“Saudi oil policy… has been
subject to a great deal of wild and
inaccurate conjecture in recent
weeks. We do not seek to politicize
oil… For us it’s a question of
supply and demand, it’s purely
business.” – Ali al Naimi, Saudi Oil
Minister
“There is no conspiracy, there is
no targeting of anyone. This is a
market and it goes up and down.” –
Suhail Bin Mohammed al-Mazroui,
United Arab Emirates’ petroleum
minister
“We all see the lowering of oil
prices. There’s lots of talk about
what’s causing it. Could it be an
agreement between the U.S. and Saudi
Arabia to punish Iran and affect the
economies of Russia and Venezuela?
It could.” – Russian
President Vladimir Putin
December 29, 2014 "ICH"
- "Counterpunch"
- Are
falling oil prices part of a US-Saudi
plan to inflict economic damage on
Russia, Iran and Venezuela?
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro
seems to think so. In a recent interview
that appeared in Reuters, Maduro said he
thought the United States and Saudi
Arabia wanted to drive down oil prices
“to harm Russia.”
Bolivian President Evo Morales agrees
with Maduro and told journalists at RT
that: “The reduction in oil prices was
provoked by the US as an attack on the
economies of Venezuela and Russia. In
the face of such economic and political
attacks, the nations must be united.”
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said
the same thing,with a slightly different
twist: “The main reason for (the oil
price plunge) is a political conspiracy
by certain countries against the
interests of the region and the Islamic
world … Iran and people of the region
will not forget such … treachery against
the interests of the Muslim world.”
US-Saudi “treachery”? Is that what’s
really driving down oil prices?
Not according to Saudi Arabia’s
Petroleum Minister Ali al-Naimi. Al-Naimi
has repeatedly denied claims that the
kingdom is involved in a conspiracy. He
says the tumbling prices are the result
of “A lack of cooperation by non-OPEC
production nations, along with the
spread of misinformation and
speculator’s greed.” In other words,
everyone else is to blame except the
country that has historically kept
prices high by controlling output.
That’s a bit of a stretch, don’t you
think? Especially since–according to the
Financial Times — OPEC’s de facto leader
has abandoned the cartel’s “traditional
strategy” and announced that it won’t
cut production even if prices drop to
$20 per barrel.
Why? Why would the Saudis suddenly
abandon a strategy that allowed them to
rake in twice as much dough as they are
today? Don’t they like money anymore?
And why would al-Naimi be so eager to
crash prices, send Middle East stock
markets into freefall, increase the
kingdom’s budget deficits to a
record-high 5 percent of GDP, and create
widespread financial instability? Is
grabbing “market share” really that
important or is there something else
going on here below the surface?
The Guardian’s Larry Elliot thinks
the US and Saudi Arabia are engaged a
conspiracy to push down oil prices. He
points to a September meeting between
John Kerry and Saudi King Abdullah where
a deal was made to boost production in
order to hurt Iran and Russia. Here’s a
clip from the article titled “Stakes are
high as US plays the oil card against
Iran and Russia”:
“…with the help of its Saudi
ally, Washington is trying to drive
down the oil price by flooding an
already weak market with crude. As
the Russians and the Iranians are
heavily dependent on oil exports,
the assumption is that they will
become easier to deal with…
John Kerry, the US secretary of
state, allegedly struck a deal with
King Abdullah in September under
which the Saudis would sell crude at
below the prevailing market price.
That would help explain why the
price has been falling at a time
when, given the turmoil in Iraq and
Syria caused by Islamic State, it
would normally have been rising.
The Saudis did something similar
in the mid-1980s. Then, the
geopolitical motivation for a move
that sent the oil price to below $10
a barrel was to destabilize Saddam
Hussein’s regime. This time,
according to Middle East
specialists, the Saudis want to put
pressure on Iran and to force Moscow
to weaken its support for the Assad
regime in Syria… (Stakes
are high as US plays the oil card
against Iran and Russia,
Guardian)
That’s the gist of Elliot’s theory,
but is he right?
Vladimir Putin isn’t so sure. Unlike
Morales, Maduro and Rouhani, the Russian
president has been reluctant to blame
falling prices on US-Saudi collusion. In
an article in Itar-Tass, Putin opined:
“There’s a lot of talk around” in
what concerns the causes for the
slide of oil prices, he said at a
major annual news conference. “Some
people say there is conspiracy
between Saudi Arabia and the US in
order to punish Iran or to depress
the Russian economy or to exert
impact on Venezuela.”
“It might be really so or might
be different, or there might be the
struggle of traditional producers of
crude oil and shale oil,” Putin
said. “Given the current situation
on the market the production of
shale oil and gas has practically
reached the level of zero operating
costs.” (Putin
says oil market price conspiracy
between Saudi Arabia and US not
ruled out, Itar-Tass)
As always, Putin takes the most
moderate position, that is, that
Washington and the Saudis may be in
cahoots, but that droopy prices might
simply be a sign of over-supply and
weakening demand. In other words, there
could be a plot, but then again, maybe
not. Putin is a man who avoids passing
judgment without sufficient evidence.
The same can’t be said of the
Washington Post. In a recent article, WP
journalist Chris Mooney dismisses anyone
who thinks oil prices are the result of
US-Saudi collaboration as “kooky
conspiracy theorists”. According to
Mooney:
“The reasons for the sudden
(price) swing are not particularly
glamorous: They involve factors like
supply and demand, oil companies
having invested heavily in
exploration several years ago to
produce a glut of oil that has now
hit the market — and then, perhaps,
the “lack of cohesion” among the
diverse members of OPEC.” (Why
there are so many kooky conspiracy
theories about oil, Washington
Post)
Oddly enough, Mooney disproves his
own theory a few paragraphs later in the
same piece when he says:
“Oil producers really do
coordinate. And then, there’s OPEC,
which is widely referred to in the
press as a “cartel,” and which
states up front that its mission is
to “coordinate and unify the
petroleum policies” of its 12 member
countries…. Again, there’s that
veneer of plausibility to the idea
of some grand oil related strategy.”
(WP)
Let me get this straight: One the one
hand Mooney agrees that OPEC is a cartel
that “coordinates and unify the
petroleum policies”, then on the other,
he says that market fundamentals are at
work. Can you see the disconnect?
Cartels obstruct normal supply-demand
dynamics by fixing prices, which Mooney
seems to breezily ignore.
Also, he scoffs at the idea of “some
grand oil related strategy” as if these
cartel nations were philanthropic
organizations operating in the service
of humanity. Right. Someone needs to
clue Mooney in on the fact that OPEC is
not the Peace Corps. They are
monopolizing amalgam of cutthroat
extortionists whose only interest is
maximizing profits while increasing
their own political power. Surely, we
can all agree on that fact.
What’s really wrong with Mooney’s
article, is that he misses the point
entirely. The debate is NOT between
so-called “conspiracy theorists” and
those who think market forces alone
explain the falling prices. It’s between
the people who think that the Saudis
decision to flood the market is driven
by politics rather than a desire to grab
“market share.” That’s where people
disagree. No denies that there’s
manipulation; they merely disagree about
the motive. This glaring fact seems to
escape Mooney who is on a mission to
discredit conspiracy theorists at all
cost. Here’s more:
(There’s) “a long tradition of
conspiracy theorists who have
surmised that the world’s great oil
powers — whether countries or
mega-corporations — are secretly
pulling strings to shape world
events.”…
“A lot of conspiracy theories
take as their premise that there’s a
small group of people who are
plotting to control something, to
control the government, the banking
system, or the main energy source,
and they are doing this to the
disadvantage of everybody else,”
says University of California-Davis
historian Kathy Olmsted, author of
“Real Enemies: Conspiracy Theories
and American Democracy, World War I
to 9/11″. (Washington Post)
Got that? Now find me one person who
doesn’t think the world is run by a
small group of rich, powerful people who
operate in their own best interests?
Here’s more from the same article:
(Oil) “It’s the perfect lever for
shifting world events. If you were a
mad secret society with
world-dominating aspirations and
lots of power, how would you tweak
the world to create cascading
outcomes that could topple
governments and enrich some at the
expense of others? It’s hard to see
a better lever than the price of
oil, given its integral role in the
world economy.” (WP)
“A mad secret society”? Has Mooney
noticed that — in the last decade and a
half — the US has only invaded nations
that have huge natural resources (mainly
oil and natural gas) or the geography
for critical pipeline routes? There’s
nothing particularly secret about it, is
there?
The United States is not a “mad
secret society with world-dominating
aspirations”. It’s a empire with
blatantly obvious “world-dominating
aspirations” run by political puppets
who do the work of wealthy elites and
corporations. Any sentient being who’s
bright enough to browse the daily
headlines can figure that one out.
Mooney’s grand finale:
“So in sum, with a surprising and
dramatic event like this year’s oil
price decline, it would be shocking
if it did not generate conspiracy
theories. Humans believe them all
too easily. And they’re a lot more
colorful than a more technical (and
accurate) story about supply and
demand.” (WP)
Ah, yes. Now I see. Those darn
“humans”. They’re so weak-minded they’ll
believe anything you tell them, which is
why they need someone as smart as Mooney
tell them how the world really works.
Have you ever read such nonsense in
your life? On top of that, he gets the
whole story wrong. This isn’t about
market fundamentals. It’s about
manipulation. Are the Saudis
manipulating supply to grab market share
or for political reasons? THAT’S THE
QUESTION. The fact that they ARE
manipulating supply is not challenged by
anyone including the uber-conservative
Financial Times that deliberately
pointed out that the Saudis had
abandoned their traditional role of
cutting supply to support prices. That’s
what a “swing state” does; it
manipulates supply keep prices higher
than they would be if market forces were
allowed to operate unimpeded.
So what is the motive driving the
policy; that’s what we want to know?
Certainly there’s a strong case to be
made for market share. No one denies
that. If the Saudis keep prices at rock
bottom for a prolonged period of time,
then a high percentage of the producers
(that can’t survive at prices below $70
per barrel) will default leaving OPEC
with greater market share and more
control over pricing.
So market share is certainly a
factor. But is it the only factor?
Is it so far fetched to think that
the United States–which in the last year
has imposed harsh economic sanctions on
Russia, made every effort to sabotage
the South Stream pipeline, and toppled
the government in Kiev so it could
control the flow of Russian gas to
countries in the EU–would coerce the
Saudis into flooding the market with oil
in order to decimate the Russian
economy, savage the ruble, and create
favorable conditions for regime change
in Moscow? Is that so hard to believe?
Apparently New York Times columnist
Thomas Freidman doesn’t think so. Here’s
how he summed it up in a piece last
month: “Is it just my imagination or is
there a global oil war underway pitting
the United States and Saudi Arabia on
one side against Russia and Iran on the
other?”
It sounds like Freidman has joined
the conspiracy throng, doesn’t it? And
he’s not alone either. This is from Alex
Lantier at the World Socialist Web Site:
“While there are a host of global
economic factors underlying the fall
in oil prices, it is unquestionable
that a major role in the commodity’s
staggering plunge is Washington’s
collaboration with OPEC and the
Saudi monarchs in Riyadh to boost
production and increase the glut on
world oil markets.
As Obama traveled to Saudi Arabia
after the outbreak of the Ukraine
crisis last March, the Guardian
wrote, “Angered by the Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, the
Saudis turned on the oil taps,
driving down the global price of
crude until it reached $20 a barrel
(in today’s prices) in the
mid-1980s… [Today] the Saudis might
be up for such a move—which would
also boost global growth—in order to
punish Putin over his support for
the Assad regime in Syria. Has
Washington floated this idea with
Riyadh? It would be a surprise if it
hasn’t.” (Alex Lantier,
Imperialism and the ruble crisis,
World Socialist Web Site)
And here’s an intriguing clip from an
article at Reuters that suggests the
Obama administration is behind the
present Saudi policy:
“U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry
sidestepped the issue (of a US-Saudi
plot) after a trip to Saudi Arabia in
September. Asked if past discussions
with Riyadh had touched on Russia’s need
for oil above $100 to balance its
budget, he smiled and said: “They
(Saudis) are very, very well aware of
their ability to have an impact on
global oil prices.” (Saudi
oil policy uncertainty unleashes the
conspiracy theorists, Reuters)
Wink, wink.
Of course, they’re in bed together.
Saudi Arabia is a US client. It’s not
autonomous or sovereign in any
meaningful way. It’s a US protectorate,
a satellite, a colony. They do what
they’re told. Period. True, the
relationship is complex, but let’s not
be ridiculous. The Saudis are not
calling the shots. The idea is absurd.
Do you really think that Washington
would let Riyadh fiddle prices in a way
that destroyed critical US domestic
energy industries, ravaged the junk bond
market, and generated widespread
financial instability without uttering a
peep of protest on the matter?
Dream on! If the US was unhappy with
the Saudis, we’d all know about it in
short-order because it would be raining
Daisy Cutters from the Persian Gulf to
the Red Sea, which is the way that
Washington normally expresses its
displeasure on such matters. The fact
that Obama has not even alluded to the
shocking plunge in prices just proves
that the policy coincides with
Washington’s broader geopolitical
strategy.
And let’s not forget that the Saudis
have used oil as a political weapon
before, many times before. Indeed,
wreaking havoc is nothing new for our
good buddies the Saudis. Check this out
from Oil Price website:
“In 1973, Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat convinced Saudi King
Faisal to cut production and raise
prices, then to go as far as
embargoing oil exports, all with the
goal of punishing the United States
for supporting Israel against the
Arab states. It worked. The “oil
price shock” quadrupled prices.
It happened again in 1986, when
Saudi Arabia-led OPEC allowed prices
to drop precipitously, and then in
1990, when the Saudis sent prices
plummeting as a way of taking out
Russia, which was seen as a threat
to their oil supremacy. In 1998,
they succeeded. When the oil price
was halved from $25 to $12, Russia
defaulted on its debt.
The Saudis and other OPEC members
have, of course, used the oil price
for the obverse effect, that is,
suppressing production to keep
prices artificially high and member
states swimming in “petrodollars”.
In 2008, oil peaked at $147 a
barrel.” (Did
The Saudis And The US Collude In
Dropping Oil Prices?, Oil Price)
1973, 1986, 1990, 1998 and 2008.
So, according to the author, the
Saudis have manipulated oil prices at
least five times in the past to achieve
their foreign policy objectives. But, if
that’s the case, then why does the media
ridicule people who think the Saudis
might be engaged in a similar strategy
today?
Could it be that the media is trying
to shape public opinion on the issue
and, by doing so, actually contribute to
the plunge in oil prices?
Bingo. Alert readers have probably
noticed that the oil story has been
splashed across the headlines for weeks
even though the basic facts have not
changed in the least. It’s all a rehash
of the same tedious story reprinted over
and over again. But, why? Why does the
public need to have the same “Saudis
refuse to cut production” story driven
into their consciousness day after day
like they’re part of some great
collective brainwashing experiment?
Could it be that every time the message
is repeated, oil sells off, and prices
go down? Is that it?
Precisely. For example, last week a
refinery was attacked in Libya which
pushed oil prices up almost immediately.
Just hours later, however, another
“Saudis refuse to cut production” story
conveniently popped up in all the major
US media which pushed prices in the
direction the USG wants them to go, er,
I mean, back down again.
This is how the media helps to
reinforce government policy, by crafting
a message that helps to push down prices
and, thus, hurt “evil” Putin. (This is
called “jawboning”) Keep in mind, that
OPEC doesn’t meet again until June,
2015, so there’s nothing new to report
on production levels. But that doesn’t
mean we’re not going to get regular
updates on the “Saudis refuse to cut
production” story. Oh, no. The media is
going to keep beating that drum until
Putin cries “Uncle” and submits to US
directives. Either that, or the bond
market is going to blow up and take the
whole damn global financial system along
with it. One way or another, something’s
got to give.
Bottom line: Falling oil prices and
the plunging ruble are not some kind of
free market accident brought on by
oversupply and weak demand. That’s
baloney. They’re part of a broader
geopolitical strategy to strangle the
Russian economy, topple Putin, and
establish US hegemony across the Asian
landmass. It’s all part of Washington’s
plan to maintain its top-spot as the
world’s only superpower even though its
economy is in irreversible decline.
Mike Whitney lives in Washington
state. He is a contributor to Hopeless:
Barack Obama and the Politics of
Illusion (AK Press). Hopeless is
also available in a Kindle
edition. He can be reached at fergiewhitney@msn.com.