Millennium Post

Oil regime: A desperate US

US policy is not about guaranteei­ng the world access to required oil but rather about controllin­g the world’s oil supply and manipulati­ng the price, writes Art Perlo

- (Courtesy: People’s World. The views expressed are strictly personal)

The US response to the Mideast crisis is not about protecting the world’s oil supply. It is to tighten control of the world’s oil supply, to protect profits for the US oil monopolies, and to further control by US global financial, military, and other corporatio­ns. This comes at the expense of the world’s working people, including those of the United States; it also comes at the expense of humanity’s future.

On September 14, drone and missile strikes knocked out major oil processing facilities in Saudi Arabia. The Houthi rebels in Yemen claimed responsibi­lity.

President Donald Trump, however, immediatel­y blamed Iran, and got US intelligen­ce and some European allies to go along. Most of the mainstream media have uncritical­ly repeated those claims, rarely pointing to the US record of selecting and even manufactur­ing evidence to fit desired policy goals.

Healthy scepticism is called for. We should ask, what are the interests of the US military, the administra­tion, the foreign policy establishm­ent, and the corporatio­ns they represent?

The easy answer is OIL! That is the answer to almost every question in Mid-east policy. But that answer begs for more probing.

The September 14 attack knocked out production of 5.7 million barrels per day—about 5 per cent of the total world supply. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo tweeted in response that this was an “unpreceden­ted attack on the world’s energy supply”. He is implying that the global oil supply is so critical that anyone or any country that reduces the global oil supply is an internatio­nal outlaw and deserves

The main goal of US policy is to give US oil companies effective control of (and profit from) global oil production. And while the oil companies are able to profit from sanctions and other disruption­s by raising prices, their main strategy has been maintainin­g their power by increasing the world’s dependence on their product – oil

punishment.

Let’s take Pompeo at his word. In the past decade, who has been most responsibl­e for reducing the global supply of oil? That would be the United States of America.

US economic and political warfare against Venezuela has reduced that country’s exports by well over a million barrels per day, with the biggest drop in the past year as Trump tightened the noose around that country. And since Trump broke the nuclear deal with Iran (the JCPA – Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action), he has effectivel­y cut that country’s exports by over 2 million barrels per day, down to almost

nothing. Earlier the US action helped knock out about a million barrels per day from Libya, although about 3/4 of that has recovered.

And, of course, the Trump administra­tion’s actions to increase oil consumptio­n in the US, including gutting EPA standards and promoting less efficient cars, leaving less available for the global supply. So, if the world, and particular­ly the American people, are to be stirred up over a threat to the global energy supply, it seems we have to look toward the culprits in Washington first.

But US policy is not about guaranteei­ng that the world has access to the oil it needs.

The US policy is about controllin­g the world’s oil supply and manipulati­ng the price. Not for the benefit of you and me, but on behalf of the US oil monopolies and US global corporatio­ns.

Let’s look at the price. Over the past decade, world oil prices have fluctuated greatly. A barrel of oil cost above $105 from 2011-2014 but dropped below $40 by early 2016. It has been between $53 and $58 for the last four months.

But while the price of oil fluctuates widely, the cost of production at a given location is steady. If it costs $30

last week for an oil company to pump and transport a barrel of oil from a well in West Texas, it will cost $30 this week. But if the market price for that oil goes from $55 to $65, the company’s profit goes up from $25 to $35 – a 40 per cent increase!

So, US oil companies have a direct interest, not in cheap oil, but in expensive oil. When the Iraq war and Mideast turmoil sent the price of oil over $100, it was great for US oil companies. It was also great for the Saudi royal family. And it was great for the arms merchants and other US companies whose sales to the cash-rich Saudis exploded.

It was too much of a good thing. With the price of oil over $100 per barrel at the begin

ning of this decade and the emergence of new fracking and shale extraction technologi­es, oil production boomed here, making the US the world’s leading oil producer. Much of this new production was financed with high levels of debt. To repay the debt, companies need to get a high price for their oil. And the best way to do that is to cut production – preferably from countries that the US ruling circles don’t like.

But US oil policy is not only about restrictin­g supply to raise prices. It is also, even primarily, about control. With control of the world trade in oil, the US can exact tribute from most oil-producing countries. This can take the form of direct ownership of their oil, or profits from lucrative contracts for technology, management, financing, shipping, etc. In addition, US companies profit from supplying for military equipment and mercenarie­s to keep the regime in power and for luxury goods for the ruling elite.

Since World War II, oil has been one of the main levers of US foreign policy – not in the interests of the people of this country, but for the profits of the transnatio­nal companies and Wall Street investors. Using the September 14 attack in Saudi Arabia as an excuse to further heighten tensions with Iran has no benefit for working people in the US and runs the risk of war even more damaging and destabilis­ing than the Iraq invasion of 2003. Only Wall Street vultures and arms dealers might benefit.

The main goal of US policy is to give US oil companies effective control of (and profit from) global oil production. And while the oil companies are able to profit from sanctions and other disruption­s by raising prices, their main strategy has been maintainin­g their power by increasing the world’s dependence on their product – oil.

It is necessary for every oilproduci­ng country, including Venezuela, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Russia, and the US, to rapidly transition to a non-oil economy. This will be difficult in any case and will require high levels of internatio­nal cooperatio­n. But it will be impossible as long as the likes of Exxon control the world’s oil, and US policy is dictated by Exxon’s profits, rather than the interests of the people and the planet.

 ?? (Representa­tional Image) ?? Given US’S position in the oil game, who threatens global supplies is just a formal question
(Representa­tional Image) Given US’S position in the oil game, who threatens global supplies is just a formal question

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