choice is that, being a part of the world wide US/UK/Zionist military/corporate is that kind of a choice of - eventually starving from sanctions and blackmail or going back to the absolute Monarchies – this time of  absolute military dictators.

Otherwise, nations like Australia who have had the fortune of being governed by Labor occasionally, when we have staved off the US military/corporate – at least during the “Lucky Country” government of Gough Whitlam.

You point out the situation with Iranian PM. Mossadegh who I barely remember, but then again, would the foreign media want us to know? It seems to me that the similarities between PM Mossadegh and Commodore Bainimarama are evident at least in the desire that those countries should control their own assets and their own future.

But – they understood that they didn’t have the power to influence the world wide observers (read media) and acted accordingly on a purely unilateral way.  What I believe Commodore Bainimarama is trying to do is to return to the Fijians their sovereign right to govern themselves without political or military interference by anyone, including the methods of the racist Howard Foreign Minister Alex Downer and any subsequent regime.

Every force develops an equal and opposite force and the "divisive only for profit tactics" of the Murdochracy is intended to maintain and increase the opinions of only the conservatives of a world tired of that method of predatory exploitation.

However, these profiteering foreigners, exploiting our assets, have the gall to claim that we should be grateful since they employ some, but not anywhere near all, Australians along with their dollar an hour Howard work visas from Asia.

God Bless Australia Howard – not America.  NE OUBLIE.