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Harold Ickes and United States Foreign Petroleum Policy Planning, 1939–1945*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 June 2012
Abstract
As Secretary of the Interior and Petroleum Administrator for War, Harold Ickes played a significant, albeit hitherto largely overlooked, role in the formulation of United States foreign petroleum policy planning during World War II. As Petroleum Administrator for War, Ickes worked closely with oil company personnel who shared his commitment to planning and government-industry cooperation. In addition, as a firm believer in the need for a coherent national petroleum policy, Ickes played a major role in broadening the mandate of the ill-fated Petroleum Reserves Corporation. While business groups generally opposed this broadened mandate, business opposition was by no means monolithic and was, in fact, reinforced by considerable opposition from within the government itself.
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- Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 1983
References
1 Ickes has been almost inexplicably neglected by historians until recently. See Harmon, M. Judd, “Some Contributions of Harold Ickes,” Western Political Quarterly, VII (June 1954), 238–52Google Scholar; Graham, Otis, An Encore for Reform: The Old Progressives and the New Deal (New York, 1967), 105, 127–28Google Scholar; Thelan, David, Robert M. LaFollette (Boston, 1976), 184Google Scholar; Lear, Linda, Harold L. Ickes: The Aggressive Progressive, 1874–1933 (New York, 1980).Google Scholar
2 Ickes to FDR, December 1, 1941, Box 2826, File 1–188 Petroleum Administration; Ickes to Hull, September 15, 1942, Box 2827, File 1–188 Petroleum Administration; FDR to Ickes, February 28, 1942, Box 2826, File 1–188 Petroleum Administration; lckes to Hull, October 11, 1941, Box 2825, File 1–188 Petroleum Administration, RG 48 (Department of the Interior), NA.
3 Petroleum Administration for War Memorandum (1943), Box 2828, File 1–188 Petroleum Administration, RG 48. Ickes' appointment as Petroleum Administrator received praise from Business Week (December 5, 1942), 7–8. Ickes to Jennings Randolph, House of Representatives, November 15, 1943. Ickes to Freda Kirchway, January 18, 1944, Box 2829, File 1–188 Petroleum Administration, RG 48. Undersecretary of the Interior Abe Fortas later resigned as vice-president of the Petroleum Reserves Corporation because of his belief that he was being bypassed by Ralph Davies. Ickes to Fortas, April 25, 1944, PRC File, Ralph Davies Papers, Truman Library.
4 Cox to Hopkins, April 24, 1941, Box 328, Stockpiling Oil Folder, Harry Hopkins Papers, Roosevelt Library (hereafter referred to as FDRL).
5 Ickes to Randolph, supra, note 3. See as well Wall, Bennett and Gibb, George, Teagle of Jersey Standard (New Orleans, 1974), 202.Google Scholar
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8 Addresses Before the 24th Annual Meeting of the American Petroleum Institute, Chicago, November 10, 11, 1943 (Washington, 1943), 6–14.
9 On the establishment of the Petroleum Reserves Corporation see Nash, Gerald, United States Oil Policy, 1890–1964: Business and Government in Twentieth Century America (Pittsburgh, 1968)Google Scholar; and Krasner, Stephen D., Defending the National Interest: Raw Materials Investments and U.S. Foreign Policy (Princeton, 1978).Google Scholar The most recent and thorough study of the Anglo-American oil agreement is Stoff, Oil, War, and American Security. See as well Feis, Herbert, Petroleum and American Foreign Policy (Stanford, 1944)Google Scholar, and “The Anglo-American Oil Agreement,” Yale Law Journal (August, 1946), 1174–87.
10 Davies to Ickes, October 15, 1941; Ickes to FDR, October 18, 1941; FDR to Ickes, December 3, 1941; Ickes to FDR, December 8, 1941, Oil Folder, Box 221, Ickes Papers, LC.
11 U.S. Congress, Senate, Report on Multinational Petroleum Corporations (1975), 2. Feis, , Three International Episodes (New York, 1947), 152.Google Scholar
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13 Committee on International Petroleum Policy, Report to the Secretary of State, March 22, 1943. PRC Folder #1, Box 1, PD.
14 Stimson, Diaries, entries for June 4, 8, 1943, vol. 43, pp. 94–95, Yale University. See also the entries for June 9 and 11, 1943, 104, 107–108. Minutes of the meeting of the JCS, June 8, 1943, CCS, 463. 7, 5–31–43, RG 218, NA.
15 Ickes to FDR, June 10, 1943, PRC File, Box 21, Davies Papers, Truman Library. Feis suggested that Roosevelt did not realize he had an option between a stock purchase in Aramco and a contractual agreement to purchase Saudi Arabian oil.
16 Hull Memorandum, June 14, 1943, PRC Folder #1, Box 1, Petroleum Division Lot File. Department of State Memorandum, “The Position of the Department on the Petroleum Reserves Corporation,” June 6, 1944, DS 800.6363/2–644. The State Department experienced a further loss in 1943 with the departure from the department of petroleum advisor Max Thornburg in July and Feis’ resignation in October. See Feis, Three International Episodes, 110–12.
17 Wallace Murray Memorandum, November 3, 1943, DS 800.6363/11–343. PRC, History, 41. Ickes to Alvin Wirtz, November 5, 1943, PRC File, Box 21, Davies Papers, Truman Library. Ickes, Diaries, 8422 (all references to the Ickes Diaries are to the unpublished microfilm copy). Murray to Edward Stettinius, November 4, 1943, DS 800.6363/11–343.
18 James C. Sappington, Office of the Petroleum Adviser, Department of State, to Murray, November 30, 1943, PRC Folder, Box 1, PD. Loftus to Steinbower, December 8, 1943, PRC Folder, Box 1, PD. Hull to Leahy, December 15, 1943; Hull to Ickes, November 13, 1943, PRC Folder, Box 1, PD.
19 Ickes, Diaries, 8570.
20 Foreign Operations Committee, “A Foreign Oil Policy for the United States,” November 1943, Box 159, Ickes Papers, LC. The companies also agreed to maintain a crude oil reserve for the United States government of one billion barrels or 20 percent of total crude reserves.
21 Petroleum Administration for War, Press Release, February 6, 1944, Box 221, Ickes Papers, LC. Negotiations leading to the agreement are discussed in Ickes, Diaries, 8578–94, and in the minutes of the meeting of the PRC directors, January 27, 1944, Folder 2845, File 1–188, RG 48, NA.
22 Ickes, , “We're Running Out of Oil,” American Magazine (January 1944)Google Scholar; Ickes, Diaries, 8626, 8630; see also the entry for February 20, 1944, 8664–65.
23 Washington Post (February 7, 1944); New York Times (February 6, 1944); Time (February 14, 1944), 79; The New York Herald Tribune expressed reservations in a March 14 editorial “The Basis for an Oil Policy. “The press response was more complex than some analysts have suggested. See, for instance, Stoff, Oil, War, and American Security, 140.
24 Ickes, Diaries, 8594–95, 8605.
25 Charles Rayner to Secretary of State, February 5, 1944, DS 800. 6363/2–544.
26 Research and Analysis Branch, “Problems of Legal, Political, and Administrative Nature concerning the Arabian oil agreement,” February 12, 1944, R&A Report No. 1897, RG 59, NA.
27 Research and Analysis Branch, OSS, “Comments on ‘A Foreign Petroleum Policy of the United States’,” February 24, 1944, R&A Report No. 2014, NA.
28 Coe to Leo Crowley, director FEA, February 16, 1944; Pike to Lauchlin Currie, February 28, 1944, Folder: Saudi Arabia, Box 819 E-129, RG 169, NA.
29 H. D. Collier report to stockholders, Standard Oil of California, PRC File, Davies Papers, Truman Library. A copy of the March resolution in OF 4436-b, Roosevelt Papers, FDRL. See as well PIWC, United States Foreign Oil Policy and Petroleum Reserves Corporation: An Analysis of the Effect of the Proposed Saudi Arabian Pipeline (Washington, 1944)Google Scholar; U.S. Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, Subcommittee on Multinational Corporations, Documentary History of the Petroleum Reserves Corporation, 1943–1944 (Washington, 1974).Google Scholar Published since the completion of this paper is the perceptive study by Anderson, Irving, Aramco, The United States and Saudi Arabia (Princeton, 1983)Google Scholar.
30 Abe Fortas to Ickes, February 22, 1944, Interior File, Box 221, Ickes Papers, LC. Fortas to Lindley Beckworth, House of Representatives, February 24, 1944, Box 1, Series 225, RG 234 (Reconstruction Finance Corporation), NA. Ickes, Diaries, entry for March 11, 1944, p. 8703. Oil and Gas Journal, February 10, 1944.
31 Zook to Ickes, March 3, 1944, File 1–188, Folder 2845, RG 48; Zook, “The Proposed Arabian Pipe Line: A Threat to Our National Security,” April 28, 1944, in PIWC, United States Foreign Oil Policy (Washington, 1944)Google Scholar; Independent Petroleum Association of America, “An Analysis of the Effect of the Proposed Saudi Arabian Pipeline,” in Documentary History of the PRC, 88–119.
32 Documentary History of the PRC, 72–79. Miller, George A., “U.S. Foreign Policy For Oil,” Mining and Metallurgy (March 1944)Google Scholar. Miller's article was based on an interview with Lovejoy.
33 Brown to Stimson, March 15, 1944, ABC 679 (5–2–43), Section 2, RG 319, NA.
34 FDR to Ickes, May30, 1944; the letter is in Ickes, Diaries, entry for May 28, 1944, 8941–55. FDR to Ickes, June 12, 1944; FDR to Senator Francis Maloney, June 12, 1944, PRC File, Rox 21, Davies Papers. Andrew Carter to Secretary of the Navy, June 17, 1944, File 36–1–30, Box 69, RG 80, NA. Charles Rayner to Undersecretary of State Stettinius, May 5, 1944, DS 800.6363/1656. James Forrestal, Acting Secretary of the Navy, memorandum of a conversation with Stettinius, May 5, 1944, PRC Folder #3, Box 1, PD. Forrestal indicated that little would be lost as far as the present war was concerned by postponing the Saudi pipeline, “but the main thing is to keep our feet on the ground in concessions in that area.” See as well the memorandum “Justification of Trans-Arabian Pipeline,” June 8, 1944, PRC File, Box 1, Davies Papers (no author).
35 U.S. Congress, Senate, Special Committee Investigating the National Defense Program. Subcommittee Concerning Investigations Overseas. Report, Section 1-Petroleum Matters. S, Report 10, Part 15, 78th Congress, 2nd Session, 1944. See Riddle, D. H., The Truman Committee: A Study in Congressional Responsibility (New Brunswick, N.J., 1964).Google Scholar U.S. Congress, Senate, Special Committee Investigating Petroleum Resources, American Petroleum Interests in Foreign Countries, Hearings, 79th Congress, 1st Session, 1945; Hearings, Petroleum Requirements—Postwar, 79th Congress, 1st Session, 1946.
36 Special Committee Investigating the National Defense Program, S. Report 10, Part 15, 1944, 550.
37 Ibid., pp. 514–16. Leo Crowley to Hugh Fulton, Chief Counsel, Truman Committee, February 10, 1944, DS 800.6363/1632; Charles Rayner to Hull, February 9, 1944, DS 800.6363/2–944.
38 The other members of the committee were: Tom Connally, Texas (Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee); Joseph O'Mahoney, Wyoming; Edwin Johnson, Colorado; Scott Lucas, Illinois; Burret Maybanks, South Carolina; Arthur Vandenburg, Michigan; E. H. Moore, Oklahoma; Owen Brewster, Maine; Chan Gurney, South Dakota; Robert M. LaFollette, Jr., Wisconsin. U.S. Congress, Senate, Investigation of Petroleum Resources in Relation to the National Welfare, Final Report of the Special Committee Investigating Petroleum Resources, 80th Congress, 1st Session, 1947, p. 3. Maloney to Ickes, June 14, 1944, PRC File, Box 21, Davies Papers, Truman Library.
39 The quotation is from the Hearings of the subcommittee on multinational corporations, Harold Ickes, An Oil Policy: An Open Letter to the Members of the Congress of the United States (May 30, 1947), 3.
40 Lindblom, Charles, Politics and Markets. The World's Political-Economic Systems (New York, 1977), 171–79.Google Scholar The best examination of the bureaucratic politics model is Allison, Graham, Essence of Decision (Boston, 1971)Google Scholar; see as well his article “Bureaucratic Politics: A Paradigm and Some Policy Implications,” World Politics, XXIV (Spring, 1972, Supplement), 40–79.
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