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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
The Oil Bomb
2004-06-27
Posted to net on Thursday, June 24th, 2004
By Ottawa Citizen
David Warren

Things are not as they appear in the Middle East, for while on the surface things may look pretty bad, underneath they are much worse. And what looks so bad is really the one thing that is going right.

Two nasty car bombings on successive days, a couple of high-level assassinations, and numerous small sniping and other terrorist incidents, on top of unresolved constitutional squabbling between Kurds and Shia, and intra-Shia, and legal chaos surrounding the handover of Saddam Hussein and several thousand other key prisoners still in U.S. custody, have left the Western and Arab media under the impression that the turnover of power to the new Iraqi government is somehow not going smoothly.

Yet all these hits and complications are easily survivable, for the new Iraqi state. They are just the background noise one must increasingly expect wherever Muslim "militants" are confronted with the possibility of an open society. The crescendo is building towards June 30th -- the formal date of transfer from Paul Bremer’s administration to that of Prime Minister Iyad Illawi -- after which the Iraqi music will begin to fade.

Less attention is given to the more worrying, longer-term development. In the vicinity of Basra -- which has been remarkably quiet despite the best efforts of Moqtada al-Sadr’s Shia blackshirts to stir up trouble -- two clever acts of sabotage have succeeded in cutting off most of Iraq’s oil exports, for a couple of weeks. The saboteurs were most likely members of cells controlled by the Wahabi Islamist underground in neighbouring Saudi Arabia.

The main terminal complex in Basra and a smaller one at Khor al-Amaya nearby had been loading 2.5 million barrels per day, a significant portion of the world’s oil supply, and most of the new Iraq’s income. The pipeline through Syria is down by policy, and that through the Kurdish north and Turkey (with a capacity well under 1 million barrels per day) has been cut to a trickle by frequent small terrorist hits.

The problem here is that oil pipelines and facilities have become targets of choice. They were always fairly easy to hit, but as Arab psychopaths from Osama bin Laden down used to argue publicly, they must not be hit because they are the unique source of Arab wealth, power, and prestige. To stop the flow of oil is to cut: 1. the ability of the "Arab nation" to hold the industrialized nations hostage; 2. their ability to fund the terror networks, and the parallel networks of Wahabi madrasas, mosques, charities, and political fronts that proselytize for radical Islam across Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americas. Worse (from an Al Qaeda point of view), the destruction of the oil weapon would mean, ultimately, 3. the loss of the Arab ability to shape, direct, and define Islam for non-Arab Muslims in our post-modern world.

Desperate times require desperate measures, however -- the Islamist "militants" have been, since 9/11, losing materially on almost every front -- and it is becoming clear that the leaders have been rethinking their approach. It becomes very clear, when one looks into Saudi Arabia, and finds a purposeful strategy to "drive out the infidels" by assassinating carefully selected Western technologists upon whom continuous Saudi oil production most depends.

For two months now, the U.S. State Department, working on the premise that people’s lives are more important than people’s money, have been advising American nationals to get out of Saudi Arabia, in response to the terrorist campaign. They are in fact leaving, faster and faster. While the House of Saud can still contrive to pump oil at something like the present volume for a few months using Saudi nationals and the less skilled foreign workers not yet targeted, the oil infrastructure will then collapse. It depends entirely on American, Japanese, and European expertise.

This makes the possibility of a world oil crisis on a scale beyond anything experienced in 1974 or 1979 entirely thinkable in the coming winter. It explains why the U.S., Japan, Germany and other leading oil-dependent countries have been building inventories at an unprecedented rate, even at high current oil prices.

There is another regional issue of some urgency: that Iran’s ayatollahs are on the verge of obtaining nuclear weapons. That is very serious, and almost nothing is being done about it, in the run-up to the U.S. presidential election. Call that potential Armageddon No. 1.

But Armageddon No. 2 must also be considered: fanatical Arabs having decided, on behalf of all their brethren, that they must try to turn the world’s oil supply into one big suicide bomb.
Posted by:Mark Espinola

#5  Domestic and U.S. offshore oil may have a gusher really soon, contingent on OPEC's #1 running on empty courtesy of their own creation, al-Qa'ida and Iranian involvement, in the biggest economic crude oil stab in the back in history.
Posted by: Mark Espinola   2004-06-27 9:52:18 PM  

#4  Texas Hold 'em, asshats?
Posted by: Frank G   2004-06-27 4:42:17 PM  

#3  Patrick - Lol! I missed it, but the notion that the Mad Mullahs are good poker players, since I think they are the most transparent bunch of goofs ever to attempt to "play" at foreign affairs / policy, is a scream! I would love a shot at the pile of cash they've stolen from the Iranians! Think we can whip up a Gulf High Stakes game? Mebbe a floating version anchored on the middle of the Gulf? I've got a pretty good stake and... Lol!
Posted by: .com   2004-06-27 4:40:38 PM  

#2  I agree .com. Warren had another piece in Canadian papers last week arguing that the Iranian Ayatollahs were unstoppable, that they were smarter and more ruthless and better poker-players than anyone in the West. His basic point of view seems to be that every bad thing we could imagine will happen to us and that no miscalculation or error or over-reach will happen to the Ayatollahs. He's missing two points: first, dictatorships never win against democracies. Second, Bush is a real poker player.
Posted by: Patrick   2004-06-27 4:34:32 PM  

#1  A few observations:

Re: Expats leaving Saudi
I have received an answer to my query regards how many are leaving. Well, the number at this moment is surprisingly low: approx 150 resignations were turned in this month (June) - maybe only 2x or 3x normal attrition rate. This strikes me as the norm - people want to complete their tours, realize their plans / dreams, etc. and will only abandon them under truly dire duress. But it seems that a huge number of the men are returning with the families on "repat" visits this summer and the rumor is that all will be looking for alternative work while home. Additionally, the common "meme" is that one or two more strikes of any kind in SA (And who believes that it won't happen - in spite of Saudi pronouncements?) will result in a flood. My friend says that there is little doubt that the year-end numbers will be "very large." For what it's worth.

Everyone loves David Warren. Except me, it seems. He gets so much right (i.e. Izzies "losing materially on almost every front") and then draws conclusions contrary to the facts. Mebbe there's some "magic" in the equation I missed.

1) He doesn't know dick about oil transport facilities. They can be defended and repaired - in days or weeks. Iraq's contribution to the world supply is still marginal - recent disruptions proved the point in barely upticking the price. Attacks on oil facilities in Iraq will decline as the Iraqis realize that they're not "occupied" anymore and that the Iranian agents, Izzies, foreigners, etc. are working against them - money talks everywhere, friends, and the Arabs are terminally mercantile, heh - the indicators are already there that intel has improved dramatically where the morons don't hold sway (i.e. intimidate whole pops, such as in Fallujah), and Sadr's little game just folded. Support for such attacks, especially in the South has just diminished in kind. The North, where the pipelines cross Sunni "tribal lands" is still problematic. We'll see if Alawi falls for the "Fallujah Solution" (heh) again. I think he'll stop the shit as soon as he has the forces. If Iran stayed the same (which it won't) and the populace was substantially "with" the Izzies (which it's not), then he'd be right - let's all just give up and go home. I don't buy his pathetic fatalism.

2) He also seems to presume that the oil sands of Saudi Arabia and Iran, now hostage to Islam, must and will remain so. I submit that's absurd - if push comes to shove, and the Izzies seem determined to do some shoveing - the West will not sit idly by wringing its hands. Access to the oil is not optional. Period. He's terminally PC, I guess - it has been obvious what must happen 'round these parts for nigh-on a year -- and prolly much longer in the Pentagon Planning groups. Sheesh! "Save me, the train is coming!", cried Nell.

3) He thoroughly wrings his hands about the US election and the Mad Mullah situation. Armageddon, huh? Mebbe he knows stuff no one else does, to wit: the Black Hat Bomb will be ready before November. Otherwise, WTF is this wailing and gnashing of teeth about? Given his other pronouncements, I'm thinking mebbe he doesn't know much about this, either. Certainly he knows less than those whose job it is to worry about such things.

4) He has, by indicating that all is lost because of the US election timing vs. the Black Hats, made a rather odd case, when you think about it... In effect, he has laid the world's fate at the door of the US. Ain't that funny? Dave, baby, chill. The big bad ugly Americans, uncouth and unsavory as they may seem, are not the nimcompoops that the Canucks seem to believe. Lay off the local news, son. It's rotting your brain.
Posted by: .com   2004-06-27 12:39:18 PM  

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