Fear and Loathing in the Arabian Nights
US President Barack Obama landed in Saudi Arabia for a GCC petrodollar summit and to proverbially “reassure Gulf allies” amidst the oiliest of storms.
20
April, 2016
The
Doha summit this past weekend that was supposed to enshrine
a cut in oil production by OPEC, in tandem with Russia
– it was practically a done deal – ended up literally in the
dust.
The
City of London – via the FT – wants to convey the
impression to global public opinion that it all boiled down to
a dispute between Prince Mohammed bin Salman – the conductor
of the illegal war on Yemen — and Saudi Oil
Minister Ali Al-Naimi. The son of — ailing — King
Salman has been dubbed “the unpredictable new voice of the
kingdom’s energy policy.”
A
famous 3 am call did take place in Doha on Sunday. The
young Salman called the Saudi delegation and told them the deal was
off. Every other energy market player was stunned by the
reversion.Yet the true story, according to a financial source
with very close links to the House of Saud, is that
“the United States threatened the Prince that night with the
most dire consequences if he did not back down on the oil price
freeze.”
So
– predictably — this goes way beyond an internal Saudi
matter, or the Prince’s “erratic” behavior, even as the
House of Saud is indeed racked by multiple instances
of fear and paranoia, as I analysed here.
As
the source explains, an oil production cut would have “hindered the
US goal of bankrupting Russia via an oil price war, which
is what this is all about. Even the Prince is not that erratic.”
Iran
had made it more than clear that after the lifting
of sanctions it does not have any reason to embark on a
production cut. On the contrary; oil contributes to 23%
of Iran’s GDP. But as far as the House of Saud
is concerned – feeling the pain of a budget deficit of $98
billion in 2015 — a moderate cut was feasible, along with
most of OPEC and Russia, as Al-Naimi had promised.
Another
key variable must also be taken into account. Not only the whole
saga goes way beyond an internal Saudi dispute; no matter what
Washington does, the oil
price has not crashed as expected.
This would indicate that the global surplus of oil has been
largely sopped up by falling supply and increasing demand.As a
GCC-based oil market source reveals,
“have you noticed how much attention Kerry and Obama have been giving Saudi Arabia out of all proportion to the past to keep that oil price down? Yet WTI is up and holding over $40.00 a barrel. That’s because oil demand and supply is tightening.”
The
oil market source notes, “oil surplus is now probably less than a
million barrels a day.” So the only way, in the short
to medium term, is up.
Blowback
from His Masters’ Voice?
The
House of Saud, by flooding the market with oil,
believed it could accomplish three major feats.
1)
Kill off competition – from Iran to the US shale oil
industry.
2)
Prevent the competition from stealing market share with key
energy customer China.
3)
Inflict serious damage to the Russian economy. Now it’s
blowback time – as it could come from none other than His
Masters’ Voice.
The
heart of the whole matter is that Washington has been
threatening Riyadh to freeze Saudi assets all across the
spectrum if the House of Saud does not “cooperate” in the
oil price war against Russia.
That
reached the tipping point of the Saudis shaking the entire
turbo-capitalist financial universe by issuing their
own counter threat;
the so-called $750 billion response.
The —
burning — issue of freezing all Saudi assets across the
planet has come up with the US Congress considering a bill
exposing he Saudi connection to 9/11.
The
declassification and release of those notorious
28 pages would
do little to rewrite recent history; 9/11 – with no
serious investigation — was blamed on “Islamic terror”,
and that justified the invasion of Afghanistan and the
bombing/invasion/occupation of Iraq, which had no connection
to 9-11 nor any weapons of mass destruction.The 28 pages
did intimidate the House of Saud and Saudi intelligence though.
Especially because the odd sharp brain in Riyadh could make the
connection; the 28 pages were being paraded around in Western
corporate media before the OPEC meeting to keep the Saudis
in line on the oil war against Russia. That may have
been yet another Mafia-style “offer you can’t refuse”; if the
House of Saud cuts oil production, then it will be destroyed
by the release of the 28 pages.
So
we are now deep into Mutually Assured Threat (MAT) territory,
more than Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD).
No
one really knows how much Saudi Arabia has tied up in US
Treasuries – except for a few insiders in both Riyadh and
Washington, and they are not talking. What is known is that the US
Treasury bundles Riyadh’s holdings along with other GCC
petrodollar monarchies. Together, that amounted to $281 billion two
months ago.
Yet
the Saudis are now saying they would get rid of a whopping $750
billion. A New York investment banker advances that “six trillion
dollars would be more like it.” Earlier this year, I
revealed on Sputnik how
the House of Saud was busy unloading at least $1 trillion
in US securities on the market to balance its
increasingly disastrous budget. The problem is no one was ever
supposed to know about it.
The
fact is the US and the West froze $80 billion in assets that
belonged to the deposed head of the Egyptian snake,
Mubarak. So a freeze tied up with framing Saudi Arabia
for terrorism would not exactly be a hard sell.
The
nuclear option
For
all the pledges of eternal love, it’s an open secret in the
Beltway that the House of Saud is the object of bipartisan
contempt; and their purchased support, when push comes to shove,
may reveal itself to be worthless.
Now
picture a geopolitical no exit with a self-cornered House
of Saud having both superpowers, the US and Russia, as their
enemies.
Obama’s
visit is a non-event. Whatever happens, Washington needs to sell
the fiction that the House of Saud is always an ally in the
“war on terra”, now fighting ISIS/ISIL/Daesh (even if they
don’t.) And Washington needs Riyadh for Divide and Rule
purposes – keeping Iran in check. This does not mean that the
House of Saud may not be thrown under the bus in a
flash, should the occasion arise.
As the source close to Riyadh
advances, “the real nuclear option for the Saudis would be
to cooperate with Russia in a new alliance to cut
back oil production 20% for all of OPEC, in the
process raising the oil price to $200.00 a barrel to make up for
lost revenue, forced on them by the United States.” This
is what the West fear like the plague. And this is what the
perennial vassal, the House of Saud, will never have the balls
to pull off.
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