Picked up by FTW's Peak  Oil Blog:
 Peak Oil, Missing Oil Meters and an Inactive Pipeline: The Real Reason for the Invasion of Iraq?
By Paul Cherufka
 In this article I will present research that supports a rather startling  hypothesis: that the USA invaded Iraq primarily to enable the secret diversion  of a portion of Iraq’s oil production to Saudi Arabia. This was done in order to  disguise the fact that Saudi Arabia’s oil output has peaked, and may be in  permanent decline.  The evidence for this conclusion is circumstantial, but  it does knit up many of the loose threads in the mystery of the American  administration’s motivation for invasion.
 To lay the groundwork we need to set out a couple of assumptions.
The primary assumption is that the world’s oil production has been on a plateau for the last two years, and in fact we may be teetering on the brink of the production decline predicted by the Peak Oil theory. Such a decline could be dangerous to the world economy, both directly through the loss of economic capacity and indirectly (and perhaps more importantly) through the loss of investor confidence in the global economic structure.
 The primary assumption is that the world’s oil production has been on a plateau for the last two years, and in fact we may be teetering on the brink of the production decline predicted by the Peak Oil theory. Such a decline could be dangerous to the world economy, both directly through the loss of economic capacity and indirectly (and perhaps more importantly) through the loss of investor confidence in the global economic structure.
The second assumption is that the oil production of Saudi Arabia is key to  maintaining the global oil supply.  Saudi Arabia supplies over 10% of the  world’s crude oil, with over half of that coming from one enormous field named  Ghawar.  There is a large and well-informed body of opinion that believes  that if Saudi oil production goes into decline the world will follow because  there is not the spare capacity anywhere else to make up for such a  decline.  Saudi Arabia is notoriously tight-lipped about the state of their  oil fields, and in fact oil production information is considered to be a state  secret. The only trustworthy information the world really has about Saudi  Arabia’s oil are their aggregated production figures.
The conclusion that can be drawn from these two assumptions is that if Saudi Arabia’s production began to decline and the world found out about it, there would be a significant risk of a world-wide economic panic that would destabilize markets and throw nations like the USA into a recession or depression that would be worse than the actual damage done by the loss of the oil. We can assume that the prevention or postponement of such a crisis would be an extremely high priority for the administrations of both the USA and Saudi Arabia....
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The conclusion that can be drawn from these two assumptions is that if Saudi Arabia’s production began to decline and the world found out about it, there would be a significant risk of a world-wide economic panic that would destabilize markets and throw nations like the USA into a recession or depression that would be worse than the actual damage done by the loss of the oil. We can assume that the prevention or postponement of such a crisis would be an extremely high priority for the administrations of both the USA and Saudi Arabia....
[ full article ]


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