Entries in Iraq War (69)
Soaring Price of Oil Continued
Thanks to all who sent e-mail from our last post about soaring oil prices. From analysts, politicians and just about everybody weighing in, there are many opinions about the cause and ways to solve our dependency on oil. Here's my personal thoughts on some of the major causes of why oil has risen to all time highs
. . . CT
For the past 20-25 years, this country has obviously neglected to find other sources of energy and fuel, and instead opted to stay dependent on foreign oil. Now we come to a time when as Thomas Friedman's book title "The World Is Flat" hits us squarely in the face.
This is a global economy - and the rest of the world wants what we have. We are no longer the driving force on the oil & gasoline prices worldwide. Even if we cut back on gasoline consumption - drivers in the rest of the world (China, India, etc) will continue to consume more gasoline. So the answer lies not just in finding more oil, the big pill to swallow is a real alternative energy policy.
While we have been living the "American Dream", much of the rest of the global world is catching up. They want the cars, homes and a lot of the technology we have become accustomed to. There are just not enough resources to supply the demand. Actually from my point of view they are falling into the same trap we now find ourselves - but that's another story . . .
The facts are crude oil production has remained rather flat - while the need for oil continues to rise - especially from developing countries. The American dollar is at an all time low, and let me state once again that oil is priced worldwide in dollars.
Terrorist activity around the world can send oil souring at any time as we have seen in Nigeria, and threats remain throughout the Middle East.
Oil speculators also have to be figured into the equation of the rising oil prices. Many institutions playing the market for their investors own far too many oil contracts - and when they announce oil price expectations - prices continue to rise. It's easy to control the price when you own most of the contracts!
And the war in Iraq has dramatically cut their pre-war production of approximately 4 million barrels per day to less than 2 million barrels per day. So in reality this war has also added to the reduction of the global oil supply - and I won't even go into what the threat of war with Iran will do to the world oil market prices.
But there's more bad news . . . Russia, the world's second largest oil exporter is having production problems. Russia's lack of investment in their infrastructure and many aging oil fields has led to their first production decline in 10 years.
At the end of the day, it's all of us who pull up to the gas pump each week who are the losers. Obviously the elected politicians for the past two decades have not had the country or our best interests at heart. So, it's up to us to make changes in our lives, and try to ride out this economic chaos.
I certainly don't have all the answers, but I do know that we are facing a very bad economic time in this country. It's going to take sacrifice, and hopefully this time we will come out this with a new outlook on alternative energy - but it's not going to happen overnight.
That's my take . . .
The Oil War?
In a mode that could clearly say: “I told you so”, critics of America’s involvement in Iraq are now saying that the U.S. Administration sent the troopers there for one primary reason.
To shore up a reliable source of crude oil that would keep flowing into American storage facilities, and hence into American citizens gas tanks for at least another 15 to 20 years.
With Iraqi petroleum reserves estimated to be at least 10% to total world supply, and if major American oil companies like .Exxon-Mobil and Amoco controlling the pumping of oil in most of Iraq, then it would be a win-win situation
Unfortunately, things didn’t work out the way we wanted them to. Now that Iraqi and US forces are staging an operation against Shiite militiamen in the oil rich Iraqi city of Basra.
Maybe this explains why so many top American officials have made so many “surprise visits” to Iraq in this 2008 election year.
Ever since the invasion of March, 2003, production and exports of Iraqi crude oil have been beset by a combination of old production equipment in bad repair, as well as countless incidents of sabotage by Iraqi insurgents and foreign elements who simply do not want Iraqi oil to fall into the hands of “The Great Satan”,
Five years later and 4,000 American soldiers lay dead, this precious resource seems even more distant from American and other Western automobile gas tanks.
Israel, who once feared possible attacks from Iraq with weapons of mass destruction, called WMD’s for short, now fear another oil rich country, Iran,
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has often called for Israel to be “wiped off the face of the map”.
Oil is now fetching more than $100 a barrel, and the U.S. Dollar is even weaker than currencies like the Israeli Shekel.
It appears that the time has come for some serious stock-taking in regards to just why American forces went into Iraq in the first place, instead of simply letting Saddam Hussein and his cronies remain there as a possible buffer against the real world enemy – .
http://www.onejerusalem.com/2008/03/26/the-oil-war/
U.S. Controlling Iraqi Oil
This Friday, Feb 22, marks one year since the U.S. managed to pressure the Iraqi cabinet to pass an oil law that the U.S. concocted to allow foreign multinational oil corporations unprecedented and undue control over Iraqi oil for the next 30 years.
With international support, and with the Iraq Federation of Oil Unions leading the way, the parliament has so far resisted passing the law.
Workers in Iraq still have no labor law and unions are illegal. The government has used this fact to tell the Oil Workers Union they do not exist and they will not recognize their leadership in the protest against the oil law. Worse, Iraqi union leaders have been killed and threatened with arrest in their fight for labor rights and to keep their oil under their control.
In Iraq, the on-going war and occupation has led to hundreds of thousands of Iraqi deaths, widespread devastation, relentless insecurity and crippling poverty. Foreign oil companies are scrambling to use this opportunity to secure access to massive profits from Iraq’s large untapped oil reserves at the expense of the Iraqi people.
The occupation of Iraq serves to protect these interests while U.S. military bases are built nearby to guard the oil fields. As well, the Bush Administration has tried to push the Iraqi Parliament to pass a law that would give foreign oil companies unprecedented control over Iraq’s oil resources.
The Iraqi cabinet, under pressure from the US, passed this law one year ago on February 23, 2007. The Iraqi Parliament has so far resisted pressure to pass this oil law, but the pressure is by no means over.
The U.S. should have no role in pressuring Iraqis to privatize control of their oil while occupying their country. The Iraqi people are held in a military occupation by over 160,000 foreign troops. We support the Iraqis in their call for resisting the oil law and foreign contracts while under occupation!
Endorsing Organizations: Oil Change International, US Labor Against the War, No War No Warming, Code Pink, VotersForPeace, After Downing Street, Grassroots America, Hands Off Iraqi Oil, War on Want, Platform, and ConsumersForPeace.
I fully agree with this article. It is a serious conflict of interest for this country, and big oil to go about the business of privatizing Iraqi Oil while occupying the country. Iraqi oil should be for the benefit of the Iraqi People - CT
Source - After Downing Street
Irans Oil Bourse
Iran Opens Oil Bourse to Sidestep U.S. Sanctions
Iran opened an exchange for crude and petrochemicals Sunday, an effort that encourages private investment in the nation’s prominent energy sector. See our previous posting Iran Kish Island Opens Oil Bourse
"The bourse provides an economic opportunity for Iranians, other countries, and foreign customers,"
The primary trade currency used by the bourse will be the euro, thereby establishing a euro-based oil marker if successful. Iran first floated the idea of trading oil in euros several years ago, but a weak dollar has breathed new life into the concept.
Russia Writes Off Iraq Debt for Oil
Iraqi debt will be written off in exchange for access to oilfields
Russia has agreed to write off $900 million of Iraqi debt built up by the regime of former leader Saddam Hussein to buy military supplies.
In return, Russian companies, including oil giant Lukoil, will be given access to oil, and the outstanding debt will be repaid over a 17 year period.
Lukoil plans to develop one of the largest oil fields in West Qurna. The Russian oil giant previously had a deal to develop oil deposits in Iraq, but the cointract ended right before Saddam Hussein's government was removed from power back in 2003.
Russia said the deal was meant to help rebuild Iraq's economy following the US-led invasion, which it opposed. The deal was signed by the Russian Finance Minister, Alexei Kudrin, and the Iraqi Foreign Minister, Hoshyar Zebari, who is currently visiting Moscow.
CBS Journalists Kidnapped in Iraq
Two journalists working for CBS News are believed to have been kidnapped in southern Iraq. Police and witnesses said they were seized from a hotel in the city of Basra by at least eight gunmen.CBS released a statement saying the two were missing and that efforts were under way to find them. The network did not name the journalists and it requested that others refrain from speculating on their identities.
"CBS News has been in touch with their families and asks that their privacy be respected," the statement added. The journalists were taken from the Sultan Palace Hotel, police and witnesses said.
A member of staff was quoted as saying the gunmen had arrived at the hotel earlier in the day and inquired about who was staying there. They are said to have returned later in a four-wheel drive vehicle.
Other reports say the group were masked and carrying machine-guns.
Source: BBC News - UK
BP Plans to Boost Iraqi Oil Production
BP is in talks with the Iraqi Government about a plan to boost oil production at the huge Rumaila field on the border with Kuwait.
Among other potential projects in Iraq, BP's interest is understood to include the Rumaila field, one of Iraq's largest, which is believed to contain about 18 billion barrels of oil.
BP undertook a study of the field for the Iraqi Government about two years ago. It already has a small Iraq team based in the Middle East and is one of a number of big oil companies discussing agreements designed to increase rapidly the country's output to 2.6 million barrels per day by the end of this year.
These effectively would be service contracts to provide training, expertise and equipment, for which the companies would be paid in oil. A BP spokesman said that it was too early to consider putting in expatriate staff because of the security situation.
BP,Total, Shell, ExxonMobil, Chevron and ConocoPhillips attended talks with the Iraqi Government in Amman, Jordan, last month to help to fix the terms of the contracts. Shell is interested in a gasfield in western Iraq.
BP was involved in Iraq until 1975, when the country's oil industry was nationalized.
Source: Business Times Online
Iraq To Pay With Oil Rather Than Cash
Iraq will pay with oil instead of cash to oil majors that sign special technical service agreements aimed at short-term increases in oil production, according to a UPI report.
ExxonMobil, Chevron, ConocoPhillips and Shell are firms targeted for the deals, The Times of London reports. In exchange for the oil, the companies would direct training of Iraqi workers and equipment to Iraq’s largest oil and gas fields. The decision, which is politically highly charged in Iraq, would involve the oil majors taking on the role of special contractors to the Government.
The agreements would cover a variety of oil and gasfields in western, southern, central and northern Iraq.
Shell, for example, is interested in the Akkas gasfield in Anbar and another gasfield in the south of the country.
Iraq Accuses Iran of Siphoning Iraqi Oil
Arabic-language media report that Iraq's government has accused Iran of siphoning Iraqi oil from wells near their shared border.The news reports say the Iraqi government has sent a letter to the Iranian embassy in Baghdad demanding that Tehran stop encroaching on the oil fields.
A London-based Arabic newspaper, Al-Hayat, quotes an Iraqi foreign ministry official, Muhammad Mahmud al-Hajj, as saying Baghdad will soon send a delegation to Iran to discuss the issue.
The Iraqi official says Baghdad wants to negotiate a solution to its border dispute with Tehran and to reach an agreement for developing joint oil wells in the border region.
Iraq and Iran have for decades claimed sovereignty over the mouth of the Shatt al-Arab waterway, which forms the southern-most section of their common border.
Source: VOA - Voice of America
Canada Puts U.S. and Israel on Torture Watchlist
An official Canadian government document has put both the United States and Israel on a watch list of countries where prisoners run the risk of being tortured, CTV television reported on Thursday.
Other countries on the watch list include Syria, China, Iran and Afghanistan.
The revelation is likely to embarrass the minority Conservative government, which is a staunch U.S. ally. A spokesman for Foreign Minister Maxime Bernier tried to distance Ottawa from the document.
The document mentions the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba where a Canadian man is being held.
CTV said the document was part of a course on torture awareness given to Canadian diplomats to help them determine whether prisoners they visited abroad had been mistreated.
Source: Reuters
Iraq Oil Sale Shortfall
A halt in crude oil pumping along Iraq's northern pipeline to Turkey raises doubts about Baghdad's ability to meet commitments to sell more than 300,000 barrels per day, traders said yesterday.
Iraq has stopped pumping oil along the pipeline after a power cut at Kirkuk's oilfields, the Iraqi Oil Ministry announced.
The halt has reduced stocks at Turkey's Ceyhan port to between 400,000 and 500,000 barrels, according to a shipping source. "The longer it's closed the more concerned we become," said a trader whose company buys Kirkuk. It could be very difficult with stocks so low," he said, when asked whether Iraq could meet its contract volume.
A delay would hinder Iraq's efforts to boost revenue from oil exports, which have been mostly taking place from the south. With oil prices near a record high, world markets will react to the supply loss.
Baghdad allocated the Kirkuk volume in the wake of more reliable flows along the pipeline, which has been idled by sabotage and technical problems for much of the time since the US-led invasion in March 2003.
An engineer at the Kirkuk fields in northern Iraq confirmed that a power cut was to blame for the halt in pumping, while an Iraqi oil official said he expected exports to restart soon.
Some in the industry remain sceptical that Iraq will sustain a regular flow of Kirkuk. A previous attempt to do so proved short-lived due to renewed bombing of the pipeline.
Four tankers are expected to arrive at Ceyhan in the period to January 28 to take Kirkuk crude, according to shipping industry sources.
Source: Daily News
Iraqi Oil By Any Means Necessary
Iraq's Oil Ministry has announced that all oil companies interested in winning oil contracts need to register with the government as time gets closer to its first tenders of oil fields. Foreign oil companies have to file application forms and submit the documents before the end of January 2008.
Nothing is ever clear cut in Iraq, and it is not clear whether these fields will be open to bidding, or if the oil ministry will negotiate with some of the oil majors. Another big issues is since the supposed oil law has not been concluded, the "type" of contract has also not been specified by the oil ministry.
Now, the major oil companies have already conducted studies, along with providing training to the oil ministry staff. But many foreign companies have stayed out of Iraqi deals because of the legal uncertainty of the oil law, along with security issues.
This month end deadline announcement comes as the Iraqi government and the Kurdish Regional Government both are accusing each other of stalling the oil sector process.
The Kurdish Regional Government has its own regional oil law, and KRG has already signed approximately 20 exploration and production contracts with foreign firms. This move by the Kurds has angered Baghdad, but the Iraqi government has angered the Kurds by selling oil that is deemd to be theirs.
One such argument between the two governments in Iraq is the purchase of 730,000 of Kurdish oil by Exxon Mobil from the government of Iraq. While Exxon Mobile already pumps oil from Kirkuk under an existingt contract, at issue is the fact that Exxon Mobile and Baghdad bypassed the Kurdish Regional Government. And it appears Exxon will purchase even more oil by the end of this month.
Let's see what we have here . . . A war going on in a country with two different governments in the same country, which are at odds, and back stabbing each other. One government is oil rich and already has signed contracts with foreign firms to sell their own oil. The larger dual government plans to sell their oil, and also bypass the other to sell their oil too. Oil companies are lined up in anticipation of the filing deadline, and plan to proceed to sign fuzzy contracts under an oil law that is still being contested - But oil will be sold.
This is a complicated mess, but there are other issues. Iran is also looking at those Iraqi oil fields.
The recent confrontation between Iran's Revolutionary Guards and the U.S. Navy in the Persian Gulf last week only serves to show that these waters are crucial for oil and power. Sixty per cent of the world's reserves sit underneath its shores, and 17 million barrels of crude oil exports pass daily through the Strait of Hormuz.
In 2008 Iraq's overall strategy is to increase oil production beyond 3 million barrels per day.
First Iraq Oil Tanker in 27 Years Launched
The Iraqi Oil Tanker Co. launched its first new ship in 27 years Monday, and delivery of two more tankers is expected within three months.The Dijlah, the name for the Tigris River in Arabic, was inaugurated in the southern port city of Basra. The 14,000-ton capacity, Chinese-built ship will help ease export problems Iraq has encountered. Iraq's fleet of oil tankers was battered by the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, and then by the first Gulf War.
Iraqi Oil Output Rises
The International Energy Agency announced that Iraqi oil output has risen dramatically in recent months, hitting its highest monthly level in over 3 1/2 years in November. Iraqi output increased by 330,000 barrels per day from August to November alone.
Improved security has helped Iraqi production to 2.32 million barrels per month in November, a slight increase from October, and up from 1.9 million barrels per month in January.
Regular pipeline crude shipments from fields around the northern city of Kirkuk to Turkey has resulted in more output, according to the IEA.
Iraq's oil industry has been under repeated attack since the war began, primarily through bombings of key pipelines.
Other obstacles include the failure of political leaders to agree on a formula for sharing Iraq's oil wealth among its divided communities and conflict over control of oil-rich territory. Iraq's underperforming oil industry has been an additional headache for its fledgling government.
Saudi Oil Plants Targeted by Terrorists
Over 200 suspected terrorists have been arrested by the Saudi security forces in a plot to disrupt the country's oil industry.
The terrorist plot involved attacking the kingdom's oil industry targets. The plot evidently had been planned for months, and preparations were being made to smuggle missiles into the country, which included the importing of eight rockets.
In addition to this plot, another group planned to assassinate clerics, along with members of the kingdom's security forces. Another 32 people were arrested who were involved in providing financial assistance for the terrorists.
Saudi security forces stated that more than half of the suspected terrorists were militants who had come into the kingdom from Iraq.
And the Saudi's have also warned the clerics to do more to stop Saudi Sunni's wanting to join the al-Qaeda militants in Iraq, and who also wish to fight the U.S. backed Shiite Muslim government.
Prior to the arrest of the militants, Saudi Arabia announced that a 35,000 security force would be created to protect the oil fields, pipelines and crude processing plants. So far approximately 9,000 have been trained. The kingdom is coordinating security efforts with neighboring countries to improve overall security for the oil industry.
Iraq Kurds Have Their Own Oil Contracts
Iraqi Kurds self rule their own oil-rich northern territory,and have signed at least eight oil contracts, and 20 additional contracts for oil exploration and production are expected to be signed by mid 2008.
Announcement of these new contracts bring more tension to the already tense situation as to how Iraq's oil and gas reserves should be managed. Iraq's oil minister has accused the Kurds of using military force in order to prevent Baghdad from developing oil fields in the north. The Kurds however say that there is no true to the oil minister's statement.
The new Kurdish contracts come as tension escalates in Iraq over how the country's massive oil and gas resources should be managed, with the central government - backed by the U.S. administration - pushing for more centralized control.
The Kurds enacted their own oil law last fall which controls the oil sector in the northern region - and this did not set well with the central government in Badhdad.
One of the contracts the Kurds have signed is with a Russian company (TNK BP.RS) of which BP holds a 50% interest. Iraq's oil minister calls these contracts illegal, but the Kurds say the current constitution allows them to be a federal region, and they do not need the approval of Iraq's oil minister and cabinet.
The Kurdish government has declined to announce other contracts or release names of the oil companies, but many of the companies are smaller, rather than the big players. Once these contracts are signed, this will double the number of oil companies in the Northern Iraq, and produce approximately $10 billion in exploration and production investment. The Kurds are planning to invest some of the oil money to solve the fuel and power shortages in the region.
Chevron and ExxonMobil are trying to avoid alienating the Iraq oil minister by concentrating on lucrative oil contracts in southern Iraq, and not pursue oil contracts with the Kurds.
The larger companies are also trying to avoid the legal problems with the new hydrocarbon law, which will establish federal rules for the oil and gas industry. And any oil that will be shipped from the Kurdish region will require a permit, which raises other legal issues.
So, why are the smaller companies signing contracts with the Kurds with unknown legal issues that may be looming? Well for one, the Kurds are more willing to give foreign companies better terms than Baghdad. The Kurds maintain that their contract agreements will actually give a better rate of return. Many of the larger projects are expected to run over budget, along with schedules, and in the end may produce less profit for the country as a whole - at least that the Kurdish spin.
Currently the Kurds and the central Iraqi government are obviously at odds. Baghdad has even threatened to blacklist the companies that sign with the Kurds. So only time will tell if the Kurds win out with the smaller oil companies, or if the central government in Iraq wins out with the larger, major oil players.
Most of the oil in Iraq is concentrated in the north by the Kurds, and in the southern region controlled by the Shiites - which presents an opportunity for more violence between the Shiites and Sunni's. So it's still very much a three way fight inside Iraq for the oil, and then the U.S. is pushing Baghdad for a national reconciliation, and of course oil contracts too.
What ever the outcome - It is about oil and profits for everyone involved.
Texas Oil Man Jailed in Iraq Oil for Food Scam
Paying kickbacks to Saddam Hussein's former government sent 83 year old Texas oil magnate Oscar Wyatt to a year in prison.
Wyatt was sentenced for his part in paying kickbacks to Iraq to participate in the U.N.'s Oil for Food Program. He pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and had to pay the government $11 million.
Iraq, at the time was under heavy U.N. sanctions, and the oil for food program rules was for Iraq to sell its oil and use the money for humanitarian purposes. However Saddam Hussein required kickbacks for the right to buy the oil, and the funds did not go to any humanitarian efforts in the country.
New Iraq Oil Base, Russia Claims Oil Foul
US, British and Australian forces build new oil-protection base in Iraq. Russia Claims the U.S. is in an oil grab, and What happened to all that oil money?
A permanent base to guard two oil export platforms is being constructed in Iraq by the U.S. Navy, along with British and Australian forces at the northern end of the Persian Gulf.
The Pentagon says the new oil terminal base will not be a permanent U.S. facility, and will be turned over the the Iraq - eventually. Naval officers admit Iraq is going to need help for many years to come, and while the presidential candidates debate about bringing troops home, this new construction could mean our soldiers will be there for years to come - some estimates say 10 years.
The U.S. has patrolled the Persian Gulf for the last 30 years with warships to keep the oil shipping lanes open, but this new construction to protect the oil terminals moves patrolling to more of a security guard to the offshore oil industry in Iraq.
The Russian Connection
Russia sees this latest development as a U.S. oil grab, and Russian political leaders are publicly stating that the U.S. invaded Iraq in order to steal the vast oil reserves. Russia is not happy about the oil contract it already had with Iraq during Saddam's rule, and these were ruled as illegal by the U.S. after taking control of Iraq's oil fields.
Politicians in Russia have gone even farther in suggesting that the oil grab was the original intent of the neo-cons which include Wolfowitz, Libby, and Chaney - who Russia regards as the de-facto president.
The story gets even better with speculation that Bush and company pre-planned to privatize the Iraqi oil industry, then increase the oil production - along with exploration - and flood the world oil market to drive prices down. This could bring about the collapse of OPEC, and then strengthen the U.S. economy.
Iraq has the potential to pump lots of oil - 115 billion barrels of reserves are estimated to be in the ground. This would make Iraq the second or third largest holder of crude oil behind Saudi Arabia and Iran.
We were told that oil money would pay for reconstruction in Iraq, but we now know what little reconstruction was done is shabby, and the sub-contractors have been the winners.
And Back Home
What many Americans are wondering is what happened to all that oil money that was supposed to pay for the war? Since the proposed oil production in Iraq has not yet come about, whatever money is being made is barely covering the cost of running the government there.
The estimated cost to the U.S. taxpayers is nearly $2 trillion over the next ten years. So, do we think this war is going to end anytime soon? And do we think the reason for going to war with Iraq was about anything other than oil at this point? Going back to what the Russians leaders are saying, was this the plan all along?
With so many lives lost, tens of thousands of soldiers severely injured, and a $2 trillion dollar tax bill tied to this war, Americans need to finally start asking some serious questions.
Our economy is in a tail spin, the dollar is falling, jobs have and are continued to be lost, health care is a big issue, and there's so many more important issues than I can list here. So where is this all leading? We really need to get some answers, and solutions!
Kurds Sell Out Fellow Iraqi's on Oil Deal
When the Kurdistan Regional Government already started selling oil exploration contracts to Western companies, the fight was on with Iraqi Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani, and the much touted Iraqi oil deal seems doomed.
An article in the New York Times says a carefully constructed compromise on a draft law governing iraq's rich oil fields, agreed to in February after months of arduous talks among Iraqi political groups, appears to have collapsed.
The apparent breakdown comes just as Congress and the White House are struggling to find evidence that there is progress toward reconciliation and a functioning government here.
More on this topic at the New York Times
Dubia Hosts Conference to Divide Up Iraqi Oil
The new Iraqi Sharing Oil Law is expected to pass next month - under lots of pressure from the U.S. government.
The world oil giants have been waiting for this day. All the major players - and a NEW CARTEL are lined up to attend next month's conference in Dubai. The purpose of the conference is to develop the framework for investing in, and dividing up Iraq's oil sector business.
BP, Shell, Exxon Mobile and Chevron are all geared up to do business in the one place in the world where there is a chance for large oil discoveries. 115 billion barrels of oil have been discovered in Iraq, however only 40 billion have been developed - and there are many unexplored parts that could hold more billions.
Russia has made a bold move in setting up an energy cartel to rival OPEC, and the cartel includes the country that is becoming the biggest consumer of oil - no guess as to who that is - China! And Iran has also made it clear they will have a place at the table in Dubai.
September is the big month. The General's war progress report is due in Washington, the oil law is expected to pass, and all the major players are set to make a fortune.
The backdrop to all this is our American soldiers who are bravely fighting to stay alive and return home, the soldiers who have returned home badly injured, and the weekly death toll of Iraqi citizens. I heard somewhere that over a million Iraqi's have been killed - but no one seems to know the exact number - and it appears few even care.

