ABCs Good Morning America asked two different guests if this plan
was just a pipe dream. Meanwhile, The Washington Post suggested
that this could have come straight from the mouth of Jimmy Carter.
The only thing missing was the sweater.
These same media outlets seemed to forget the no blood for oil
drumbeat they had championed in the months before the Iraq invasion
and largely since. Such reports normally focused on supposed cabals
constructed by neoconservatives within the administration for the
domination of the Mideast and its vast oil reserves, or simply to
aid the profits of Vice President Dick Cheneys former company
Halliburton.
The Case Against Mideast Oil
Such disturbing conspiracy theories ran rampant throughout the media
the past four years. For example, The Washington Post published an
article on Aug. 6, 2002, about a Pentagon advisory board meeting
that depicted Saudi Arabia as Americas enemy and outlined a
strategy supposedly concocted to take over the entire region: This
view, popular among some neoconservative thinkers, is that once a
U.S. invasion has removed Hussein from power, a friendly successor
regime would become a major exporter of oil to the West.
USA Today published an article three days later concerning this same
conspiratorial premise stating that the administration is hearing
from critics who support radical changes in U.S. policy, including
liberating the Saudi province that contains its oil fields. And
The New York Times ran an April 10, 2003, story discussing Vice
President Dick Cheneys position on the war: He showed little
reaction, they said, to protests around the world in which he was
portrayed as the instigator of a blood for oil war and was accused
of using the conflict to benefit his former employer, Halliburton,
the oil field services firm.
That Was Then; This Is Now
All this makes the ironic response to Bushs Mideast oil reduction
platform more surprising. The New York Times devoted three stories
on February 1 to the presidents address dealing with this proposal.
Elisabeth Bumiller and Adam Nagourneys
article
quickly dismissed it with But even that goal was less ambitious
than it might have appeared the United States gets less than 20
percent of its oil from the Persian Gulf. They later emphasized
this with Energy analysts also said Mr. Bush's goal to replace 75
percent of Americas Mideast oil imports by 2025 was not as
meaningful as it appeared because the bigger suppliers to the United
States are Mexico, Canada and Venezuela.
▪ And where was this three years ago?: The Times and USA Today
reported different figures on the subject. As reported by USA Today
on February 2, Middle East countries account for about 22% of total
U.S. oil imports, Energy Information Administration data show, or
roughly 14% of the oil used in the USA. If America did reduce
Mideast oil imports by 75 percent and didnt replace them with other
sources of oil, this would represent a 16.5-percent decline in total
imports. It would also mean a 10.5-percent cut in the nations oil
usage, both foreign and domestic.
▪ Nothing new under the sun: The Times David Sanger http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/01/politics/01assess.html
dismissed the presidents call to reduce Mideast oil imports by
suggesting it was a program whose only novelty was its name: What
was new was his Advanced Energy Initiative, though the increases he
proposed in clean-energy research, better batteries for hybrid cars
and new ways of making ethanol largely piggyback on programs already
under way at General Motors and Ford, Toyota and Honda, rather than
charting a new course.
▪ Yeah, yeah: The Times continued its attack on this proposal with
an article http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/01/politics/01energy.html
entitled Call to Cut Foreign Oil is a Refrain 35 Years Old.
Matthew L. Wald and Edmund L. Andrews echoed much of the content of
the prior two pieces, while suggesting the public not take it too
seriously: President Richard M. Nixon promised in 1971 to make the
United States self-sufficient in energy by 1980. President Jimmy
Carter promised in 1979 that the nation would never again use more
foreign oil than we did in 1977.
▪ Pipeline or pipe dream?: ABCs Good Morning America decided to
dismiss the seriousness of this proposal. While discussing the
content of the address with Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) on February
1, Charles Gibson asked: Talking about energy, talking about
reducing dependence on Middle Eastern oil by 75 percent in 20 years.
Pipe dream? Doable? Gibson later asked his second guest, Sen.
Barack Obama (D-Ill.) virtually the same question: You think the
idea of using alternative sources to reduce dependence on Middle
Eastern oil, 75 percent, 20 years, pipe dream?
▪ Is anyone really stable?: Meanwhile, using a premise similar to
that of the Times, The Washington Posts Glenn Kessler downplayed
the presidents point about reducing oil demand from countries that
were somewhat unstable: Only three of the 10 biggest suppliers are
from the Middle East Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Algeria. Needless to
say, it seems a bit disingenuous to minimize the significance of
Saudi Arabia when talking about oil imports, or Iraq when it comes
to instability. In addition, it would be a stretch to classify two
of Americas other major oil exporters, Mexico and Venezuela, as
stable. And, after the events of this past weekend, with riots
throughout parts of Europe and Asia over a cartoon, whos to say
what represents stability?
▪ Alternative energys identity crisis: USA Today took a different
approach to downplay the significance of Bushs proposal. Bush
proposed that a reduction in American oil demand will involve
alternative energy something that has been hyped by the political
left for some time. However, in one staff article on February 1, USA
Today wrote: The former Texas oilman ticked off a series of
alternative-energy initiatives, but the dirty reality is that most
of the new technologies Bush is touting are costly, require taxpayer
subsidies and are years if not decades from making any meaningful
impact. When did the mainstream media begin concerning themselves
with such issues as cost and taxpayer subsidization? More
importantly, nuclear energy, ethanol, wind and solar power are not
decades away most of these technologies have been in existence for
many years and are already being employed at both the consumer and
commercial levels.
Noel Sheppard is an economist, business owner, and contributing
writer to the Business & Media Institute. He is also contributing editor
for the Media Research Centers NewsBusters.org. Noel welcomes
feedback at nsheppard@costlogic.com .
Ironic Media Position Follows Bushs Declaration of Oil Addiction
February 8th, 2006 2:00 PM
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