When exactly did oil become a viable commodity? Late 19th century/Early 20th Century.
Where not humans studying the art of war for a few years before that?
List of Wars:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Li...rs_by_date
It pretty much works out that as soon as man started making settlements wars broke out, and on a global setting we are hard pressed to find a single day where a war wasn't being fought somewhere on earth.
If its not oil humans fight over its gold, if its not gold they are fighting over its some other resource. But then humans don't fight just over resources, they fight over religion, and philosophy and for land and just for the sake of just making a mess of things.
If the rumors are true about the Trojan War, then humans even fight for love.... Seriously the whole myth that someone wanted to marry some woman so badly that it escalated into thousands dying, and a city being brought to its knees - no one mentioned all the rape pillaging - all for one woman? Madness I tell you - just madness.
The only thing oil did was make war more efficient and take it to the skies, making it possible for more nations to get into these tiffs and make what we call 'World Wars'.
If oil was the real issue, then the USA wouldn't be involved in the Middle East as a war effort. Why? Because the USA gets its oil from:
If the US was really intent on getting more oil then logic would dictate to attack Canada or Latin America - you know places that are closer.
Who gets the most oil from the Middle East? Europe and China.
Does the USA even need this much oil from outside? No. We still have untapped reserves of good oil around the nation.
http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/12/0...blogs&_r=0
I heard it once said that California can produce nearly double the oil it no produces just by opening up of shore drilling.
California is pumping about 20% of the nations oil. It has about 10% of the nations population. And that is active oil wells. This doesn't include the offshore oil or the shale oils.
Yet nearly half the gasoline Californian's use is from oil from Alaska, and South America.... We do not need to turn to any outside source of oil, we already produce twice (at least) the oil we need here here in this state.
Few Americans know that the USA actually has a lot more oil than the politicians like to talk about. For instance no one talks about the oil fields of Colorado.... What Colorado has oil?
http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/busi...s/2613497/
"Kern County still accounts for 10 percent of U.S. domestic oil production."
What?
Kern County is just above Los Angles County.
That whole region of southern California has its landscape dotted with oil pumps.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Joaquin...#Petroleum Makes for a short interesting read about oil.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midway-Sunset_Oil_Field has a nifty map of known reserves (on shore only).
This is just California. No one talks about the Colorado oil Reserves
or Montana's:
http://www.mtpioneer.com/archive-July-oil-reserves.htm
Well there is a lot more:
https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=Unt...in+the+USA
My Point, war for oil, at least for the USA's involvement in the Middle East does not actually exist. There is no real need.
The USA's involvement profits the USA nothing when it comes to oil. We most likely expend more oil in teh production of military hardware and sending it over to bomb places like Iraq into the stone age (Then all of the bombing for decades to keep it in the stone age).
Oil is not the problem. People are.