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The U.S. government is not the daddy of U.S. oil companies by Jacob G. Hornberger.
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Among the many rationalizations that the Trump administration is using to initiate massive
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force and violence against the Venezuelan people is that the Venezuelan government nationalized
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American oil interests many years ago.
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The notion is that since they stole our oil several decades ago, it is entirely proper
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U.S. officials say, for the U.S. government to retaliate against Venezuela, including presumably,
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getting back the oil they supposedly stole from us.
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But contrary to what many Americans now have convinced themselves is true, Venezuela
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never stole our oil, especially if one is referring to you and me and most other American
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citizens with the use of the possessive pronoun R. That's because neither you nor I or the vast
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majority of other Americans ever owned Venezuela oil. For that matter, the U.S. government
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didn't own any Venezuelan oil either. It was U.S. oil companies that were granted concessions
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from the Venezuelan government near the beginning of the 20th century to extract oil from Venezuela
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in return for payment of concession fees to the Venezuelan government.
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The situation was similar to what happens when an oil company enters into a lease contract
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with a private landowner here in the United States. The oil company pays the landowner a bonus
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to sign the lease. If it later strikes oil, the oil company pays royalties to the landowner.
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Essentially, the same thing happened with Venezuela, with the Venezuelan government serving as owner
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of the mineral rights. It should be pointed out that the terms of the concessions were
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extremely generous to the oil companies. But there is one critically important point that we
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must keep in mind. There is always the risk of nationalization when it comes to operating in foreign
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countries. Every oil company executive knows that. Nationalization, of course, is impossible to
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defend on a libertarian basis. It constitutes a severe breach of contract. But the fact is that
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it happens, and everyone knows that. It's a risk of doing business in a foreign country.
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If an oil company doesn't want to take that risk, then it should simply limit its operations
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to the domestic United States. In other words, oil company executives are big boys. They themselves
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choose to take the risk of nationalization if they decide to drill in a foreign country.
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If things don't pan out and their operations are nationalized, they shouldn't be looking to the
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US government to be their daddy. They simply have to take their lumps. And don't forget,
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the US oil companies made a lot of money with their oil concessions in Venezuela
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before the Venezuelan government nationalized their oil interests in 1976.
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We also shouldn't forget that it's not only foreign countries that engage in nationalization.
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So does the US government. In the 1930s, it nationalized privately-owned gold coins
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which had been the official money of the American people under the Constitution for more than 125
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years. In other words, the US government stole our money. When is it going to return our money to us?
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It's also worth reminding ourselves that we've heard this. They stole our oil argument before.
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When the democratically elected Prime Minister of Iran, Muhammad Masada,
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nationalized British oil interests in Iran in 1951,
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British officials ran to US officials to seek their help in getting their oil back.
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That's what led to the CIA coup that ousted Mossadeg from power,
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installed the brutal tyrannical and dictatorial rule of the Shah,
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and destroyed Iran's democratic system. That US installed and US supported tyranny led to the Iranian
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revolution in 1979, which brought the brutal theocratic regime in Iran that is now considered to
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be a permanent official enemy of the United States. What happened in Iran was just another dark
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and sorted legacy of the US national security state and its foreign policy of interventionism,
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including coups, assassinations, sanctions, embargoes, ship seizures, freezing of assets,
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single tap and double tap killings, and military invasions, no doubt the Pentagon, the CIA and the
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NSA are hoping to have better results with their interventionism against Venezuela.
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