Alaska’s Gull Island Oil Fields Could Power U.S. for 200 Years
By Mark Anderson
American Free Press
August 14, 2006
“Crude oil is the real ‘currency’ of the world,” said Lindsey Williams
at a gathering of the Midwest Concerned Citizens group in Kansas City on July
22. But Americans will never hear about huge oil and gas reserves in the United
States, which, if ever tapped, would bring today’s fuel prices at least as low
as $1.50 per gallon and make America more energy independent.
As a Baptist missionary in the 1970s, Williams said he rubbed elbows with
members of the world’s power elite—who boasted of detailed 30-year and 50-year
plans to control the flow of oil and information.
A huge quantity of crude oil and natural gas exists under Gull Island, located
in the waters of Prudhoe Bay in Alaska, says Williams. He cited key British
Petroleum memoranda and related the statements of upper echelon oil officials
who told him that Gull Island would be kept under wraps, limiting domestic
supplies so Americans would someday see prices hit up to $10 a gallon at the
pump.
“Every issue in the world today relates to crude oil,” said Williams. The U.S.
occupation of Iraq and the saber rattling about attacking Iran fit into the
crude oil matrix.
Iran is being targeted because it’s one of several countries that want to use
their own currencies for oil sales, rather than using the U.S. dollar. Williams
told AFP that any country that doesn’t want to “play ball” with the U.S.
government and the financial and oil interests is, in essence, put on a hit
list.
The United States, he said, learned that Iran intended to form its own bourse
and not use the dollar for oil sales. Therefore, the notion that Iran is a
menacing “almost-nuclear” country was trumped up, presented as fact via the
corporate media and Iran is now in the crosshairs.
Other nations wanting more independence from U.S. meddling include Norway,
Venezuela, Nigeria, Bolivia, Sweden and Russia.
The 30-year plan, which was first proposed three decades ago and is nearing
fruition, included smug assurances from oil officials that the United States
will triple its crude-oil usage and alternative fuels will not be allowed to
gain enough ground to make a difference. They also noted that all foreign oil
production will be scaled back to the United States and that Americans soon
will pay $4 to $5 a gallon at the pump and could pay as much as $7 to $10 down
the road.
In the early 1960s crude oil was selected as a tool of world control, Williams
said, adding, “What we pay at the gas pump is a form of taxation.” The American
consumer’s dependence on crude oil thus far has enabled people from foreign
oil-producing nations to buy T-bills (U.S. treasury notes) in order to support
the U.S. national debt and continued deficit spending. The need to support that
debt puts the U.S. government in a bind, forcing Americans to remain dependent
on foreign oil.
Williams, as a chaplain in 1970 when the trans-Alaskan oil pipeline was
finished, ministered among the pipeline workers. However, as time passed he
made a favorable impression with the top brass and was asked to improve
worker-company relations. Next thing he knew, he said he was sitting at
meetings of the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and various
meetings of oil executives over a three-year period.
He told AFP that the IMF-World Bank acts as a middleman between oil producing
nations and refineries. In so doing, they set oil prices, he said.
The big event in that three-year period was in 1977 when an Atlantic Richfield oil
executive told him, “We have just drilled into the largest pool of oil in North
America—[and] in the world!”
That pool was Gull Island. It was said that there was enough natural gas to
supply America for 200 years. But to this day, “not one drop” of that oil has
been released to American refineries, Williams said.
Williams said the executive had warned him that the Gull Island find was highly
classified. Do not repeat any of this, he was told. Obviously, that warning did
not stop him.