The Socialist Party has long insisted that many of the modern
wars revolve around natural resources such as oil. Now research suggests they
do play an even bigger role in conflicts than some pro-capitalists have tried
to deny. The study confirms our view.
Research from the Universities of Portsmouth, Warwick and
Essex found foreign intervention in a civil war is 100 times more likely when
the afflicted country has high oil reserves than if it has none. The research
is the first to confirm the role of oil as a dominant motivating factor in
conflict, suggesting hydrocarbons were a major reason for the military
intervention in Libya, by a coalition which included the UK, and the current US
campaign against Isis in northern Iraq. The study, published in the Journal of
Conflict Resolution, analysed 69 civil wars between 1945 and 1999, but did not
examine foreign invasions. The invasion of Iraq in 2003, led by the US and the
UK, wasn’t covered in the research because it wasn’t a civil war. However, the
report notes previous claims that a thirst for oil was “the alleged ‘true’
motivation of the US invasion of Iraq”. It noted that civil wars have made up
more than 90 per cent of all armed conflicts since the Second World War and
that two-thirds of these have seen a third-party intervention. It found that
the decision to intervene was dominated by the third-party’s need for oil, far
more than historical, geographic or ethnic ties.
“We found clear evidence that countries with potential for
oil production are more likely to be targeted by foreign intervention if civil
wars erupt,” said one of the report authors, Dr Petros Sekeris, of the
University of Portsmouth. “Military intervention is expensive and risky. No
country joins another country’s civil war without balancing the cost against
their own strategic interests.”
“After a rigorous and systematic analysis, we found that the
role of economic incentives emerges as a key factor in intervention,” said
co-author Dr Vincenzo Bove, of the University of Warwick. “Before the Isis
forces approached the oil-rich Kurdish north of Iraq, Isis was barely mentioned
in the news. But once Isis got near oil fields, the siege of Kobani in Syria
became a headline and the US sent drones to strike Isis targets.”
The US maintains troops in Persian Gulf oil producers and
has a history of supporting conservative autocratic states in spite of the
emphasis on democratic reform elsewhere, the report says.
Britain intervened in
the Nigerian Civil War, also known as the Biafran War, between 1967 and 1970.
During this period the UK was one of the biggest importers of oil in the world,
with North Sea oil production only starting in 1975. BP’s presence in the
oil-rich eastern region of the country meant stability in the area was of
critical importance. David Cameron was instrumental in setting up the coalition
that intervened in Muammar Gaddafi’s Libya in 2011, a country with sizeable oil
reserves. Britain watched on as Sierra Leone’s Revolutionary United Front, with
support from Charles Taylor’s National Patriotic Front of Liberia, attempted to
overthrow Joseph Momoh’s government. The resulting civil war lasted 11 years
(1991 to 2002) and enveloped the country, leaving more than 50,000 dead. The UK
also opted not to intervene in the Rhodesian Bush War between 1964 and 1979 – a
three-way battle between the Rhodesian
government, the military wing of Robert Mugabe’s Zimbabwe African
National Union and the Zimbabwe People’s Revolutionary Army.
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