By James P. Lucier on 9.3.08 @ 12:08AM
So how does the experience of Sarah Palin stack up against the experience of Joe Biden? Just ask British Petroleum.
Would you trust Sarah Palin to negotiate with Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad without preconditions?
Well, why not?
Palin came into the governor's office and found a mess on her
desk. The oil deal struck by defeated Republican governor Frank
Murkowski wasn't working. Through creative accounting by big oil
and ambiguous reporting standards, the Murkowski plan just wasn't
giving the State of Alaska the pay-off that was expected. So the
former mayor of Wasilla (population 9,000, as the MSM always points
out) demanded that the agreement be renegotiated and the terms be
nailed down. They laughed when she sat down to negotiate, but in
the end she had a new deal that delivered 50 percent of the oil
revenues to the Alaska Permanent Fund, and enabled Palin to send a
check for $1,200 to every qualified Alaskan citizen.
Now one of the major companies involved was BP, a.k.a. British
Petroleum, before that, the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. It was
Anglo-Iranian, at that time a British parastatal (70 percent owned
by the British government and the Bank of England) that started the
Middle East conflict in 1953. Anglo-Iranian was using creative
accounting and payments to dummy corporations to pretend to the
Iranian government that there was virtually no profit. They
demanded that the Iranian government uphold the original contract
made decades before. Prime Minister Mohammed Mossedegh threatened
to nationalize Anglo-Iranian. The British responded with a naval
blockade of Iranian ports.
The Americans stepped in to help. U.S. Ambassador George
McGehee, an experienced former petroleum engineer, and Gen. Vernon
Walters, the linguistic wizard, huddled with Mossedegh in sessions
in Washington and New York. They got him to agree to accept a 50-50
split, a reasonable proposal by the then international standard,
similar to the contract that U.S.-owned Aramco had renegotiated
with Saudi Arabia. But the British refused. Instead they plotted a
coup against the Iranian government, and then prevailed upon on the
incoming Eisenhower administration to implement it with the
assistance of British agents on the ground. Iranian production was
taken over by an international coalition that agreed to the 50-50
split. There was plenty enough blame to go around on all sides, but
one of the first acts of Ayatollah Khomeini in 1979 was to toss out
all foreign oil companies and confiscate their assets.
Today BP, the former Anglo-Iranian, is the third largest global
energy corporation. It now claims to be privatized, and it is
estimated that 70 percent of the shares are owned by British
investors. At one time the Kuwait Investment Office held over 21
percent of the shares. It tried, and failed, to merge the two
companies, but was blocked by a British government inquiry. Under
Prime Minister Thatcher, the company went private and on a spending
spree. BP bought up Standard Oil of Ohio (Sohio), Standard Oil of
Indiana (Amoco) and Atlantic Richfield (Arco). BP became a major
player in the U.S. petroleum industry, including Prudhoe Bay and
the Alaska Pipeline. And despite its advertising campaign trying to
suggest that BP means "Beyond Petroleum," the company has one of
the worst environmental records in the United States with its
refineries blowing up and its pipelines bursting, the result -- as
testimony showed -- of parsimonious budgets for maintenance. It is
a formidable corporation.
So enter the PTA community organizer from Wasilla. Without
preconditions she took on a company that has a market cap of $205
billion and annual revenues of $291 billion in worldwide
operations. Its budget is larger than that those of most sovereign
countries, yet she won on her terms. If she can outsmart BP, the
company that started the Middle East conflict, she can easily
outsmart Ahmadinejad, if need be.
Then to follow up that act, she got the Alaskan Legislature to
approve development of the TransCanada gas pipeline, a $40 billion
deal that will go 1,715 miles from the treatment plant at Prudhoe
Bay, Alaska, to the Alberta hub in Canada, from which it will be
transferred to the United States. This project had been sitting
around for 30 years on hold because the big energy companies didn't
think it would be profitable, and their corrupt cronies in the
legislature obediently kept it on the shelf. Crusading against
corruption and negotiating across the aisle, Palin not only got it
passed in record time, but opened up the bidding when the U.S.
companies were reluctant to jump in. So she went ahead and awarded
the contract to low-bidder TransCanada Alaska, a firm that has
already built 36,000 miles of pipelines in North America. As a
final fillip, the Governor signed the bill at the Alaska AFL-CIO
biennial convention. While Barack Obama's solution to the energy
problem is to urge us to check the air in our tires, Palin's
solution is to start building a $40 billion gas pipeline, without
Federal government assistance.
SO HOW DOES the experience of Sarah Palin stack up against the
experience of Joe Biden? There are some people who confuse
seniority in the Senate with experience. In the Senate you get to
be Chairman of something or other if you sit around long enough
until all those with higher seniority pass out of the picture.
Merit has nothing to do with it. That's how Biden got to be
chairman of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Most people don't realize that the SFRC is one of the dustier
corners of the Senate, largely populated with snoozing Rhodes
Scholars, UN-firsters, and people who intuitively know how to
pronounce the name of Kyrgyzstan and how to use it in a sentence.
Occasionally someone gets on the committee who is more interested
in American relations with other countries, rather than their
foreign relations with us, and that wakes up the committee.
Usually, ambitious politicians go elsewhere. The committee's main
business is to pass the Foreign Relations act, which authorizes
money for the State Department and its overseas operations.
Occasionally, a treaty wanders by. Sometimes the SFRC doesn't have
the clout to get its bills to the Senate Floor, so it gets ignored
while all of its functions are packaged into the appropriations
bills, without new authorization.
No Senator on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has
authority under the U.S. Constitution to conduct foreign relations
or to negotiate treaties. That's why Biden has no experience in
foreign relations, and Palin does. He just talks about
foreign policy, and talks...and talks. Biden's long tenure on the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee is not necessarily a red badge
of courage. He thinks he has experience, but most of his experience
is wrong. We can look at a few examples of the results of his
experience, and ask What Would Sara Palin Do?
If Sarah Palin were campaigning for President, she probably
would not have made the centerpiece of that campaign a cockamamie
plan to divide Iraq into three autonomous regions.
Sarah Palin probably would not have told General Petraeus that
he was "dead flat wrong" on the surge.
Sarah Palin probably would not have voted against the first Gulf
War.
Sarah Palin probably would not have opposed the United States
designation of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist
organization.
Sarah Palin probably would not have told top Israeli officials,
as reported in the Israeli press, that Israel would just have to
learn to live with a nuclear-armed Iran.
Sarah Palin probably would not have assumed that the answer to
failed diplomatic negotiations with Iran was more diplomatic
negotiations with Iran.
The word "probably" must be used because we can only speculate
on the basis of her barracuda-like instincts.
But there is one thing of which we can be sure: If Sarah Palin
had been in the Senate in 1973, she would not have been one of the
five Senators opposing the Alaska Pipeline Bill.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Sarah Palin, Business, Environment, Constitution, Iraq, Iran, Israel, NATO, Energy, Alaska, Oil