http://www.newsday.com/news/opinion/ny-opcoc094376423aug09,0,312665.column?coll=ny-viewpoints-headlinesBush's oilmen got it all wrong in Iraq
Marie Cocco 8/8/05
No oil for blood.
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"Iraq has oil," Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told Fortune magazine in 2002, discussing the potential cost of an Iraq invasion and how it would be met. "They have financial resources."
Paul Wolfowitz, formerly Rumsfeld's deputy, was bolder: "The oil revenues of that country could bring in between $50 and $100 billion over the course of the next two or three years," he told Congress as the war began. "We're dealing with a country that can really finance its own reconstruction."
Iraq exported 1.6 million barrels per day in July, according to the oil ministry, at least half a million barrels a day less than in the waning months of Saddam Hussein's regime. Hours-long lines at gas stations are a constant of daily life, and the country must import gasoline.
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How did an administration overflowing with oilmen get it all so wrong?
The story line is tiresome. It parallels the warnings about weapons of mass destruction. It tracks with the delusional prediction about being greeted as liberators, and the fantasy about how only a few "dead-enders" continued to fight after our troops took Baghdad.
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http://www.newsday.com/news/opinion/ny-opcoc094376423aug09,0,312665.column?coll=ny-viewpoints-headlines