Has
Washington Lost the Middle East After Qatar?
William
Engdahl
27 June, 2017
There is a hidden thin red thread connecting the recent US Congress’ sanctions against Iran and now the Russian Federation, with the decision of Saudi Arabia and other Gulf monarchies to sanction Qatar. That red thread has nothing to do with a fight against terrorism and everything to do with who will control the largest natural gas reserves in the world as well as who will dominate the world market for that gas.
For
more or less the past Century, since 1914, the world has been almost
continuously at war over control of oil. Gradually with the adoption
of clean energy policies in the European Union and most especially in
China’s agreeing to significantly cut CO2 emissions by reducing
coal generation, itself a political act not a scientific one, as well
as advances in natural gas transport technologies, notably in the
liquefaction of natural gas or LNG, natural gas has finally become a
globally traded market as is oil. With this development, we now are
in an era not only of wars for control of major oil reserves around
the world. Now we have the dawn of the age of natural gas wars.
Fasten your seatbelts, ladies and gentlemen.
In
terms of geopolitical actors, no political power has been more
responsible for launching the recent undeclared gas wars than the
corrupt Washington cabal that makes policy on behalf of the so-called
deep state interests. This began markedly with the Obama Presidency
and is continuing with a vengeance under the current Trump-Tillerson
dog-n-pony show. Donald Trump’s recent trip to Riyadh and Tel Aviv
to nudge along the idea of a Sunni Arab “NATO” to fight
“terrorism,” which Washington now defines as Iran, has ignited a
new phase in the emerging US global gas wars.
Burning
the house to roast the pig
The
Trump Administration policy in the Middle East–and there is a clear
policy, rest assured–might be compared to that of the ancient
Chinese fable about the farmer who burnt down his house in order to
roast a pig. In order to control the emerging world energy market
around “low-CO2″ natural gas, Washington has targeted not only
the world’s largest gas reserve country, Russia. She is now
targeting Iran and Qatar. Let’s look more closely at why.
I’ve
written before about the infamous meeting on March 15 2009 between
then-Qatar Emir Sheikh Hamad Bin Khalifa Al Thani in Qatar with
Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, at that time still considered a
reliable friend of the Emir. Reportedly when Sheikh Hamad proposed to
Assad construction of a gas pipeline from Qatar’s huge Persian Gulf
gas field through Syria’s Aleppo Province on to Turkey aimed at the
huge EU gas market, Assad declined, deferring to his long-standing
good relations with Russia in gas issues and to not wanting to
undercut Russian gas exports to the EU with Qatari
gas.
That
Persian Gulf gas field, the Qatari part called North Dome and the
Iranian called South Pars, is estimated to be the largest single gas
field in the world. As fate would have it, the field straddles the
territorial waters between Qatar and Iran.
Then
in July 2011, reportedly with Moscow’s nod of approval, the
governments of Syria, Iraq and Iran signed a different gas pipeline
agreement called “Friendship Pipeline.” That agreement called for
construction of a 1,500 km long gas pipeline to bring the untapped
vast Iranian South Pars gas to the emerging EU market via Iraq, Syria
and to the Mediterranean by way of Lebanon. That pipeline is
obviously on hold since NATO and the Wahhabite reactionary Gulf
states opted to destroy Syria after 2011. They opted to destroy Assad
and a unified Syrian state through various false flag terror entities
they have variously named Al Qaeda in Iraq and Syria, then called the
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, then simply IS, or in Arabic DAESH.
For NATO and the Gulf Arab states a Iran-Iraq-Syria gas pipeline
would have changed the energy geopolitical map of Eurasia, and the
political influence of Iran over Saudi Wahhabite domination.
Not
surprising, when the mysterious ISIS exploded onto the scene in 2014,
it moved to occupy Aleppo where the pipeline to Turkey from Qatar was
planned. Coincidence? Not very likely.
The
proposed Qatar-Syria-Turkey-EU pipeline (blue) would go through
Aleppo Province and the alternative Iran-Iraq-Syria (red) via Lebanon
to the EU gas markets.
The
year 2011 was the point that Qatar began pouring as much as $3
billion into her war against Assad, backed then by Saudi Arabia and
the other Sunni Gulf Arab states, and then also by Turkey, which saw
its geopolitical European and Asian gas hub ambitions vanishing. The
very next month after announcement of the Iran-Syria “Friendship
Pipeline” agreement, in August, 2011, in the UN Security Council
the US demanded that Syria’s Assad step down. US Special Forces and
CIA began covertly training “Syrian opposition” terrorists
recruited from around the Sunni Wahabite-influenced world at secret
NATO bases in Turkey and Jordan to drive Assad out and open the door
for a Saudi-controlled puppet regime in Damascus friendly to their
gas pipeline ambitions with Qatar.
Geopolitical
stupidity in Washington and Riyadh
How
does that all fit the demonization today by Trump and by Saudi Prince
Salman of Iran as “the number one sponsor of terrorism” and Qatar
as a backer of terrorism?
It
all fits together when we realize that the current Emir of Qatar,
Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, son of Sheikh Hamad, being a more
pragmatic sort and realizing that Qatari dreams of a pipeline through
Aleppo into Turkey on to the EU had gone up in flames once Russia
stepped into the Syrian war, quietly began talks with…Teheran.
This
past spring, Qatar began talks with Teheran about finding a
compromise on exploitation of the shared South Pars-North Dome gas
field. Qatar lifted its moratorium on exploiting the field and
carried out discussions with Iran over its joint development.
Reportedly Qatar and Iran had come to an agreement on joint
construction of a Qatar-Iranian gas pipeline from Iran to the
Mediterranean or Turkey that will also carry Qatari gas to Europe. In
exchange, Doha agreed to end its support for terrorism in Syria, a
huge blow to the Trump-Saudi plans to balkanize a destroyed Syria and
control the gas flows of the region.
To
prevent that geopolitical catastrophe as Washington and Riyadh and
Tel Aviv view it, the unholy three have teamed up to blame Iran and
Qatar, ironically home to the Pentagon’s most important bases in
the entire Middle East. Qatar they announced is the ‘Evil Knievel’
of world terrorism, with US Defense Secretary “Mad Dog” Mattis
actually declaring that Iran was the world’s “biggest state
sponsor of terrorism,” while Qatar’s crime allegedly was as key
financier of
Hamas, Al Qaeda and ISIS. That
was maybe then. Today Qatar is pursuing other aims.
Washington
conveniently whitewashes the role of Wahhabite Saudi Arabia which has
reportedly funneled more than $100 billion in recent years to build
networks of fanatic Jihadi terrorists from Kabul to China, from
Bosnia-Herzegovina to Kosovo and Syria and even in Iran and Russia.
Doomed
to Fail
Like
most recent neo-con Washington strategies, the Qatar-Teheran
demonization and sanctions is blowing back in the faces of its
backers. Iran responded immediately with offers of emergency food and
other aid to break the blockade, reminiscent in a very different
context of
the 1948-49 Berlin Airlift.
As
well Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has just met with the
Qatari Foreign Minister in Moscow and
China and the Chinese Navy has just landed in an Iran port to engage
in joint Iran-China naval exercises in the hyper-strategic oil
chokepoint at the Strait of Hormuz. The Strait of Hormuz between Oman
and Iran at the opening from the Persian Gulf to the Sea of Oman, is
undeniably the most strategic water choke-point in today’s world
with more than 35% of all seaborne oil passing through it to China
and other world markets.
Iran
is a candidate to become a full member of the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization now that US and EU sanctions have been semi-lifted, and
is already an invited strategic participant in China’s One Belt,
One Road, earlier known as the “New Economic Silk Road,” far and
away the world’s most impressive infrastructure project to create
economic linkages across the states of Eurasia including the Middle
East.
Qatar
too is no stranger to either China or Russia. In 2015 Qatar was
officially recognized by the Peoples’ Bank of China as the
first Middle East center for clearing transactions in the
Chinese currency, the yuan, now accepted by the IMF in its SDR basket
of currencies, a major boost to international acceptance of the
renminbi or yuan. That renminbi clearing status allows Qatari
companies to settle their trade with China, for example in natural
gas, directly in renminbi. Already Qatar exports significant LNG to
China.
According
to recent reports out of Amsterdam, Qatar is already selling China
gas denominated in renminbi rather than US dollars. If true, that
spells a major tectonic shift in the power of the US dollar, the
financial basis of its ability to wage wars everywhere and run a
federal deficit and public debt over $19 trillion. Iran already
refuses dollars for its oil and Russia sells its gas to China in
rubles or yuan. Were that to significantly shift in favor of
international bilateral trades in renminbi or Russian rubles and
other non-dollar currencies, that would be twilight for America’s
global superpower. Lights out, basta!
It
ain’t easy to be the world’s Sole Superpower today, not at all as
it was, say, in the 1990’s. Not even psychopathic generals with
nicknames like Mad Dog can scare others into falling back in line
when Washington barks her orders. Back as recent as the 1990s it was,
so to say, a piece of cake. Run a war in Yugoslavia, destabilize the
Soviet Union after a long war in Afghanistan, loot the former
Communist economies of all Eastern Europe. Worse still, the world
seems not to appreciate Washington’s wars of destruction anymore.
Now that’s real ingratitude after all that Washington has done for
them in recent years…
Could
it be that the American Century, viewed by future historians, will
have its obituary written around the time in 2017 when Washington
lost control of the “strategic prize” as Dick Cheney called the
energy-rich Middle East?
F.
William Engdahl is strategic risk consultant and lecturer, he holds a
degree in politics from Princeton University and is a
best-selling author on oil and geopolitics, exclusively for the
online magazine “New
Eastern Outlook.”
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