International oil cartels: Another S.E. Asia invasion (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of two parts.) By MICHAEL MORROW Dispatch News Service International SINGAPORE - Behind the buffer of the Indo- china War, American, Japanese and international oil companies are moving determinedly into Southeast Asia with hopes of exploiting what may prove to be the world's largest offshore oil reserves. This de- velopment promises increasing pressure from power- ful economic interests against an American disen- gagement from Indochina. It will, moreover, keep Southeast Asia in the mainstream of big power politics for a long time to come. And it could be the source of additional econ- omic friction between the U.S. and its most import- ant Asian ally - Japan. Indonesia is presently the focal point for South- east Asian oil exploration, but oil fever has spread throughout Southeast Asia, including Vietnam where offshore oil drilling within a year is a possibility. Indonesia's crude oil exports from onshore wells have nearly doubled since 1964. Lt. General Ibru Suto- wo, director of the government-owned oil monopoly P. T. Pertamina, has pedicted that total oil produc- tion will reach two million barrels per day (about one-fifth of U.S. production) by 1973 as offshore reserves begin to develop. He estimates that by the end of the decade Indonesia will be one of the top oil-producing countries in the world. To date, the Pertamina oil monopoly has let near- ly a million square miles of oil concessions, most of them offshore. American oil companies or their subsidiaries are the major recipients. Shell, a benefactor of earlier British and Dutch control of Malaysia and Indoesia, has had a head start in developing the area's oil reserves. Its explora- tion of North Borneo is the oldest offshore ex- ploration in the region, dating to 1956. Shell has also been the first to begin developing rich natural gas reserves with a $300 million scheme for refrigerat- ed liquification of natural gas at its North Borneo concession site. OTHER SOUTHEAST Asian countries have nego- tiated with foreign oil firms for much of their con- tinental shelves. Malaysia has let much of its shelf to American, Japanese and French companies. Cam- bodia, which let a large part of its shelf to the sFrench oil combine Elf Union just before the over- throw of Sihanouk last year, will see offshore drill- ing within the year according to a company spokes- man in Singapore. Burma has begun offshore ex- ploration with West German involvement in the form of an aid agreement for offshore development. Negotiations with Japanese oil concerns are report- ed underway but moving slowly. In Thailand, the government has tentatively let the entire Thai continental shelf area in the Gulf of Siam to Continental, Union, Gulf, British Petrol- Middle East-Japan sea route and central location relative to Southeast Asian oil fields and markets, appears slated to be regional capital for the oil in- dustry's Southeast Asian empire. According to the American Embassy, the number of Americans living here has increased from 2,000 to nearly 7,000 in the last two years. Nine thousand Americans are expected by 1972. The growth is attributed primarily to oil business. By Embassy reckoning, 33 American firms involved in petroleum exploration are now in Singapore, hav- ing invested $12.1 million as of mid-January. According to the Embassy survey, four American refining enterprises are committed and have invest- ed $101.6 million in Singapore. "But this is peanuts compared with what is coming," said an Embassy of- ficial. American refineries are committed to $121.5 million in investments over the next 8 months. Singapore government statistics list gross fixed assets in the petroleum sector to date at appriximate- ly $230 million. OIL PRODUCTS constitute 18 per cent of Singa- pore's total trade. Though the majority of these products are of Mid-East origin bound for Vietnam, Thailand or Japan, Singapore's own production of refined oil products has increased tremendously - from 17.3 million barrels in 1965 to an estimated 110 million barrels in 1970. By 1975, current pro- duction is expected to more than double. Singapore's trade with Indonesia is classified so that information on the amount of Indonesian oil reaching Singapore is not available. However, oil pro- ducts from North Borneo have trebled since 1963. Sarawak refineries are now the major supplier of approximately one million tons of jet aircraft fuel which yearly passes through Singapore, going most- ly to Vietnam and Thailand. Bangkok has also approved a Japanese govern- ment survey to plot a pipeline across the Kra Is- thmus in southern Thailand. The pipeline would cost $250 million and permit Japanese 500,000dton super-tankers from the Middle East to offload oil for transfer to other tankers in the Gulf of Siam. Thus they could bypass the Straits of Malacca, too shallow to accommodate such large ships. According to the most recent Chase Manhattan World Petroleum Industry report, the international oil industry's expenditures in the Far East tallied $1.5 billion in 1969, up $17 million from 1968. It was the third largest sector of capital outlay for the industry. Chase Manhattan expects $35 billion to be spent by international oil concerns in the Far East be- tween 1969 and 1980, twice as much as was spent in the preceding twelve year period with four times as much money spent on exploration. Seventy-five percent of this is slated for refinery development in Japan and Australia. ACCORDING TO the U.S. Assistant Secretary for eum, American Overseas Petroleuzn (a subsidiary of Standard of Indiana incorporated in the Bahamas) and Tenneca (a joint venture of Marathon, Phillips Petroleum and Italian oil interests). In addition, two concessions have been let in the Northeast, in sensi- tive areas adjoining the Laos border, and another let in the area surrounding Bangkok. Finalization of contracts and drilling waits on the Thai legislature's passage of oil laws, expected this year. Saigon's legislature passed South Vietnam's first petroleum exploitation and exploration legislation in late November. According to oilmen in Singapore, 40 internationaloilconcerns will soon bid on 18 concessions totalling 90,000 square miles. (The March 6 Business Week said ten American firms recently signed exploration agreements.) The Philippines has reportedly let 117 out of 555 on-and-offshore oil concessions, but current Philip- pine legislation is considered unsatisfactory to inter- national oil concerns because it consists of ma- jority Filipine ownership for foreign participation in oil development. Local companies with some foreign backing have been further stymied by prob- lems of financing owed to the weak position of the peso. However, freer legislation now pending in Manfla could provide major international oil con- cerns the privileges they demand for exploration investments within the year. SINGAPORE, WITH its pivotol position on the Economic Affairs, Philip H. Tresize, speaking on October 23 of last year, "we have a short-range fuel and energy problem . . . it has a number of causes: the nuclear utility program has encountered serious delays; natural gas production has not kept up with demand; local anti-pollution regulations have increased the requirements for sulphur-free residual oil and for natural gas: and our own growing requirements have coincided with rising de- mand in Europe and Japan and with a serious tank- er stringency caused by an interruption of produc- tion and transportation of oil in the Middle East." According to Tresize, U.S. oil consumption will be nearly half the non-communist world's million bar- rels per day by 1980. Even with development of Alaskan reserves, he predicted, current production of 10 billion barrels per day could not expand to meet demand. Thus, more oil is likely to be imported. The major market for Southeast Asian oil, how- ever, appears to be Japan, 90 per cent of whose oil imports now come from the Mid East and whose petroleum needs are expected to rise over 300 per cent in the next 15 years. When Chase Manhattan's David Rockefeller visited Singapore in March, 1970, he was accompanied by John G. Winger, head of the bank's Energy Econ- omics Division. Winger said at the time that: "As we all know, current conditions in the Middle East are not all favorable . . . A prolonged interruption could not be tolerated. It is likely, therefore, that an intensified effort will be made to find and develop alternate sources of supply." Chase sticks by that prediction. "Japan particularly is over the barrel," commented Andrew Barry, re- gional oil expert for the bank in Singapore. Accord- ing to Chase Manhattan, the Far'East is third only to North America and Western Europe among non- communist regions of the world in energy consump- tion. It constitutes 13 per cent of the total market. Its demands, moreover, may increase threefold by 1980. "AS FAR AS OFFSHORE area is concerned," com- mented James Gauntt, a professional geololgist with long experience in the region, "in this region you are looking at 65 per cent of the area in the world favor- able to offshore exploration . . . I think a safe figure for production from the south section of Asia five years from now is four million barrels per day." Others are more skeptical, but geological odds fav- or Gauntt's prediction. The China Sea Basin alone is 1.5 million square kilometers of sedimentary ocean bottom with much of its area covered with less than 600 feet of water, the maximum depth in which pre- sent offshore rigs can drill. Much of the oil found in the region so far has tested much lower in sulphur than Middle East Oil. Such "sweet crude" along with natural gas, in which the region is suspected to be rich, can be expected to draw a premium on the future's pollution-conscious energy market. Southeast Asia offers the added attraction of be- ing an international oilman's bargain basement. Oil leases let for 543,898 acres (about 850 square miles) of U.S. continental shelf in November of last year cost oil companies $345.8 million initial payment: By comparison, 800,000 square miles of Indonesian offshore concessions have so far been acquired by foreign oil companies for an initial cash outlay of less than $80 million. Even the much heralded "production-sharing" ar- rangements in Indonesia are a very good deal for the oil companies. The fc rmula for these arrange- ments allow the concession aire up to 40 per cent of all oil produced in order to cover "operational costs." This percentage is unattached by taxes or royalties. The remaining oil is split with the Indonesian oil monopoly Pertamina with the oil company normally getting 35 per cent of this amount. ONLY PROFITS from this latter amount are tax- ed. The oil companies thus end up with more than 60 per cent of the oil, two thirds of it free of taxes or royalties. Both tax and royalty payments can be reduced, moreover, by use of subsidiary-to-subsidiary selling at artifically low prices. Prospects for large profits from the development and exploitation of Southeast Asian oil are good. For this very reason political crises can be expected as the firms of many nations scramble for oil con- cessions. c0 1971 Dispatch News Service I The Seale trial: Politics on judicial ground By ALAN LENHOFF NEW HAVEN - In order to realistically as- sess the problems involved in holding a fair "trial" for Black Panther Seale and Erica Huggins, it is necessary to view the trial in a distinctively political context. The Black Panther Party represents a revo- lutionary .force outside the mainstream of American affluence that challenges the exist- ing police control of the ghetto and seeks to raise black people from their status as second- class citizens. The government reaction to the Panthers and other revolutionary black groups has so far been a moderate amount of civil rights legis- lation coupled with i startling number of police raids on local Panther headquarters, which have resulted in ,the deaths of over 20 Panthers and a number of policemen. J. Otis Cochran, President of the Black American Law Students Association, addressed a May Day rally in New Haven in support of the Panthers last year and said: "It would take a person of extreme naivete to contend that there has been no pattern to police harassment of the Panthers in the last two years; it would take extraordinary gulli- bility to believe that every arrest made has been justified, that every charge brought in has been grounded on reasonable evidence; that every pre-trial detention or every bail figure set has been the product of a fair and impersonal inquiry." "And it would take a person of surpassing faith in our police departments to believe that there has never been manufactured evidence, that no agents have ever been planted as pro- vocateurs, or that no dummy informers have been created out of thin air." IN THIS SENSE the trial must be viewed as a political trial in which the government has chosen to confront its enemies in the judicial arena of its own creation. Some will argue that a murder trial trans- cends all political barriers; that there is a general agreement within our society that people should not kill other people. This argu- ment further dictates that the judicial system has a clear cut obligation to try murderers without any consideration of possible political motives. The rationale for calling murder a crime however, is based on subjective political ideas. An important distinction to be made is that "killing" per se is not a crime unless it is done under circumstances that the system condemns. For example, policemen who shoot looters ire not called murderers. Nor is the pilot who drops bombs on Vietnamese peasants or the man who kills a burglar. Our society justifies these "contradictions as being necessary for preservation of the exist- ing svstem and its neonl but has categorically often neatly disposed of in police review boards or (as in Ann Arbor) an ad hoc investigating commission. Just as important perhaps is the facts that neither Seale nor Huggins is charged with the actual killing of alleged police agent Alex Rackley. Seale is charged with telling Panther George Sams to "off the mother fucker". Sam, in turn, ordered Panthers Warren Kimbrow and Lonnis McLucas to carry out the killings. ANOTHER FACTOR that makes this a poli- tical trial is that the court system cannot iso- late itself from the political world outside its doors. The fact that jurors have contact with the media and other persons before they are empaneled on the jury insures that they will bring with them various amounts of informa- tion and misinformation that have been pre- sented to them in a political manner. This was demonstrated on numerous oc- casions during the jury selections at New Hav- en when many propspective jurors were dismis- sed because of preconceived ideas about Black Panthers. Persons questions about their knowledge of the Panthers gave such answers as: "I think its a colored motorcycle gang". "It's just like the Communist Party." "My husband told me its a party of colored people who believe that black people are better than white pelople."' The court did award the defense 60 jury challenges (challenges without sufficient rea- son) in an effort to keep projudiced people off the jury. However, this attempt was unsuccess- ful as the defense used all its challenges before the end of the jury selection. At that time the defense made a motion to have an additional 60 challenges awarded, cit- ing the fact that over 1300 prospective jurors had been questioned so far, during four months of jury duty selection. Judge Harold Mulvey denied the motion but awarded the defense two additional challenges. THE DEFENSE also repeatedly moved to have the charges dismissed because of diffi- culty in finding an impartial and open-minded "jury of peers" from the lists of registered vot- ers in New Haven County. An indication of the magnitude of this prob- lem came when the court began consideration of the second panel of 500 prospedtive jurors. Only three per cent of the members were black and the average age was 47. The jury that was finally chosen has an average age of 44 and includes five blacks out of a jury of 12. The black jurors, however, can hardly be called peers, since each is old enough to be the defendants' parents. The most accurate assessment of the situa- tion, however, seems to have come from Judge Mulvey. Back in January during jury selection. Seale's War research fast: Life of enlightenment By ROSE SUE BERSTEIN A FAST AGAINST war research. What a lovely opportunity to prove the sincerity of one's scruples against the military. An exquisite chance to demonstrate conviction. The time has come, I decided, to join in this test of character. People throughout the world go hungry every day, and here we spoiled and overfed university students find it difficult to give up our food for a paltry week. Why this attachment to food, I wondered. Why can we not be spiritual for one week? Why can't I experience the exhiliration every other faster seems to be talking about? So I stopped eating. I soon discovered how linked up in the routine of living are our meals. What does one do all day without meals? Many students, I noticed, wake up in the morning, eat breakfast while reading the paper, go to class, eat lunch while reading their mail, go to class again, "relax before dinner," eat dinner while discussing what happened that day,. But if meals are so important, then why always the other activity, the supplementary nourishment? I tried reading the paper at nine one morning without breakfast. It seemed rather lackluster, and I couldn't quite understand. What was in that serving of scrambled eggs that rendered the news comprehensible? How does cottage cheese enhance the message in a letter from home? And what in God's name can tuna salad do to spice up the tone of everyday gossip? THIS EMPHASIS on combining eating with other activities extends beyond meal hours. For example, at the outset of my fast, I went for a walk with a friend, and though we were both fasting, there was a com- pulsion to "go somewhere to get something to eat," even if it was no more than fruit juice or tea. If the food is so important, on the one hand, then why the need to mask one's eating with some other activity? And, if the tone be reversed, and the activity itself is primary, then why the need to affix it to a meal? One answer may lie in the student's schedule. Meal hours arrive at convenient intervals by which to gauge a day's activity. Between the last afternoon class and dinner may be a good time for a few hands of bridge. But if there were no set dinner hour imminent, perhaps a more time-consuming activity would be selected. Or, take another example. If I wake up between breakfast-time and lunch-time, I often have an impulse to turn over and go back to sleep until lunch. After all, what else is there to do before lunch if you don't have a class and there's not enough time to study something thoroughly? I HOPE THAT if I lived alone, away from institutional structures Lett( Differential increases To the Daily:r I WOULD .like to add some fur- ther comments to the discussion of the editorial, "The B u d g e t Crisis". Several of your readers have properly written to point out that time spent in classroom hours is only a small fraction of t h e time teachers give to their work at the University. However, nei- ther the editorial or these addi- tional comments have considered the important role of research for teaching itself. Teaching is certainly a primary function of a great University, but the discovery of new knowledge is important too, and is also essen- tial to our teaching function. One of the most important aspects of the learning experience for our graduate students, as well as for many undergraduates, is partici- pation in and observation of dis- covery, research, creative scholar- ship, and creative work in the arts. This is an important part of what a great university has to of- fer. It is an error to separate t h e faculty into those who are "re- search-oriented" and those who are interested in teaching. Some of the best teachers in the Uni- versity are distinguished schol- ars and research experts. Besides, there are many kinds of teaching. Some men are brilliant and stir- ring lecturers who can enthrall a large audience almost every class hour. Others, who could not pos- sibly give such lectures, are mas- ters in teaching smaller groups of students who learn by association with the model of the work of a fine scholar. There are - and should be - various mixtures and teaching of orientations in a great University. INSTEAD, I would like to sug- gest careful consideration of dif- ferential increases (and perhaps decreases) in teaching loads. For example, I believe that faculty members who are skillful teachers but have little interest in re- search should be encouraged to take on a larger teaching load that is to do that' in which they have primary interest and skill The encouragement should carry a reward with it: those who teach more and well should receive pro- motions and salary increases com- mnensurate with those given for re- search contributions. For many young staff members being per- mitted to do more teaching will be a source of satisfaction rather than frustration, if they can look forward to promotion without the obligation of publication in whicn they have no interest. Many others will prefer to continue to do research as well as to teach. We need both kinds of faculty members. Such a program will involve dif- ficult decisions in establishing dif- ferentiel criteria and in their ap- plication. But decisions about pro- motions and merit increases are difficult now, and some changes do not seem to offer an insuper- able obstacle. It should be clear that a reduc- tion in the amount of research ac- tivity on the campus will yield far less than proportional financial savings. A large proportion of all ers to The Daily research activity is paid for by outside grants rather than from general funds. Furtner a large number of graduate and profes- sional students derive their fel- lowships, assistantships, research experience, and dissertation ma- terial from such research projects. They would lose both the experi- ence and the financial support with a drastic cut in research. A PROGRAM OF selective var- iations in teaching loads of the kind I have suggested might pro- vide significant savings, without creating the havoc of across-the- board increases in classroom hours for all. This particular proposal may be lacking in merit, but I think it is this kind of flexible re- sponse to the problems of the Uni- versity that we need to be seeking. -Ronald Freedman Professor of Sociology Feb. 19 ............ .............. 0-1 .I' ~~11 / IL WT -Ng X -14 At " Q s.. - riq ~ ta' . " ;".~ j~r . C. i r c "'l--' c " r , ' Y fi i' t "Self-discipline on the part of the executive branch will provide an answer to virtually all of the legitimate complaints against excesses of information gathering .,. This is a recorded message. . . the i irhigttn ttil