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       Could War Flare Again Between Iraq and 
	  Kuwait  
	By John Daly 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 8, 2011 
	  
	According to Iraqi Council of Representatives Oil and Energy Committee 
	member Furat al-Sharei, the 10 oil fields that spread across the 
	Iraqi-Kuwaiti frontier are still waiting to have a line drawn through them 
	to delineate the border, more than eight years after a coalition led by U.S. 
	forces toppled the regime of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.
  
	According to al-Sharei, the two countries must first collaborate in 
	developing legislation for equitably sharing the fields before oil 
	extraction can begin, noting, "The problem of the common fields can be 
	resolved by developing legal mechanisms."
  While Iraq and Kuwait are 
	now at peace, many of the border issues that led to conflict two decades ago 
	remain, which no amount of diplomatic bonhomie can completely paper over.
	
  In 1993 the United Nations Security Council Resolution 833 precisely 
	delineated the previous borders between Iraq and Kuwait following Saddam 
	Hussein’s invasion of his neighbor in August 1990. Iraqi forces were 
	summarily expelled by a 34-nation coalition led by the United States during 
	Operation Desert Storm, which began in February 1991. That conflict left 
	Iraq with a $22 billion reparations bill to Kuwait that it is still 
	struggling to pay off, tithing 5 percent of its oil revenue to its tiny 
	plutocratic southern neighbor. 
  What were some of Saddam Hussein’s 
	grievances against Kuwait? By the time Iraq signed the ceasefire in its 
	punishing eight year war with Iran in August 1988, Iraq was virtually 
	bankrupt, owing $80 billion in debt to Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, which now 
	pressured Baghdad for repayment with interest. Iraq pressured both nations 
	to forgive the debts, but they refused. Iraq also accused Kuwait of 
	exceeding its OPEC quotas and driving down the price of oil, thus further 
	hurting the Iraqi economy, as collapsing oil prices further decimated the 
	Iraqi economy. 
  Baghdad also repeatedly protested to no avail about 
	what it claimed was economic warfare waged by Kuwait’s slant-drilling into 
	disputed border regions, which reached as far as Iraq's Rumaila oil field 
	 Despite the overthrow of Saddam Hussein’s regime in March 2003, two 
	years later Kuwait began the construction of a 125-mile metal barrier along 
	its land borders with Iraq in early 2005. But with a new administration in 
	Baghdad, on 23 November 2006 Kuwait's Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Khaled 
	al-Jarallah told reporters following talks with Iraq's Foreign Ministry 
	Undersecretary Mohammad al-Haj, “We have signed a deal ... after which 
	Kuwait will be able to complete the construction of the security fence,” 
	noting that as the arrangement calls for the payment of "compensation to 
	Iraqi farmers" on the border, the requisite amount "had been deposited with 
	the United Nations." Al-Haj added, "We have completed the practical 
	requirements for the demarcation of borders," based on UN Security Council 
	Resolution 833.
  Five years later, little has moved since "the 
	practical requirements for the demarcation of borders." The reestablishment 
	of bilateral Iraqi-Kuwaiti diplomatic relations has been even more glacial. 
	Kuwait reopened its embassy in Iraq in 2008 after nearly 19 years of broken 
	diplomatic relations, while the Consulate of Iraq was again opened in Kuwait 
	only last year.
  Local Iraqis based in Basra have a very different 
	view of UN Security Council Resolution 833, stating that it led to the 
	transfer of a significant amount of Iraqi land, hosting both oil wells and 
	agriculture such as tomato farms to Kuwait, as well as the establishment of 
	a wide zone of neutrality between the two countries which again favored the 
	emirate. A high-ranking Iraqi government official in the Safwan border 
	region, who had had some of his own land confiscated when the new border was 
	marked out, commented that the locals describe “the unjust demarcation of 
	borders as well as their government’s reluctance to put an end to this 
	injustice.”
  Once again, local Iraqis two decades later are 
	complaining that Kuwaitis are “stealing” Iraqi oil in border areas by using 
	directional drilling techniques. Local Basra government officials say that 
	they have proof of the Kuwaiti theft and have forwarded it to Baghdad, 
	offering as proof the fact that pressure in some oil reservoirs near the 
	border has dropped significantly, which local Iraqi government officials 
	believe has been caused by Kuwaiti drilling to tap the same reservoirs. 
	Ratcheting up the tension, Kuwait's ambassador to Baghdad, Ali al-Mu'men 
	recently denied Iraqi allegations and instead, accused Iraqi companies of 
	extracting oil from Kuwaiti oil reserves. For Farid Khalid, head of the 
	energy committee of the Basra provincial council, the issue is simple - “No 
	oil work was done on the Iraqi-Kuwaiti-Iranian borders by the Iraqi 
	government for years which is why the oil reserves were open for looting.” 
	 Read more by John C.K. Daly at: 
	oilprice.com.  
	
	http://oilprice.com/Geo-Politics/Middle-East/Could-War-Flare-Again-Between-Iraq-and-Kuwait.html 
       
       
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