This
article represents an Israeli view and so makes assumptions about
Iran's aggressive intentions. However this article makes clear the
vulnerability of Saudi oil and the western economy.
I
don't think the Iranians would make any hostile moves.
However,
if Israel attacks Iran all bets are off
How
Iran could get carte blanche in the Middle East — without a nuclear
weapon
A
cyber attack earlier this month highlighted the vulnerability of the
Saudi oil industry, on which so much of the world depends. A recent
simulation showed that a full-scale terror attack at Abqaiq, where
Saudi Arabia processes six million barrels of oil a day, would hugely
bolster Iran and bring economic ruin to parts of the world
29
August, 2012
Saudi
Aramco, a corporation worth hundreds of billions of dollars and the
world’s largest producer of oil, came under cyber attack on August
15. A sophisticated malware weapon destroyed 30,000 of the company’s
computers.
In
a message on an online bulletin board the attackers called themselves
the “Cutting Sword of Justice,” a group unknown to cyber security
experts, and said that the attack was retribution for “oppressive
measures” taken by Saudi Arabia in the Middle East. The group
specifically cited Saudi involvement in Syria and Bahrain — two
countries where the Saudi government has reportedly aided Sunni
factions in their struggle with the Alawite regime and the Shiite
majority, respectively.
Officials
at Saudi Aramco said this Sunday that “our core businesses of oil
and gas exploration, production and distribution from the wellhead to
the distribution network were unaffected and are functioning as
reliably as ever,” according to Reuters. It said that the attack
had come from “external sources” and that the investigation was
ongoing.
This
wasn’t the first time that the Saudi oil industry was targeted. Six
years ago, Saudi Aramco dealt with a more direct attack. On February
24, 2006, at 3 p.m., a car driven by a suicide bomber exploded at the
gate of its Abqaiq oil facility. A second car, loaded with 2,000
pounds of ammonium nitrate as well as unknown quantities of
high-grade explosives, crashed through the hole made by the first car
and hurtled toward the heart of the oil facility, in the desolate,
parched, Shiite-majority Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia.
Abutting
one of the world’s largest oil fields with proven reserves of 17
billion barrels, Abqaiq processes two thirds of all Saudi Arabian
crude oil. More than six million barrels flow daily through the
facility. There the gas components of the oil are stabilized and made
safe, stripped of sulfur (made “sweet”), and readied for
transportation.
Saudi
national guardsmen and a squad from the elite Special Emergency
Forces stopped the second car a mile inside the facility, according
to the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington,
DC. Several guards were killed in the initial explosion. The damage
to the facility was minor; the Saudi Interior Ministry said the sum
total of the damage to the site was “a small fire.” Even so, the
price of oil, in a market hypersensitive to risk, rose by two dollars
a barrel.
Like
this month’s cyber attack, the 2006 terror attack, launched by the
subgroup called Al-Qaeda in the Arab Peninsula, was largely
unsuccessful and caused no long-term damage. But the two strikes
hinted at the vulnerability of the Saudi oil industry, on which so
much of the world depends.
Earlier
this year, a group of international experts at the Herzliya
Conference imagined a very different scenario — a far more drastic
one — in which a sophisticated attack on Abqaiq was directed by
Iran and carried out from within. In the simulation, a series of
explosions, along with a cyber-weapon, crippled the facility.
An
illustration of Saudi Arabia’s oil facilities and shipping routes
(Photo credit: Courtesy: Institute for Policy and Strategy and the
Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya)
The
results of this simulated attack, detailed here in full for the first
time, were profoundly disturbing. The price of oil skyrocketed to
over $200 per barrel. The House of Saud, and the territorial
integrity of the kingdom, were existentially threatened. Saudi
Arabia’s neighbors — Jordan, Iraq, the UAE, Bahrain, Qatar,
Kuwait and Oman — were destabilized. Developing countries that use
oil for electricity were propelled into war, both civil and external.
And
Iran, the world’s third-largest producer of oil, authoritatively
recognized as the perpetrator of the attack, reaped the rewards, its
influence growing throughout the Middle East as the demand for oil
outpaced the supply, and the Shiite populations in the Gulf —
increasingly unrestful throughout the Arab Spring revolutions —
rose up in arms.
“The
simulation showed that global over-reliance on Saudi oil and our
over-reliance on Saudi stability, would give Iran, in the case of
such an attack, carte blanche in the Middle East — and that’s
without a nuclear weapon,” said Tommy Steiner, the author of the
report and a senior research fellow at the Institute for Policy and
Strategy at the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya. “Even
small-scale meddling” — Sinai-style vandalism along the 11,092
miles of pipeline that crisscross the desert kingdom — “would be
enough to significantly increase Iran’s standing.”
The
simulation
The
simulation started one week after the “attack”:
A
senior executive of the Saudi oil company Aramco briefs journalists
in Dhahran. He acknowledges that the blasts forced the closure of the
facility for 14 more days and that the power station’s main
transformers were ruined. Moreover, at least three of Abqaiq’s 10
“hydrosulphurization cylindrical towers (silos for separating
sulfur and producing “sweeter” crude oil – the Arabian Extra
Light and Arabian Light crude oil)” were destroyed, creating a
long-term environmental disaster and necessitating an emergency
evacuation of some 2,000 workers and their families from the area.
The
executive refuses to comment on rumors of a cyber-attack but does
acknowledge that the sabotage had been “sophisticated” and that
the plant’s monitoring, data collection and supervisory control
systems had been debilitated.
Global
security contractors and advisers say that such an elaborate attack
was surely the product of two years of careful surveillance and that
it was likely perpetrated from within, by Shiite Aramco employees —
part of a disenfranchised 15 percent minority in Saudi Arabia long
feared to harbor allegiances to Iran, the home country of Shiite
Islam.
Several
dozen workers are detained for questioning. Saudi national guardsmen
are deployed to the Shiite Qatif region. State television in Iran
claims that the workers are innocent cleaners and janitors employed
by Aramco. The Committee for the Defense of Human Rights in the
Arabian Peninsula, a pro-Shiite group with ties to Iran, issues a
statement condemning the police deployment and calling on the Shiite
communities to protest the “brutality of police forces.”
The
Saudi General Security Service reportedly detains clerics affiliated
with Hizbullah al-Hijaz, the Iranian-sponsored group behind the
deadly Khobar Tower bombings that claimed the lives of 19 US
servicemen. Saudi officials anonymously blame Iran, which denies the
accusations but does indicate that it will “consider its options”
if Saudi security forces continue to forcefully put down the civilian
Shiite demonstrations.
Not
farfetched
Seated
around a table at the Israel Economic Forum in Herzliya last week,
Steiner, Yossie Hollander, a member of the simulation’s control
group and the Chairman of the Israeli Institute for Economic
Planning, and Maj. Gen. (res) Danny Rothschild, the director of the
Institute for Policy and Planning and the Chairman of the Herzliya
Conference Series, agreed that while the simulation “constituted
one of the worst possible scenarios,” it was not “farfetched or
entirely hypothetical.”
On
the contrary, they said, with international focus currently centered
on Iran’s nuclear ambition, the Abqaiq simulation was a crucial
means of understanding the strategic implications of global oil
dependency in an age of Sunni-Shiite tension in the Middle East.
One
week after the attack, the price of oil rises from $100 a barrel to
$180. At the pump, gas prices go up by 30-50 percent. And the United
States indicates that it will allow “a divergence of crude oil”
to China, which, along with South Korea and Japan, are the primary
importers of Saudi oil.
“At
this stage of the game most of the participants were focused on
calming the market,” said Hollander, especially by releasing the
International Energy Agency’s strategic petroleum reserves.
The
IEA was established in 1974 as a response to an oil crisis sparked by
an Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries‘ decision to
punish the United States for its resupply of Israel during the Yom
Kippur War. The 28 developed-nation members, which represented
three-quarters of all oil consumers in the world at the time and
today represent a mere half, created the Strategic Petroleum Reserve,
in which each country keeps 75-90 days’ worth of oil in reserve and
commits to aiding the other countries in need.
“The
1973 crisis solution, though, is no longer sufficient,” said
Hollander, noting that the enormous populations and emerging
oil-consuming economies of China and India, for instance, were not
included in the IEA pact.
Other
countries heavily reliant on oil for electricity and not party to the
pact include Malta, Eritrea, Cyprus, Jamaica, Cambodia, Lebanon,
Senegal, Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Sri Lanka.
“China
and India would buy all of the spare oil on the market, everything
that’s on the tankers,” said Steiner. The result would be acute
shortages in certain countries and a swift decline in law and order
in many developing nations.
Three
months later the situation is graver. Abqaiq is stuck at 30 percent
of its normal capacity, oil prices reach $200 a barrel, an
“unprecedented” economic depression takes shape due in part to a
tremendous increase in shipping and production costs, and, though
Iran’s responsibility for the attack is proven “irrefutably,”
the price of oil, coupled with the unfeasibility of removing an
additional 2.5 million barrels of oil from the market, means that
Iran is effectively shielded from any US or NATO operations.
The
international actors agree that Iran, so long as it stopped short of
an outright invasion of Saudi Arabia or blatant military action in
the Strait of Hormuz, has gained “immunity from international
pressure and bolstered its regional influence.”
Six
months after the attack, the IEA releases 900 million barrels out of
a total store of 1.6 million. The international community fails to
establish a mechanism to control and allocate the global oil needs.
Rich countries are engaged in “zero-sum competitions” leading to
“fierce competition over oil supplies on the high seas and in
international markets.” The soaring prices of commodities and the
aggressive behavior of state actors triggers intra-state and
inter-state wars in sub-Saharan Africa and in the Horn of Africa,
resulting in famine and chaos. And Saudi Arabia, “lying across the
maritime lifeline of Europe,” according to Steiner, teeters under
the stress of soaring unemployment, sectarian strife and a newfound
difficulty to run electricity and desalinate water — crucial tasks
in a desert society whose energy production is dependent on oil.
Reducing
the danger
The
recommendations it has compiled, the Herzliya Game report makes
clear, are imperative but not altogether novel.
The
report found a need for car-industry reform, allowing vehicles to
operate on all-alcohol fuels such as ethanol and methanol. (Methanol
can be made from natural gas or refuse and, as Yossie Hollander noted
in a TEDx lecture, the United States is “the Saudi Arabia of
garbage.”)
Oil
subsidies, particularly in developing countries, must be phased out.
The result would be a drastic reduction in consumption and would
prevent soaring debt and domestic instability in the event of a
global oil shortage.
The
concentration of oil, with 78 percent of all proven reserves in the
hands of OPEC nations, “is unsustainable.” Consumers must
“diversify import sources,” and the IEA, which will represent
only 30 percent of consumers by 2030, must expand its “mandate and
membership and invite China, India and other major developing
countries to pool resources and collectively manage strategic
reserves” — without which it will plainly not be able to carry
out its primary mission of mitigating the global effects of an oil
crisis.
Steiner
stressed that these reforms were urgent.
“A
loss in Syria will not lead to Iranian capitulation,” he said.
“Iran is going to raise the price of oil. Their counteraction will
come and it will” — even if on a far smaller scale than in the
Herzliya Game — “be either in Iraq or in Saudi Arabia.”
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