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Public Employee Press
Part 2 in a series
Political Action 2006 BUSHONOMICS: Blood
for oil Four years into the Iraq War, we can easily identify
the winners and losers. One big loser is former dictator, Saddam Hussein,
now on trial for genocide and crimes against humanity that could lead to his execution.
The people of Iraq are suffering with their infrastructure in ruins and an
unstable, new government that can’t seem to stop ethnic strife from dragging
the country into civil war. The people of the United States have been
duped into sending their brave sons and daughters and billions of dollars that
are urgently needed for health care and education into a war based on President
George W. Bush’s lies. And the ultimate price has been paid by as
many as 600,000 Iraqis who have been killed, many in the invasion and more since,
the 20,000 U.S. troops injured physically and mentally and the nearly 3,000 U.S.
soldiers who have returned home in body bags. But compensation has soared
for chief executive officers at oil companies and military contractors since the
war began four years ago, says “Executive Excess 2006,” a report from
Boston’s United for a Fair Economy and the Institute for Policy Studies in
Washington, D.C. The top 15 U.S. oil chief execs doubled their pay from
2004 to 2005 to an average of $32.7 million a year, compared with $11.6 million
for all CEOs at large U.S. companies. The CEOs at the top 34 defense
contractors now get double the compensation they got in the four years leading
up to 9/11. Together they earned almost $1 billion since 9/11, which the report
points out is enough to employ more than 1 million Iraqis to rebuild their country.
Americans face high prices at the pump and huge heating oil bills, but since
Bush came to office in 2001, the top five U.S. oil companies have recorded profits
of $342.4 billion. The Iraq contracts of Halliburton, the firm formerly headed
by Vice President Dick Cheney, are an estimated $11 billion. “While
many regions of the world offer great oil opportunities, the Middle East, with
two thirds of the world’s oil and the lowest cost, is still where the prize
ultimately lies,” said Cheney. “Very clearly the only two groups
to benefit from the war are the oil companies and the defense contractors,”
said Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize winner in economics and the former senior
vice president of the World Bank in an interview with Public Employee Press. —
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