click here to download article as a PDF document Addicted to Oil: Articles relating to the US' dependence on Middle Eastern oil
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Carmakers in last-ditch stand against fuel economy rules

Article in the Financial Times [Edward Luce and Bernard Simon | 27/07/2007]


Conflict-ridden Middle East strains nerves of nations addicted to its oil

Article in the Financial Times [Roula Khalaf | 5/07/2006]


Petrol-induced stupidity on wheels

Article in the Financial Times [Jacob Weisberg | 27/04/2006]


Saudi Oil Production data : an Enigma within an Enigma.

Article by Ian Rutledge [20/04/2006]


America will fall harder if oil prices rise again

Article in the Financial Times [Martin Feldstein | 03/02/2006]


US appears to have fought war for oil and lost it

Letter to the Financial Times [Ian Rutledge | 04/11/2005]


Blood For Oil?

Article in the London Review of Books [Retort | 21/04/2005]


Addicted to Oil: Confronting America's Worst Habit

Article on Alter.net [Ryan Singel | 17/06/2002]


Addicted To Oil

Article from The Economist magazine [From The Economist print edition | 13/12/2001]


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OilAddict :: oiladdict.com :: addicted to oil :: It has long been acknowledged that in America the car is king. However, America's car-orientated and car-dependent lifestyle goes beyond the culture of fast cars and freeways. In Addicted to Oil, Ian Rutledge explores the political, economic and social ramifications of the motorisation of the US economy. He argues that America's dependence on the car has created a lifestyle leading to oil needs which have heavily influenced US foreign policy in the modern era. Rutledge traces the origins of America's addiction throughout the twentieth century and explains how America's relations with the Middle East were developed through its quest for energy security. America's motorisation and its consequent demand for oil at predictable market prices was and continues to be an important influence on US policy towards Iraq - especially given the uncertainties relating to what has so far been the securest source of Middle East oil - Saudi Arabia. Ian Rutledge argues that the war in Iraq was neither a war for 'freedom' or 'democracy' nor was it a plot to 'steal Iraq's oil', but rather an attempt to establish a pliant and dependable oil protectorate in the Middle East which would underwrite the soaring demand from America's hyper-motorised consumers. Addicted to Oil is the first book to undertake an in-depth analysis of the motorisation of US society which explicitly links it to America's foreign policy adventures, past and present. Addicted to Oil is essential reading for an understanding of America's international political priorities and its fraught relations with the Middle East.