The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, September 13, 2007 - 5A Iraqi oil talks on verge of collapse TEXAS-SIZED WIND Google lands a rare, mostly private airstrip Conflict between Iraq and Kurdish North set backdrop By JAMES GLANZ The New York Times BAGHDAD - A carefully con- structed compromise on a draft law governing Iraq's rich oil fields, agreed to in February after months of arduous talks among Iraqi politi- cal groups, appears to have col- lapsed. The apparent breakdown comes just as Congress and the White House are struggling to find evidence that there is progress toward reconciliation and a func- tioning government here. Senior Iraqi negotiators met in Baghdad yesterday in an attempt to salvage the original compro- mise, two participants said. But the meeting came against the back- drop of a public series of increas- ingly strident disagreements over the draft law that has broken out in recent days between Hussain al- Shahristani, the Iraqi minister of oil, and officials of the provincial government in the Kurdish north, where some of the nation's largest fields are located. Al-Shahristani, a senior mem- ber of the Arab Shiite coalition that controls the federal government, negotiated the compromise with leaders of the Kurdish and Arab Sunni parties. But since then the Kurds have pressed forward with a regional version of the law that al-Shahristani insists, much to the irritation of the Kurds, is illegal. Many of the Sunnis who sup- ported the original deal have also pulled out in recent months. The oil law is one of several cru- cial pieces of legislation and wider political agreement that the Bush administration has been pressing for to show progress toward creat- ing a functioning government and healingthe country's divide. One of the participants in yes- terday's meeting, Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih, who has worked for much of the past year to push for the original compromise said some progress had been made at the meeting, but that he could not guarantee success. "This has been like aroller coast- er. There were occasions where we seemed to be there, where we seemed to have closure, only to fail at that," said Salih, who is Kurdish. "Given the seriousness of the issue, I don't want to create false expectations, but I can say there is serious effort to bring this to clo- sure," he said. The legislation has already been presented to the Iraqi parliament, which has been unable to take vir- tually any action on it for months. Contributing to the dispute over the draft law is the decision by the Kurds to begin signing develop- ment and service contracts with international oil companies before the federal law is passed. The most recent instance, announced last week on a Kurdish government Web site and first reported by The Wall Street Journal, was an oil exploration contract with the Hunt Oil Co. of Dallas. The Sunni Arabs who removed their support for the deal did so, in part, because of a contract the Kurdish government signed ear- lier with a company based in the United Arab Emirates, Dana Gas, to develop gas reserves. The Kurds maintain that their regional law is in fact consistent with the Iraqi Constitution, which grants substantial powers to the provinces to govern their own affairs. But al-Sharistani believes that a sort of Kurdish declaration of independence can be read into the move. "This to us indicates very serious lack of cooperation that makes many people wonder if they are really going to be working within the framework of the fed- eral law," al-Shahristani said in a recent interview, before the Hunt deal was announced. Kurdish officials dispute that contention, saying that they are doing their best to work within the constitution while waiting for the Iraqi parliament, which always seems to move at a slow pace, con- tinues to consider the legislation. "We reject what some parties say - that it is a step towards sepa- ration - because we have drafted the Kurdistan oil law depending on article 111 of the Iraqi constitution which says oil and natural resourc- es are properties of Iraqi people," said Jamal Abdullah, spokesman for the Kurdistan Regional Gov- ernment. "Both Iraqi and Kurdish oil laws depend on that article," Abdullah said. The other crucial players are the Sunnis and Prime Minister Nouri Kamal al-Maliki. The main Sunni party, Tawafuq, which insists on federal control of contracts and exclusive state ownership of the fields, bolted when it became convinced that the Kurds had no intention of following those set guidelines. But the prime minister's office believes there is a simpler reason the Sunnis abandoned or at least held off the deal: Signing it would have given al-Maliki a success that they didn't want him to have. "I think there is a political rea- son behind that delay in order not to see the Iraqi government achieve the real agreement," said Sadiq al-Rikabi, the senior political adviser to al-Maliki. Al-Rikabi was at yesterday's meeting. Ali Baban, who as a senior mem- ber of Tawafuqnegotiated the com- promise, said that allegation was untrue. "I have agood relationship" with al-Maliki, Baban said. "This is an issue of Iraqi unity," Baban said. Al-Maliki has suggested return- ing to the original language agreed to in February and attempting once again to push the law through the parliament. Salih says that there is basic agreement on returning to that language, but conceded that Sunni participants in Wednesday's meeting might insist on a deal that includes changes to the Iraqi Con- stitution to safeguard their inter- ests in the distribution of revenues. A law on how the revenue should be shared is being developed as a critical companion piece of legisla- tion to the draft law. The central element of the com- promise, known as the hydrocar- bons law or more simply as the oil law,was agreed to inFebruary after months of difficult negotiations among Iraq's political groups and was hailed as a sign of reconcilia- tion in a country riven along ethnic, sectarian and regional lines. The main parties in those negotiations were Iraqi Kurds, who were eager to begin signing contracts with international oil companies to develop their exten- sive northern fields; Arab Shiites, whose population is concentrated around the country's vast southern fields; and Arab Sunnis, with fewer oil resources. Somehow negotiators man- aged to strike that balance, but soon after, the agreement began to unravel. When the draft emerged from that council, the members of some parties, particularly the Kurdish ones, thought that the careful bal- ance struck in the draft had been upset, and they accused al-Shah- ristani of meddling. Then the law languished in parliament and, said Hoshyar Zebari, the Iraqi foreign minister, the Kurds decided to send a signal that they would not wait indefinitely and they signed the contract with Dana Gas. "It served as a reminder: 'If you keep stalling, life goes on,"' said Zebari, who is Kurdish. - Ahmad Fadam, Ali Hamdani and Khalid al-Ansary and an Iraqi employee of The New York Times contributed to this report. APPHOTO Wilson Hardin, 3, reacts to the strong wind as his grandmother holds him while they watch surfers in Galveston brave the choppy surf brought on by Tropical Storm Humberto yesterday. Japan shocked by PM 's re signation Amid long airport trips, Google stays close to home By MIGUEL HELFT The New York Times SAN FRANCISCO - In the annals of perks enjoyed by Amer- ica's corporate executives, the founders of Google may have set a new standard: an uncrowded, fed- erally managed runway for their private jet that is only a few min- utes' drive from their offices. For $1.3 million a year, Larry Page and Sergey Brin get to park their customized wide-body Boe- ing 767-200, as well as two other jets used by top Google executives, on Moffett Field, an airport run by NASA that is generally closed to private aircraft. It is a perk that is likely to turn other Silicon Valley tycoons green with envy as no other private jets have landing rights there. But it may not sit well with a commu- nity that generally considers itself proud to have Google in its midst. How did the two billionaires get such a coveted parking place for the jet, which is unusually large and rare by private jet standards? Officials at the Ames Research Center of the National Aeronau- tics and Space Administration said the agency signed a unique agree- ment last month that allows it to place scientific instruments and researchers on planes used by the Google founders. NASA gets to col- lect scientific data on some flights of those jets, which in addition to the Boeing 767-200 includes two Gulfstream V's. "It was an opportunity for us to defray some of the fixed costs we have to maintain the airfield as well as to have flights of opportu- nity for our science missions," said Steven Zornetzer, associate direc- tor for institutions and research at the Ames Center. "It seemed like a win-win situation." Moffett Field is nearly adjacent to Google's Mountain View, Calif., headquarters, and the four-mile drive between the two locations takes just seven minutes, according to Google Maps. Other Silicon Val- ley executives have to fight traffic to get to their large jets parked at San Francisco or San Jose interna- tional airports or even farther away from the technology center. The agreement is raising ques- tions from local officials and com- munity activists, who have a long history of opposing the expansion of flights at the aforementioned MoffettField, ahistoric airport that was once under the supervision of the U.S. Navy, but was transferred to NASA in 1994. Lenny Siegel, director of the Pacific Studies Center, a local non- profit group that .over the years has opposed various proposed expansions of civilian flights at Moffett Field, said he was hoping NASA would provide clear answers about the agreement. "If they are doing science missions, that's OK," he said. "If they are doing it just because they are rich and popular, it is not OK." Abe steps down amid scandal, just before questioning By NORIMITSU ONISHI The New York Times TOKYO - Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's abrupt announce- ment yesterday afternoon that he would resign upset what was to have been an orderly end to the nationalist leader's scandal- and gaffe-prone government. The res- ignation threw Japan's tense politi- cal situation into further disarray. The unpopular Abe had already been written off by Japan's politi- cal establishment and news media, his political future measured in months. The start of a new parlia- mentary session on Monday had been expected to initiate fierce debatebetweenthegoverningparty and the newly powerful opposi- tion Democratic Party, followed by probable deadlock over the Japa- nese military's role in Afghanistan and then by Abe's exit. But his resignation's timing - minutes before opposition leaders were scheduled to question him for the first time since the start of the parliamentary session on Monday - stunned Japan. Scrambling to find a viable successor, Abe's gov- erning Liberal Democratic Party will on Sept. 19 choose a new party leader who, given the LDP's control of the lower house of Parliament, will automatically become prime minister. Abe - who had described him- self as a "politician who fights" - apparently had no stomach for it. As early as Monday, he had shared his wish to quit with his closest political confidant - Taro Aso, the party's secretary-general, who shares Abe's ideological views and is now widely considered the front- runner to succeed him. "In the current situation, it will be quite difficult to forcefully pur- sue policies based on the people's support and trust," Abe said, seem- ing at one point on the verge of tears and failing - television commenta- tors and ordinary people alike said critically - to bow or apologize during his stunning news confer- ence. The timing of the resignation was all the more puzzling because Abe had steadfastly refused to resign or to dissolve Parliament and call a general election after his party suffered a humiliating defeat in an upper house election over the summer. He also reshuffled his Cabinet two weeks ago in what was touted as a fresh start. What is more, in a speech mark- ing the start of the parliamentary session on Monday, Abe had laid out plans for the future. "The way he resigned was unprecedented," said Jun Iio, a professor of government at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies in Tokyo. "Unfortu- nately, even though Abe had some successes as prime minister, he will be remembered for the way he resigned. Other prime ministers resigned after putting up a good fight and made the reasons for their resignation very clear. But the way Abe resigned suggests he lacked the qualifications to be prime min- ister in the first place." Aso said that Abe had first men- tioned to him directly his desire to quit on Monday. Aso said he had told Abe that "the timing" was not appropriate, but that Abe repeated his desire to resign on Tuesday and then again yesterday. "His intention did not change at all over three days," Aso said in a separate news conference, deflect- ing questions about his plans to run in the Sept. 19 election for party leader. Experts said that pressure to sooncall ageneral election -which must be held before September 2009 - was unlikely to diminish with a change of leadership. "A new prime minister will ben- efit from a bounce in the polls, but that is unlikely to be enough," said Takeshi Sasaki, a political scientist at Gakushuin University and a for- mer president of the University of Tokyo. "Since the last general elec- tion was in 2005, this will be the second government without the voters' direct endorsement. So the next prime minister will likely be forced to dissolve Parliament and call a general election, probably late this year or early next year." Possibly to deflect criticism of the sudden resignation, party offi- cials said that Abe, 52, the first prime minister born after World War II, was suffering from poor health, though they provided no details. Ichiro Ozawa, the leader of the opposition Democratic Party, has focused his attention on a conten- tious law that allows Japan's naval forces to refuel American and other ships participating in the war in Afghanistan. The law will expire on Nov. 1 unless it is extended. Opinion polls indiated that most Japanese opposed extending the law. And Ozawa tapped into a gen- eral unease that, under Abe and his predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, Japan has grown too close to the United States militarily, even to the point of possibly violating its paci- fist constitution. But it was Abe's mishandling of a bookkeeping problem surrounding the national pension system that contributed the most to his party's devastating loss in the upper house election. While the problem had existed for many years, Abe simply kept quiet after learning about it. 1 in 5 U.S. residents don't speak English at home New Census data shows far-reaching effects of immigration WASHINGTON (AP) - Nearly one in five people living in the United States speaks a language at home other than English, accord- ing to new Census data that illus- trate the wide-ranging effects of immigration. The number of immigrants nationwide reached an all-time high of 37.5 million in 2006, affecting incomes and education levels in many cities across the country. But the effects have not been uniform. In most states, immigrants have added to the number of those lack- ing a high-school diploma, with almost half of those from Latin America falling into that category. However, at the other end of the education spectrum, Asian immi- grants are raising average educa- tion levels in many states, with nearly half of them holding at least a bachelor's degree. "There is no one-size-fits-all policy that you could apply for all immigrant groups," said Mark Mather of the Population Refer- ence Bureau. "I think most of the attention has been on low-skilled workers coming from Mexico. But we have 10 million immigrants from Asia, a number that's grow- ing." The Census Bureau yesterday released a host of demographic data about the nation, including statistics on immigration, housing, education and employment. The data come from the Ameri- can Community Survey, an annual survey of 3 million households that has replaced the Census Bureau's long-form questionnaire from the once-a-decade census. It does not distinguish between illegal immi- grants and those who are in the U.S. legally. Mather analyzed the differ- ences in education levels among immigrants from Asia and those from Latin America. Together, the groups account for about 80 per- cent of all immigrants. About 48 percent of Asian immi- grants held at least a. bachelor's degree, compared with about 11 percent of immigrants from Latin America. Among people born in the U.S., about 27 percent were college graduates. "Driving this are people com- ing from China and India," Mather said. "They are either comingwith a bachelor's degree, or they are com- ing with visas and getting degrees once they arrive." At the other end of the spec- trum, 47 percent of adult immi- grants from Latin America lacked a high school diploma, compared with 16 percent of Asian immi- grants and 13 percent of people born in the U.S. Those numbers are fuelingover- all increases in the number of high- school dropouts in four states: Nevada, Arizona, Colorado and Texas, said William Frey, a demog- rapher at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank. "It used to be the poor southern states that had low levels of edu- cation and income. Now it is the high-immigration states as well," Frey said. "But that isn't to say that the second or third genera- tion won't do better, because they will," he added. "There is upward mobility." ONE ON ONE woRKgt SPEIA $159 for the 1t semester 129 for 3 or more students for 1St semeste $279 for both semesters Mon-Thurs: Open 24 hours Fri until 10pm Sat-Sun: 8am-8pm www.loniclub.com 2875 Boardwalk Dr. Welcomes UM Students and Faculty to a Tailgate on Elbel Field, Saturday, September 15th, I Ia-3p, for the UM vs. Notre Dame game. We want to meet you and invite you to come talk to Googlers, enjoy some food and fun, and get some free stuff!! When: Saturday, September 15th, 1l a-3p Where: Elbel Field Why: A chance for UM students and faculty and Google to get to know each other better Who: All UM Students and Faculty are welcome to attend. **Please bring your UM Identification** See you there! Go Blue! A