OPEC, Russia and the New World Order Emerging
By F. William Engdahl
September 19, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
By the day
it’s becoming clearer that what I have recently been saying in my
writings is coming to be. The OPEC oil-producing states of the
Middle East, including Iran, through the skillful mediation of
Russia, are carefully laying the foundations for a truly new world
order. The first step in testing this will be if they collectively
succeed in eliminating the threat to Syria of the Islamic State, and
prepare the basis for serious, non-manipulated elections there.
For much of my adult
life I have been fascinated by the enormous energy inside our Earth
and how in fact the Earth moves as almost a living organism. Most
fascinating I find is tectonic motion and their connection to
earthquakes and volcanoes. Not the human destruction they sometimes
cause but the sheer energy. Tectonic motion involves the huge plates
that our Earth is divided into which are in constant micro-motion.
At critical junctures which Earth science or geophysics has yet to
be able to predict far ahead, the motion of those tectonic plates
cause earthquakes and determine where earthquakes will occur.
In the political, more
accurately geo-political sphere, we are now witnessing huge tectonic
motion, and destructive it is not. It involves a new attractive
force drawing the Middle East OPEC countries, including Saudi Arabia
and Iran and other Arab OPEC countries, into what will soon become
obvious as a strategic partnership with the Russian Federation. It
transcends the huge religious divides today between Sunni Wahhabism,
Sufi, Shi’ism, Orthodox Christianity.
That tectonic motion
will soon cause a political earthquake that well might save the
planet from extinction by the endless wars the Pentagon and their
string pullers on Wall Street and the military industrial complex
and the loveless oligarchs who own them seem to have as their only
strategy today.
Russia in OPEC?
In an interview with
the London Financial Times, Russia’s most important oilman, Igor
Sechin, CEO of the state-owned Rosneft, confirmed rumors that Saudi
Arabia’s monarchy is seeking a formal market-share agreement with
Russia, even going so far as offering Russia membership in OPEC, to
stabilize world oil markets. In the interview, Sechin, considered
one of President Vladimir Putin’s closest allies, confirmed the
Saudi offer. The Financial Times (FT) is an influential media owned
until this past July by the Pearson Group an asset tied to the
Rothschild family who historically also dominate Royal Dutch Shell.
The London paper chose
to emphasize Sechin’s rejection of the Saudi offer. However, most
instructive is to read between the lines of what he said. He told a
Singapore commodities conference organized by the FT, “It
needs to be recognised that Opec’s ‘golden age’ in the oil market
has been lost. They fail to observe their own quotas [for Opec oil
output]. If quotas had been observed, global oil markets would have
been rebalanced by
now.”
Sechin well knows the background to the Saudi oil price war and the
fact it was triggered by a meeting between US State Department’s
John Kerry and the late Saudi King Abdullah in the desert Kingdom in
September 2014, where Kerry reportedly urged the Saudis to crash oil
prices. For Kerry the aim was to put unbearable pressure on Russia,
then hit by US and EU financial sanctions. For the Saudis, it was a
golden opportunity to eliminate the biggest disturbing factor in the
OPEC domination of world oil markets–the booming production of US
unconventional shale oil that had made the USA the world’s largest
oil producer in 2014.
Ironically, as Sechin
told the FT, the US-Saudi deal and the US financial sanctions have
backfired on the US strategists. The Russian ruble lost more than
50% of its dollar value by January 2015. Oil prices similarly fell
from $103 a barrel in September 2014 to less than $50 today. But
Russian oil production costs are calculated in rubles, not dollars.
So, as Sechin states, the dollar cost of Rosneft oil production has
dropped dramatically today from $5 a barrel before the sanctions to
only $3 a barrel, a level similar to that of Arab OPEC producers
like Saudi Arabia. Rosneft is not hurting despite sanctions. USA
shale oil by contrast is unconventional and vastly more costly.
Industry estimates depending on the shale field and the company, put
costs of shale in a range of $60-80 a barrel just to break even. The
current ongoing shakeout in the US shale industry and prospects of
rising US interest rates dictate the demise of shale oil from the US
for years if not decades to come as Wall Street lenders and shale
company junk bond investors suffer huge losses.
Unknotting the
‘not’ knot
I would like to
indulge in a brief exercise in imagining what some form of close
coordination between Russia and a Saudi-led OPEC grouping would look
like. I call it “unknotting the ‘not’ knot,” the knot over control
of world oil flows that has held the world in a hypnosis of wars and
murder, hate for too long.
First the new grouping
between Russia and the Mideast oil states would have to negotiate
stable market relations between themselves and their prime markets
such as China and the EU. Alexander Mercouris in a very insightful
piece suggests that the Sechin statement to the FT can be seen as an
opening Russian negotiating position with the Saudi OPEC offer.
At the Singapore
commodities conference, Rosneft’s Sechin indicated that China and
Russia this year have agreed to a total of various oil deals
amounting to some $500 billion over the next 20 years or $25 billion
a year for Rosneft. Saudi Arabia was formerly China’s largest oil
source until Russia’s Rosneft entered in a major way. That was a
strategic decision for Russia as for China and not a mere
market-driven one. Now, regardless what Sechin did or did not say to
the FT, there is no good reason for Russia not to untie the knot of
world oil to the Anglo-Americans and enter into serious negotiations
with Saudi Arabia on strategic cooperation of some consequent form.
Quotas could be agreed
so that Russia and Saudi Arabia and OPEC act much as the
Anglo-American oil companies did in 1928 to end literal wars between
the British Rothschild group behind Royal Dutch Shell and the
Rockefeller Standard Oil companies for world oil market control,
wars that raged across the world from Mexico to Baku, from Kuwait to
Texas.
The Anglo-American oil
wars were ended in a meeting at the Achnacarry Scotland castle of
Royal Dutch Shell’s Sir Henry Deterding in 1927. The American and
British oil companies formally agreed to a “ceasefire” which
resulted in the creation of the enormously powerful Anglo-American
oil cartel, later dubbed the ‘Seven Sisters.’ The peace agreement
was formalized in 1927, at Achnacarry, the Scottish castle of
Shell’s Sir Henri Deterding. John Cadman, representing the British
government’s Anglo-Persian Oil Co. (British Petroleum), and Walter
Teagle, president of Rockefeller’s Standard Oil of New Jersey
(Exxon), gathered under the cover of a grouse shoot to create the
most powerful economic cartel in modern history. The Seven Sisters
were effectively joined at the hip, acting in the world as one at
least until 1945.
Their secret pact was
formalized as the ‘As Is’ agreement of 1928, or the Achnacarry
Agreement. British and American oil majors agreed to accept the
existing market divisions and shares, to set a secret world cartel
price, and to end the destructive competition and price wars in what
became the Red Line Agreement. Britain forced a weakened France to
agree in 1927 to let the Americans into the Middle East and revise
the secret wartime Sykes-Picot accords to reflect that. A Red Line
was drawn from the Dardanelles down through Palestine, to Yemen and
up through the Persian Gulf.
The Anglo-American Red Line
Agreement has led to oil wars and world wars since 1928
The history of the
past approximately 88 years since that secret Anglo-American oil
cartel agreement is not understandable if that fateful Achnacarry
Red Line Agreement and its ensuing political corollaries are not
understood.
Now what is very
likely to emerge in the current extraordinary situation is a
negotiated arrangement between Putin’s Russia and the Saudi-led OPEC
oil producers of the Middle East, including Iran, to devise a new
ordering of world energy supply, one independent of the near century
of Anglo-American domination. The benefits of such a new world
ordering are simply too great for all involved parties to ignore.
Whether or not Igor
Sechin is ready to think in such terms, it is abundantly clear by
his diplomacy that President Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei
Lavrov are. Not that Sechin is incapable, but the recent sacking of
Vladimir Yakunin, chief executive officer of OAO Russian Railways
shows that Putin is prepared to move the global situation even if it
is not to the liking of his closest old circle of friends, if he
deems it for a greater good of
Russia.
What would be in it
for Russia? Huge benefits. It would secure the world’s largest pool
of hydrocarbons–oil and gas–by the nations of the contiguous land
mass that British “father” of geopolitics, Sir Halford Mackinder
referred to as the “World island”–Russia, China, Indian subcotinent,
South Asia, and now radiating in an arc deep into the entire Middle
East oil belt and on into Egypt in North Africa. It would provide
Russia safe markets outside the Anglo-American current war zone.
Russia would be in an
entirely new negotiating position vis-a-vis German and EU economic
sanctions. It would also transform the political map of the
so-called American Century that emerged out of the war in 1945 with
Truman’s decision to drom the atomic bombs on Japan.
In such an accord with
Russia, the oil producing countries of the Middle East would join as
central parties to the unfolding economic boom that is emerging out
of the China One Belt, One Road new Economic Silk Road rail and sea
port infrastructure project.
That project, to
recall, is already well underway, and Russia and the Eurasian
Economic Union states have recently agreed with China to integrate
the rail route development of both. The development of huge new sea
ports in Myanmar and other sites around Eurasia and the Indian Ocean
will directly link the Gulf countries to that Eurasian booming new
economic market and beyond.
The inclusion of Iran,
a geopolitical essential for all parties, as well as Saudi Arabia
and the Gulf Arab OPEC states, along with Egypt, together in an
alliance with the negotiated military support of the one state in
the world today able to challenge the USA, namely, Russia, would end
more than a century of Anglo-American colonial wars and destruction
in the region, the most recent of which is the
Washington-CIA-instigated series of destructive Color Revolutions
dubbed the “Arab Spring.”
Resolution of the
US-UK-instigated Syrian war and their unleashing of the so-called IS
on the world–lest we forget, that war and the role of the terror of
the IS is the source of the ongoing refugee crisis that is
destabilizing all Europe– such a peaceful resolution, absent the
demands of Washington that President Assad go into exile, or that
US-sponsored terrorist groups like al-Nusra and the Muslim
Brotherhood take power, would be the first sign of this cooperation
between Russia and the influential oil states of the Middle East. It
would deal a devastating blow to the Washington warhawks.
As this new world
ordering, including Saudi-led Arab OPEC states, Russia, China and
all Eurasia becomes more likely by the day, Secretary John Kerry,
CIA chief John Brennan, as well as incoming Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff Marine Corps General Joseph Francis “Fighting Joe”
Dunford, an outspoken
Russophobe, along with the various neo-con Washington
think-tanks, Defense Secretary and Democratic Party neo-con Ash (as
in ashes of war) Carter, Susan Rice, war-mongering UN Ambassador
Samantha Power, Vice President Joe Biden (possibly the next US
President), the entire USA military industrial complex, the Wall
Street money financing it, and families such as Rockefeller, Bush,
Clinton, McCain, Gates, Buffett—all these poor unhappy people are
beginning to feel suddenly naked, standing in the Arctic cold frozen
waters without even a paddle or an ice-breaker to navigate.
I can empathize with
their feeling, but I can’t feel sorry for them in any way. Their
time has gone for all the good they have managed not to do. It’s
past time for real American citizens to retake their country. After
all, aren’t we the majority? We just forgot we can also be good. We
should leave the war matrix behind.
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”