Gary Vogler
worked extensively in Iraq’s oil sector starting in 2002 when he was recruited
by the Pentagon to plan for postwar situations. That group was then folded into
the Office for Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance (ORHA) and then the
Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA). Vogler would later work as a contractor
and consultant in Iraq until 2015, and was involved in several major projects.
He recently published a book about his experiences Iraq and the
Politics of Oil, An Insider’s Perspective.
1. When people think about the 2003
invasion of Iraq many believe it had to do something with the country’s vast
petroleum resources. Did the U.S. invade Iraq to privatize its oil and sell it
off to foreign companies?
I did not see
anything in 2003 to support such an oil agenda. Phil Carroll and I agreed that
if we did experience an oil agenda by our government such as you describe that
we would resign and depart Iraq immediately. We were the CPA oil leadership
team and we were both products of the US oil industry and former army officers.
We shared a disdain for the thought of US soldiers dying to enrich an oil
company’s profits. Phil was the retired CEO of the Shell US affiliate. He was
my boss from May to September 2003 in Iraq.
I was of the
opinion that our government had no specific oil agenda until I started
researching for my book a few years ago. To my surprise, I discovered an oil agenda,
but it was not the one that many Americans thought. It was not until I read
articles in the UK and Israeli press that I became convinced that an organized
oil agenda did exist and it was perpetrated by the same individuals most
responsible for selling the Iraq war to our country, the so-called
neoconservatives. I could not find any mention of this agenda in the US
mainstream press, only in Israel’s Haaretz and the UK’s Guardian in early 2003.
The articles identified the oil agenda, motive and the players involved.
There were a
few things that I experienced in 2002 and 2003 that did not make sense to me at
the time. I mentally wrote them off as distractions to our mission. Political
appointees at the Pentagon generated those distractions. It was only after
reading about the oil agenda in Haaretz that my experiences of 2003 started to
make sense – like pieces to a puzzle that came together once I saw the whole
picture.
The agenda
was to deliver Iraqi oil to Israel. The motive was that Israel had been paying
a 25% premium for its oil imports since the mid 1990s and needed to fix that
economic burden. From the early 1970s until the mid 1990s, Israel had enjoyed a
special supply arrangement involving Iranian oil, a secret pipeline through
Israel and a very successful and nefarious Middle East oil trader by the name
of Marc Rich. This confidential supply arrangement ceased in the 1990s. The
neoconservatives were going to help Israel fix their oil problem and enrich
their friends and business colleagues at the same time.
Needless to
say, the book contains many details to further support my change in position. I
cannot adequately cover those details in a short interview. Let me just say
that it was not easy for me to change my position a few years ago. I lost a lot
of sleep when I realized that I had risked my life during seventy-five months
in Iraq. I had wrongly believed that oil did not play a role in the decision for
war and there was not an oil agenda. Our country incurred tremendous losses –
to include 4,489 American military killed, over 32,000 seriously injured and a
cost of more than $two trillion. The country of Iraq also incurred very serious
costs of life and destruction to their nation. These things are very haunting.
2. Ahmed Chalabi of the Iraqi National
Congress was one of the main lobbyists in the U.S. pushing for the invasion of
Iraq. He tried to win over the Israeli lobby and the neoconservatives in
Washington by promising that Iraq would sell oil to Israel after Saddam was
deposed. How did that play out?
Ahmed Chalabi
was the prewar anointed Iraqi leader by senior civilian decision makers at the
Pentagon. Chalabi made many promises to the Israel Lobby in the 1990s to get
their support. The CIA and State Department had tried working with Chalabi in
the early 1990s, but quickly distanced themselves from him when they realized
the type of person he was. What did Chalabi promise the Lobby and
neoconservatives to get their support that was of little interest to CIA and the
State Department? One promise was the supply of oil to Israel via the old
Kirkuk to Haifa (Israel) pipeline – this was the first Iraqi oil export pipeline
constructed in the early 1930s. It was closed in 1948 when Israel was created. Chalabi promised that he would reopen and
expand it.
During the
summer of 2003, Chalabi and the neoconservatives must have recognized that
Iraqis would never allow exports of oil to Israel through a known and visible pipeline,
the Kirkuk to Haifa pipeline. I would learn years later that the Baghdad Arabic
press carried articles about the US plans to open the Haifa pipeline and ship
oil to Israel. The Iraqi reporters were reading the same articles in the
Israeli and UK press that I would not see until 2014. These articles motivated
Iraqis inside the oil ministry to attack their own pipelines in July 2003 – the
first major attack on pipelines that supplied crude oil to the Baghdad refinery
was an inside job. It shut down the refinery for several days, created gasoline
shortages and had Iraqis in long gas lines during the hot summer.
Chalabi could
not realistically rebuild the pipeline to Haifa. However, he needed to meet his
commitments of delivering oil to Israel. In the fall of 2003, he ordered the
firing of the Iraqi who managed the marketing of all of Iraq’s oil exports (director
general of SOMO) for refusing to sell oil to Glencore – the company founded by
Marc Rich in the 1970s and supplied most of Israel’s oil for two decades. To
the surprise of the CPA oil group, the new oil minister and his new marketing
manager started selling oil to Glencore in the fall of 2003. We had previously
supported the policy to only sell oil to end users – oil companies with
refining capacity. Phil Carroll and I were aware of the high risk of corruption
by selling to third parties – traders and brokers such as Glencore. We did not
want any corruption during our watch so we endorsed the policy of only selling
to refiners. Chalabi and the new oil minister fired the SOMO director general just
after Phil Carroll departed Iraq and while I was on a break outside of Iraq.
Iraq continued
to sell oil to traders after 2003, including other oil traders besides
Glencore. Today, Israel gets its oil from the traders who buy Iraqi oil from
the Kurds at the Turkish port of Ceyhan.
3. You ran into some real hubris with
U.S. officials. How did the Coalition Provisional Authority’s budget director for
example, influence getting the oil industry back on track after the invasion?
Hubris is the
best word to describe what I saw and experienced with some decision makers who
were driven by either an ideology or another agenda. Most were physically
located in Washington, but a few came out to Baghdad with the initial CPA team.
The CPA budget director in 2003 was one such person. He provided the greatest
obstacles to reconstructing the oil sector after the invasion. The lack of
security provided the second greatest obstacle. That is not just my opinion,
but it was the opinion of all the senior oil advisors during CPA.
The budget
director created a payroll problem in July and August 2003 for the oil ministry
and brought his wife out in September as a consultant to fix the payroll problem
he created. He deemed the existing Iraqi payroll system unsuitable during July
2003, even though a US army colonel and I reviewed the system and found it
acceptable. It was a “pay for performance” system not unlike what western oil
companies used. ORHA had previously agreed to a plan for paying Iraqi employees
under their existing payroll system once we performed our review. The budget
director’s decision to ignore the ORHA plan and create a new civil service
payroll system delayed proper pay to the Iraqi employees. This resulted in the
first labor strike in the history of the oil ministry and stopped oil exports
for a few days in South Oil Company. Other oil ministry operating company
employees became hostile towards their Iraqi leaders because of his payroll
decision. We literally had a revolt inside the oil ministry during the hot
summer of 2003 because of his payroll decision.
His other
decision was to stop providing funds to the oil sector reconstruction effort
after agreeing to fund it earlier in 2003. The oil ministry, CPA and the US
Army Corps of Engineers agreed to a plan in June 2003 of completing over 200
projects in order to meet the US government’s commitment of repairing any
damage to the oil sector incurred during hostilities. The president’s cabinet
had agreed to this policy during the prewar planning. The cost of the projects
was about $1 billion and the CPA budget director had agreed to fund all the
projects. He withdrew the funding in the fall of 2003 after only providing
about 50% of the original estimate. The oil reconstruction effort came to a
halt for several months because he refused to provide funds for the
reconstruction contract.
4. During the Surge you worked on the Baiji
refinery, which was operating at below capacity and had a serious problem with
the Islamic State of Iraq. What happened to get that refinery back on track,
and why wasn’t it sustainable after the Americans left?
The Baiji Oil
Refinery story during the Surge is a great leadership story. The specific
leaders included the Baiji director general Dr. Ali Obaidi, General David Petraeus
and the US army officers who worked with Dr. Obaidi.
The refinery
was operating at about 20% of capacity in early 2007 when Dr Obaidi was moved
from Baghdad to Baiji as the new director general. The refinery was controlled
by ISIS elements at the time. The previous director general had feared for his
life and the lives of his family so he allowed ISIS to gain control of his
refinery. ISIS used the refinery and product distribution to provide financial
support for the growing Sunni insurgency.
General Petraeus
had just been appointed to his new position in Iraq in early 2007. His previous Iraq experience during 2003 as
the Commander of the 101st Airborne Division taught him about the
strategic importance of the Baiji refinery.
He moved a US infantry company to a location inside the refinery fence
to work with Obaidi and his Iraqi oil security force. They eliminated the
internal and external threats to the employees. They raided an ISIS weapons cache
and detained those employees with loyalties to ISIS. The Corps of Engineers
sent an experienced engineer to assist Obaidi with technical issues. The
refinery quickly recovered to normal operating levels within months. The
specific anecdotes I heard while interviewing Obaidi and the company commanders
are included in my book. It provides several examples of how to win the hearts
and minds of the local population by re-establishing security and enabling the
locals to live and work in a normal environment.
The plan to
withdraw US troops in 2011 created a very difficult personal security issue for
Dr. Obaidi. He was a target of the insurgents and depended on the US army for
his own security. He left Iraq and the US troops departed the Baiji Refinery in
early 2011. The refinery experienced an attack in the spring of 2011 from a
strong external force that overwhelmed the Iraqi security. Operations at the
refinery never returned to the Obaidi levels after that attack and ISIS moved
into the refinery in 2014. The Shia militia eventually replaced ISIS and looted
every piece of equipment that was not bolted down.
5. In 2009, Iraq auctioned off some of
its largest oil fields to foreign corporations. The process got off to a rough
start but eventually re-introduced energy companies to the country one of which
was ExxonMobil. They eventually grew disillusioned with the Oil Ministry and
signed a deal with Kurdistan. What was its experience in Iraq both good and
bad?
The Iraq oil
auctions of 2009 were the largest oil auctions ever offered in the
international oil industry. Contracts signed from those auctions would have
taken Iraq’s production from about 2.5 million barrels a day to over 12 million
barrels a day in seven years. Such a level would have placed Iraq as the number
one producer in OPEC, higher than Saudi Arabia. None of us felt like such numbers
would be achievable for many reasons – not the least of which was that the
global market could not take such a quantity in just seven years. However, the
contracts served an important role of re-introducing oil and oil service
companies to Iraq from all over the world.
ExxonMobil
and Occidental were the only two American oil companies who won contracts
during the 2009 auctions. Other well known oil companies included: Shell, BP,
ENI (Italy), Lukoil (Russia), CNPC and CNOOC of China. The contract terms
signed by these companies in 2009 were 20-year service contracts. The contracts
offered by the Kurds were production-sharing contracts, similar to contracts
that western oil companies used in other parts of the world. Baghdad refused to
offer such contracts that gave an equity position for oil still in the ground.
Instead, Baghdad chose a service contract model that served them well during a
period of high prices, but hurt when prices fell.
There were
several issues that created problems for the western oil companies and I
discuss those in the book. The one that seemed to offer the biggest challenge
was delayed payments from Baghdad. Any delay to payments hurt the economics of
the specific projects and Baghdad seldom met their payment terms. The delays
only got worse after 2011 when oil prices decreased. Initial project economics for
the 2009 contracts were barely acceptable to the oil companies. The western
companies felt that they needed to have a presence in Iraq’s oil sector to take
advantage of any future opportunities afforded the companies who signed 2009
contracts. As economics got worse and the security situation deteriorated, a
few companies looked at their investments and decided to decrease their Iraq
exposure. The American companies of Occidental and ExxonMobil made significant
adjustments – Occidental opted out completely and ExxonMobil’s position was
reduced significantly although they remain the operator of the West Qurna oilfield
today.
All of the
oil companies I talked to enjoyed working with the Iraqi engineers and
managers. They found them eager to work and learn. They wanted to learn how
western oil companies operated. Their work ethic was good and enabled much of
the work to be done by locals.
6. The U.S. worked with the Oil
Ministry to build several single point moorings (SPM) in Basra to expand the
export capacity of Iraq. What were the successes and failures of that effort?
The SPM
project was a very successful project and has enabled Iraq to export the record
volumes out of the south over the last few years. The oil minister was quoted
during the phase 1 commissioning of 2012 to say that it was not just an
important oil project, but it was the most important infrastructure project in
Iraq in decades. I devote a chapter in the book to a detailed description of
the project. It started in 2007 with the US seeding the project with a $2
million investment that encouraged Iraq to invest $2 billion that would enable
exports worth $hundreds of billions over the next twenty years.
The successes
were numerous, but I considered the main success to be the partnership between
Iraq and the Americans to push a project that General Petraeus had identified in
2007 as a national security project for Iraq and not just another oil project.
Iraq had attempted SPM projects twice in the previous fifteen years. The first
attempt failed in the early 1990s. The second attempt was with the Japanese government.
The Japanese initiated an SPM project with the oil ministry in 2005, but it
experienced significant problems. It has still not yet been completed.
Our SPM
project included an off shore central metering and manifold platform (CMMP) and
four large SPMs located along the deepest navigation channel in the northern
gulf. The coalition navy was a huge help with the initial surveys and clearing
of the construction area of the northern gulf. Their presence and security
offered assurances for the foreign contractors that were needed to do the work.
The Gulf Region Division of the US Army Corps of Engineers set up the initial
contracts. The oil ministry took control and funded the remaining contracts
needed for completion. I remained as the US advisor for the project until my
departure in late 2011.
South Oil
Company has done wonderful work with their on shore infrastructure to keep the
SPMs operating at high export levels since 2012. The on shore storage and
pumping investments required to support the four SPMs have experienced several
delays. Iraq needed to invest about $4 billion in storage tanks, pumps, piping
and other equipment on shore to operate the off shore SPMs at their maximum
capacity. The oil ministry’s construction company managed the on shore
construction work without any outside assistance. Their lack of experience with
such large projects contributed to the extensive delays. Workarounds using
existing pumps and storage by South Oil Company has helped to decrease the
negative impact from the delays, but future export growth will reach a ceiling
until completion of the on shore projects.
7 comments:
This is very interesting. Thanks for posting it.
I have added the book to my list of books to buy.
Don Cox
Glad you liked it The book is a quick and good read
I believe that this book should be an excellent reference of oil industry condition in Iraq and the influence of politics during the last difficult 15 years. I will have this book for sure, glad to read the interview.Thanks.
Dr. Ali Obaidi
Honored to have you read the interview Dr. Obaidi.
Gary Vogler and Dr. Obaidi, thank you for your service to Iraq.
What are your forecasts for oil production in 2018, 2019 and 2020? Currently oil production is about 4 1/2 million barrels a day.
Would you be willing to work for the Iraqi Oil ministry again? If you were in charge of GoI policy, what would your natural resource strategy be for Iraq?
Tantalising revelations.. the book is a must read
Gary is an honest broker in his analysis. I bought the book when it went on sale. I can't wait for it to be delivered so I can read it. I worked with Gary on several occasions before, during and after the shooting phase in 2003. RBH, COL, USA(Ret)
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