From Harold Meyerson, The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject The fossil fuel empire strikes back
Date January 6, 2026 8:01 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Not all our foreign adventures have been crudely about material gain. But this one sure is.**Click to view this email in your browser.**

[link removed]

JANUARY 6, 2026

On the

**Prospect** website [link removed]

[link removed]

The Most Interesting Primary of 2026 [link removed]

The three-way race for Michigan’s open U.S. Senate seat between Haley Stevens, Mallory McMorrow, and Abdul El-Sayed mirrors the larger jockeying for power in the Democratic Party. [link removed]

**BY TOBY JAFFE** [link removed]

[link removed]

Is the Supreme Court Fed Up With Trump? [link removed]

Let’s hope the ruling blocking National Guard deployment is the beginning of a trend. [link removed]

**BY ROBERT KUTTNER** [link removed]

[link removed]

Trump’s Cargo Cult Imperialism in Venezuela [link removed]

Stealing their oil is lunacy, but that won’t stop him from trying. [link removed]

**BY RYAN COOPER** [link removed]

****MEYERSON ON TAP****

**The fossil fuel empire strikes back**

**Not all our foreign adventures have been crudely about material gain. But this one sure is.**

In the late 1960s, as the Vietnam War bloodily dragged on with no prospect of ending, the actions and theories of a small number of longtime war protesters grew desperate and rather apocalyptic. It was not until the end of the ’60s that I began to hear some of my comrades conclude that the reason for the government’s irrational persistence had to be the basest of material concerns. Specifically, that we were in Vietnam for the oil.

Vietnam remains a huge blot on our nation’s shield, but that said, we weren’t there for the oil, for the rather basic reason that Vietnam doesn’t really have any appreciable amount of oil. Our gunboat diplomacy—more accurately, our B-52 diplomacy, which played a large role in the violent deaths of several million Vietnamese, most of them civilians—was the result of the worst possible application of our anti-communism, but no one except arms contractors expected to get rich from our holding on to that beleaguered nation.

[link removed]

Our first Gulf War—in which Bush the Father kept Saddam Hussein’s forces from taking over oil-rich Kuwait—fundamentally was about oil, but his son’s Gulf War, which was much longer and costlier, was more about a son’s pique at Hussein threatening his pop, and neocon fantasies of creating regular capitalist allies, with at least a Potemkin Village’s version of democracy, in the Arab world. To ensure that conversion, Bush deployed a number of Republican operatives to Baghdad once it was captured, whose ineptitude was so cosmic that the nation quickly became a semi-vassal of Iran.

Donald Trump’s anointed viceroys watching over Venezuela appear no less inept and even less oriented to democracy than Bush’s Baghdad brigade: Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and all-around consigliere Stephen Miller (Trump’s very own Himmler). More strikingly still, by keeping the Maduro regime in place and refusing to support the actual winner of the nation’s 2024 presidential election, Trump is making clear that democratization has nothing to do with our seizing control. None of Maduro’s political prisoners have been released as a result of our ousting him, but the doors have been opened to our oil companies. Say what you will of Trump, he completely justifies the crude semi-Marxist interpretations of our foreign policy that began to circulate around 1969. Actually, we have to go back a lot further than that to find the appropriate analogy for Trump’s foreign relations. I haven’t yet decided if he’s the heir of the Romans who violently dominated the Western world two millennia ago, or the barbarians who pulled Rome down. I’ll let you know when I figure it out.

Harold Meyerson
Editor-at-Large

Harold Meyerson
Editor-at-Large

[link removed]

To receive this newsletter directly in your inbox, click here to subscribe. [link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

The American Prospect, Inc., 1225 I Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC xxxxxx, United States
Copyright (c) 2025 The American Prospect. All rights reserved.

To manage your newsletter preferences, use our preference management page [link removed].

To unsubscribe from all American Prospect emails, including newsletters, follow this link to unsubscribe [link removed].

Sent to: [email protected]

Unsubscribe [link removed]

The American Prospect, Inc., 1225 I Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC xxxxxx, United States
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis