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  Sunday  March 18  2007    12: 37 PM

book recommendation



Blood and Oil:
The Dangers and Consequences of America's Growing Dependency on Imported Petroleum

by Michael T. Klare

What Amazon said:


The world's rapidly growing economy is dependent on oil, the supply is running out and the U.S. and other great powers are engaged in an escalating game of brinkmanship to secure its continued free flow. Such is the premise of Klare's powerful and brilliant new book (following Resource Wars). The U.S.—with less than 5% of the world's total population—consumes about 25% of the world's total supply of oil, he argues. With no meaningful conservation being attempted, Klare sees the nation's energy behavior dominated by four key trends: "an increasing need for imported oil; a pronounced shift toward unstable and unfriendly suppliers in dangerous parts of the world; a greater risk of anti-American or civil violence; and increased competition for what will likely be a diminishing supply pool." In clear, lucid prose, Klare lays out a disheartening and damning indictment of U.S. foreign policy. From the waning days of WWII, when Franklin Roosevelt gave legitimacy to the autocratic Saudi royalty, to the current conflict in Iraq, Klare painstakingly describes a nation controlled by its unquenchable thirst for oil. Rather than setting out a strategy for energy independence, he finds a roadmap for further U.S. dependence on imported oil, more exposure for the U.S. military overseas and, as a result, less safety for Americans at home and abroad. While Klare offers some positive suggestions for solving the problem, in tone and detail this work sounds a dire warning about the future of the world.



I hadn't realized how tied up with oil our foriegn policy has been since Roosevelt in WWII. Very illuminating. Unfortunately, his solutions aren't really solutions. There is no exit. The rest of the book is a must read. Here is an interview and a couple of articles by Klare.

Michael Klare Q & A

The Permanent Energy Crisis

Oil, Geopolitics, and the Coming War with Iran