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Iraq and the politics of oil : an insider's perspective / Gary Vogler.

By: Material type: TextPublisher: Lawrence, Kansas : University Press of Kansas, [2017]Description: xxv, 302 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780700625062
  • 0700625062
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 338.2/72909567090511 23
LOC classification:
  • HD9576.I72 2017
Contents:
American oil minister -- Contingency planning for the oil sector -- ORHA start-up : Lieutenant General Jay Garner is the first civilian leader -- Iraqi oil sector : history, resources, and organization -- Adjusting the oil plan -- Penalizing Syria : why so important -- Finding gold in Baghdad : oil ministry leadership -- The calm before the storm : June 2003 -- The long hot summer of 2003 -- The bizarre top priority -- Task force shield : securing the oil sector -- Changing of the guard : oil ministry and CPA oil change -- CPA closes out : June 2004 -- A break between tours : 2004 to 2006 -- Energy fusion cell : fixing the oil sector -- The Bayji refinery and the surge -- The southern export project -- The bid rounds : oil field auctions -- Leaving Iraq : september 2011 -- What haunts me -- Epilogue.
Summary: In this book, Gary Vogler tells the story of US involvement in the Iraq oil sector from 2002-2011. Vogler, a 21-year Mobil Oil and ExxonMobil employee, was an insider who was involved in the prewar planning stages and spent over six years in Iraq as a member of the Energy Infrastructure Planning Group (EIPG) and later as a senior oil advisor in the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Affairs (OHRA). Vogler's book was originally going to be a tribute to the great work he saw from US forces. But in the course of his research, and in looking back on his sometimes tense interactions with Department of Defense and White House staff, Vogler came to understand the darker political side of the role of oil in the decision to go to war with Iraq. It was not, as many thought, merely to secure a steady, indefinite supply of Iraqi oil for the US market, or to secure contracts for US oil companies. The purpose was in fact grander--to rebalance the political map of the Middle East by providing a steady supply of oil to Israel through the Kirkuk-Haifa pipeline, and deny oil to Syria, a purpose which was designed to enrich and empower various international operators in the region who operated below the radar on the periphery of the war effort.
List(s) this item appears in: Homeland Security
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Barcode
Books Rabdan Academy General Stacks Non-fiction HD9576.I72 2017 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 158690
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

American oil minister -- Contingency planning for the oil sector -- ORHA start-up : Lieutenant General Jay Garner is the first civilian leader -- Iraqi oil sector : history, resources, and organization -- Adjusting the oil plan -- Penalizing Syria : why so important -- Finding gold in Baghdad : oil ministry leadership -- The calm before the storm : June 2003 -- The long hot summer of 2003 -- The bizarre top priority -- Task force shield : securing the oil sector -- Changing of the guard : oil ministry and CPA oil change -- CPA closes out : June 2004 -- A break between tours : 2004 to 2006 -- Energy fusion cell : fixing the oil sector -- The Bayji refinery and the surge -- The southern export project -- The bid rounds : oil field auctions -- Leaving Iraq : september 2011 -- What haunts me -- Epilogue.

In this book, Gary Vogler tells the story of US involvement in the Iraq oil sector from 2002-2011. Vogler, a 21-year Mobil Oil and ExxonMobil employee, was an insider who was involved in the prewar planning stages and spent over six years in Iraq as a member of the Energy Infrastructure Planning Group (EIPG) and later as a senior oil advisor in the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Affairs (OHRA). Vogler's book was originally going to be a tribute to the great work he saw from US forces. But in the course of his research, and in looking back on his sometimes tense interactions with Department of Defense and White House staff, Vogler came to understand the darker political side of the role of oil in the decision to go to war with Iraq. It was not, as many thought, merely to secure a steady, indefinite supply of Iraqi oil for the US market, or to secure contracts for US oil companies. The purpose was in fact grander--to rebalance the political map of the Middle East by providing a steady supply of oil to Israel through the Kirkuk-Haifa pipeline, and deny oil to Syria, a purpose which was designed to enrich and empower various international operators in the region who operated below the radar on the periphery of the war effort.

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