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US-Saudi Agreements on the Use of the Oil Weapon
By John Manfreda
Oil
Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 8, 2015
The Evolution Of The Oil Weapon
In the age of derivatives, swaps, and electronic money transfers, a new
form of warfare has emerged: financial warfare.
Recently, the US has
passed sanctions on countries such as
Syria,
Venezuela, and
North
Korea , but the majority of energy related sanctions passed have been
targeted at Iran and Russia.
An estimated 68
percent
of Russia's government revenue is derived from oil and gas exports, while 80
percent of Iran's revenue comes from oil
exports.
That presents a very large target for the use of financial weapons.
To understand why financial warfare is now so commonplace, one must
understand how it came into existence and what has been achieved taking such
an approach.
The oil weapon first came into existence in 1956, when
Egypt nationalized the Suez Canal. What resulted from this was a declaration
of war by France, England, and Israel. As a way to counter this invasion,
Saudi Arabia decided to ban exports to England and France. This embargo
turned out to have minimal economic impact, as the US increased shipments to
Europe, and international oil companies redirected
shipments
to England and France.
The next embargo imposed was in 1967, when
Arab states imposed an embargo on the US, Britain, and West Germany. This
embargo was enacted after a rumor surfaced that Britain and the US were
providing air cover for Israeli planes, after Israel bombed Egyptian
military airports in the 1967
war. This embargo failed, due to the fact that Arab oil revenues
declined. This embargo also wasn't enforced properly, as Western countries
were still receiving oil from Arab countries.
But the most famous
incident came in 1973. This was when OPEC issued a new embargo on countries
that provided military aid to Israel, in the Yom Kippur war. This proved to
have a greater economic impact on Europe and the US, because Saudi Arabia
displaced Texas as the world's swing producer.
The 1973 embargo
led to an increase in domestic fuel prices, shortages of gasoline, and the
rationing of gasoline fuel. This embargo changed the dynamics of US foreign
policy.
After the 1973 embargo, Richard Nixon sent his secretary of
state Henry Kissinger to Saudi Arabia with a proposed deal, to ensure that
an embargo such as this would never happen to the United States again.
After some revisions, in 1976, the House of Saud and Henry Kissinger
finally reached an agreement. The agreement did the following things,
according to Marin Katusa's 2014 book, "The
Colder War." The Saudi's agreed to:
1. Give the US as much oil
as it desired, for general consumption and national security measures. Thus
increasing or decreasing oil production to the benefit of the US
2.
To only sell oil for US dollars, and to reinvest profits in US treasury
securities.
In return, the US guaranteed:
1. The protection
of the Saudi Kingdom from rival Arab countries
2. The protection of
Saudi oil fields
3. Protection from an Israeli invasion.
The
Saudi's agreed to this because, even though they had vast amounts of oil,
they didn't possess an army which could protect them from its surrounding
enemies; which included Iran, Iraq, and Israel.
This deal not only
secured a steady supply of oil to the US, but allowed the US to expand its
global footprint.
How the US and the Saudi's colluded to topple the
USSR
In 1982, a secret declaration for economic war with The Soviet
Union was signed. This declaration included:
• No new contracts to
buy Soviet natural gas • Accelerate development of an alternate supply to
Soviet gas for parts of Europe • A plan to substantially raise interest
rates on credit to the USSR • The requirement of higher down payments and
shorter maturities on Russian bonds.
This declaration made the
USSR's debt load much more burdensome, but what delivered the final blow to
the USSR was the doubling of oil production from Saudi Arabia in 1986. This
pushed oil prices down to roughly 10 dollars per barrel, thus vastly
decreasing the USSR's government revenue. This declaration combined with low
oil prices, according to James Norman, author of the 2008 book, "The
Oil Card," is what led to the collapse of the USSR.
Today, the
international financial system is much more sophisticated. Still, using
financial sanctions with the intention of creating a de facto embargo on oil
is a widespread practice today – just look at the cases of Iran and Russia.
Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/The-Evolution-Of-The-Oil-Weapon.html
***
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