Corporate Carve Up: UK Companies in Iraq

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This report analyses the role of UK corporations in post-Saddam Iraq. To date, we have uncovered evidence for about £1.1bn worth of contracts, from the US and UK reconstruction budget, and from the Iraqi ministries.

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Description

There are, of course, several different motivations behind the presence of corporations in Iraq, but they mostly spring from pro-corporate ideology amongst the political and corporate elite. One reason is what has been called ‘military Keynesianism’: the use of the military (and in this case, aid) budget to shovel large amounts of public money towards private businesses and thereby supposedly stimulate the economy. The money that corporations have been making in Iraq has largely come from US and UK tax money, where it has not been skimmed off Iraqi oil revenue. Another related, but cruder, motivation comes from the desire of the US/UK political cliques to reward their domestic corporate backers, and the neo-conservative connections to the major Iraq contractor Haliburton/KBR are a basic example of this. The pressure on the Blair government to deliver reconstruction contracts for UK corporations in Iraq is a more nuanced version.

A large part of the story of UK companies’ involvement in Iraq has been one of disappointment. As a member of the ‘coalition of the willing’ that invaded Iraq, the UK was expecting to reap significant rewards in terms of reconstruction and oil contracts. The hundreds of millions of dollars that UK companies have received is relatively small change when compared to the lion’s share taken by the US. This reflects the weak bargaining position that the UK is in, protestations of a ‘special relationship’ aside. It also indicates that the British participation in the Iraq war was strongly ideologically driven – due to the Blair government’s belief in the righteousness of the ‘War on Terror’ and probably also a pragmentic decison about the importance of continued control over Middle Eastern oil.

While the hopes for major reconstruction contracts have not been realised, despite the best lobbying efforts of the UK government, the UK private sector has been a very important player in the creation of a new, pro-corporate, Iraq. In the fields of pushing privatisation through consultancy work, and in the provision of private security to guard the reconstruction, British based and British managed companies have played a crucial part.

The oil majors, such as Shell and BP are barely touched upon in this report. They are holding back on making massive investments until a safe pro-corporate environment has been created. The memory of the oil company nationalisations of the 1950s-70s is still strong:

There has to be proper security, legitimate authority and a legitimate process… by which we will be able to negotiate agreements that would be longstanding for decades. We wouldn’t go into that situation unless these conditions were satisfied because we are a long-term business doing long-term projects and we need the framework in which we can make this sort of investment decision.Phil Watts, former head of Shell, November 2003.[1]

At the moment, oil companies are limiting their activity to surveying the oil fields, preparing development plans and signing agreements with the Oil Ministry in the hope that these will pay off once the legal and security framework exists for them to be implemented.

This analysis: of a corporate occupation of Iraq, is also one of hope. The economic capture of Iraq is not yet accomplished. There is still time for both the occupations to be reversed. Eventually, this should lead to a ‘reconstruction’ of Iraq by using its own natural wealth: in minerals, skills and education; and a reconstruction controlled by the people who’s own society is being re-made.

References [1] ‘Security fears put a block on Iraq upstream reinvestment’, Lloyd’s List, 25 November 2003

Published in 2006.

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Additional information

Weight0.0109 kg
Dimensions11.2 × 8 × 0.4 cm