Peak Oil And The Political Economy Of Terrorism
By Mathew Maavak
04/21/06 "ICH"
-- -- Crude oil has breached the $70 psychological barrier again.
This time, however, it will not be a one-day seduction by the
stormy Katrina.
The causative culprits are aplenty.
Terrorist have taken out 25 per cent of Nigeria's sweet crude
since late February and the daily joust between Washington and
Tehran is providing splendid returns to those who had invested
in oil stocks. For these savvy investors, there will be enough
gas in the tank during the peak summer driving season.
Than there is that 10.2 per cent growth registered by China,
announced very conveniently before President Hu Jintao's
scheduled meeting with his US counterpart George W. Bush.
China's booming growth can only be greased by a harder-to-pump
oil. The alternatives are stark. If the Chinese bubble gets
pricked, the global economy suffers, US corporations may need
higher tax cuts - or even subsidies - and Americans will finally
need to trim their bellies.
That would be Hu's sales pitch but Bush may opt for a more
risky oil
prospecting venture. This time, the failed former Texan
oilman may succeed, and ignite enough fires in an
energy-strained world.
It is high noon for those prospecting for maximum oil
returns. Even the types not usually associated with Wall Street,
rocket science and deficit spending are glued to Bloomberg's
running crude oil tickers by the minute.
The objective is the lucky strike. Peak Oil is forming a
strategic fit with Peak Terrorism.
For a synoptic glimpse into the future, read this excerpt
from New York Times' April 16 article headlined "Blood
and Oil":
Just as things seemed to be calming down in the delta region
of Nigeria after a spate of kidnappings and insurgent
attacks, the militant group calling itself the Movement for
the Emancipation of the Niger Delta — MEND — announced last
week to all who would listen that it was planning new
violence against oil facilities in the region. Apparently
unconcerned about tipping its hand to the authorities, MEND
even gave a date for the start of its new campaign: April
25.
That date is perfect! These guys are more financially savvy
than stuffed suits who have hedged their future in a world where
oil never existed. D-Day in the Niger Delta is just 72-odd hours
before the UN Security Council meets to unleash a little fission
over Iran's nuclear enrichment program.
Crude oil at $80 per barrel on April 28? Who knows?
If a rag-tag bunch of militants in Nigeria are accurately
reading the tea leaves in an oil-brimmed cup, imagine what Al
Qaeda and the pan-global martyrs of terror have in store?
There is a greater lead-filled premium now for oil-related
and economic targets. In a business-speak twist, collateral
damage can be applied to the unlucky rejects in a fire sale
transaction.
You can bet your every last dime that terrorists are ready to
throw their explosive spanners into the machineries of global
trade. They know the drill. There is tremendous potential here
to cause pandemonium and cross-border tensions. Targeting energy
infrastructures will be far more efficacious and less
opprobrious than the indiscriminate slaughter of civilians.
Why assassinate politicians or shoot a GI when mobs -
deprived of their daily bread - can do more in aggregates and
derivatives? In layman's terms, we are talking about riots,
sit-downs, union strikes, looted stores and political mayhem.
Economic targets offer the best returns with less risks. Stock
markets will be depressed, inflation will set in, bankruptcies
will proliferate, and people will starve.
The concatenation of financially-induced social upheavals has
been witnessed before - across continents - during the currency
crisis of the late 90s. Unless checked, wars are the inevitable
culmination. There are no IMF prescriptions for dwindling oil
reserves, busted pipelines and electricity blackouts.
Call this the political economy of terrorism, but apart from
Iraq and Palestine, terrorists will increasingly focus on the
conveyor belts of finance and trade. There is no shortage of
targets for disgruntled elements worldwide. There are Maoist
guerillas in Nepal, ethnic insurgents in Burma, Al
Qaeda-inspired militants in Islamic nations and assorted
purveyors of violence in every nook and corner where there are
power plants, ports, retail stores, trading depots, factories,
banks and transborder pipelines. Mundane industrial structures -
particularly those connected to oil - have attained value-added
targeting than shoppers at a marketplace. A suicide bomber might
as well "walk the last walk" into a minor, provincial bank than
into a crowded souk. Planting midnight bombs at ATMs in a
major city entails little or no bloodshed, though, it may douse
seasonal fire sales the next morning, not to mention the lack of
change for lunch. Ever noticed the anticipatory or frustrated
month-end file of workers at ATM kiosks short on notes?
A little inconvenience can go a long way in disrupting normal
routine, and no nation can provide complete protection for these
mundane cogs of human activity.
Terrorists switching to the political economy side of their
trade can expect other windfalls. Destroying the perceived icons
of (Western) imperialism elicit less disgust - and perhaps
sympathy - than the televised butchering of individuals. Suicide
bombings that shred innocent limbs at a discotheque and net
relayed beheadings of infidels reek of bestiality. Why kill a
Daniel Pearl when you can play Che Guevara?
But is this happening?
There were strong hints emerging since February.
The Niger Delta attacks offlined production amounting to
550,000 barrels per day, rendering the affected Royal Dutch
Shell installations immobile till today. What was untouched was
probably left for April 25. Almost simultaneously, violent
protests in the Ecuadorian province of Napo forced state oil
firm Petroecuador to halt supplies through its Trans-Ecuadorean
pipeline.
Both incidents raised US crude oil futures by $1 overnight.
It has since risen by more than $10 dollars - a safe median
figure used by commentators without an MSNBC or Bloomberg ticker
on their offline notebooks.
In Iraq, while bombs routinely kill civilians, little has
been noted of pipeline sabotages, stretching from Kirkuk to
Bayji to the Turkish border. Restoring normal output may take up
to a year. And that's a big hypothetical "if" with Iraq in a
state of disintegration. Think of the hundreds of thousands of
miles of exposed pipelines around the world, and the cumulative
number of years needed to repair them? If Iraq's oil and its
pipelines can energize the current sectarian war, couldn't that
be replicated in places simmering with ethnic and social
tensions? Expect authoritarian governments to manufacture
terrorism for the perpetuation of power. If you regard the USA
PATRIOT Act as draconian, you haven't seen the world yet!
Any bomb anywhere can be pinned on "terrorists" and sifting
the real from the manufactured would be next to impossible with
censorship laws established to prevent the transmission of coded
communications. Sounds familiar?
It would pose no barrier to the Real McCoys, however.
Terrorists - separated by ethnic, ideological and religious
motivations but united by calculated anarchy - have learnt their
economic primers on the go. It is the most potent weapon in this
age of Peak Oil.
Neither the brotherhoods of anarchy nor coded messages are
needed to set action time. The daily business headlines will do.
In Sync
While oil traders were still risk managing the outage from
Ecuador and the Niger Delta, militants in Saudi Arabia attempted
to blow up the world's largest oil processing complex in Abqaiq
on Feb 24. If they had succeeded, there would have been a double
digit increase in the price of crude in 48 hours. It could have
also precipitated social anarchy in a land seething with
repressed anger against the Al Saud monarchy. Under such a
scenario, repair works at Abqaiq would be next to impossible,
oil would shoot to above $100 per barrel, and a vortex of
violence would spiral to engulf much of the world. Remember,
society is only three meals away from anarchy.
As tensions rise by the day over Iran's nuclear enrichment
program- and it's not only Iran - pipelines and economic targets
are easier pickings vis a vis heavily-guarded political,
military and constabulary bastions. Call this risk management on
both sides. Governments will prioritize security for the levers
of governance and power; terrorists will probe and prioritize
valuable, less-guarded targets to trap security apparatuses in a
game of musical chairs. This will leave a gap for political
targets sooner or later. It's an old trick with new destructive
possibilities in a world peaked of oil.
Terrorists can also conflate ideological mileage with
financial aggrandizement. This was demonstrated during the days
leading up to the Sept 11 attacks. Unusually heavy transactions
were noted on airline stocks in the hours and days leading up to
the fateful incident. The yet-to-be-proven suspects were Osama
bin Laden and Al Qaeda. This gives a new twist to the maligned
practice of "insider trading," and it ingeniously raises capital
for further terrorist ventures. Non-ideological players like
organized criminal gangs and state actors would have taken note.
Each day, violence permeates our airwaves, are regurgitated on
news clips, and are headlined on our dailies. The real dangers
of terrorism can be manipulated and faked by the religious
devotees of Mammon.
Blames can fly in all directions.
Terrorists, after all, are the dernier cri bogeyman of
our times. They can - advertently or not - create political and
financial capital for powerful entities. The terrorism shill
also provides a Trojan Horse for state actors to destabilize a
hostile nation. In this high-octane world of dwindling mineral
resources, "terrorism" might be the spark - and later a sideshow
- for outright inter-state conflict. Wars are dictated by the
primacy of economics while ideologies serve to rouse the masses.
The most tindery powder keg right now is Iran. It's not just
hedge fund managers and investment gurus who are bracing for the
worst, or the best, depending on one's philosophy. There is
money here for Armani-clad entrepreneurs and coups de grace
for ski-masked individuals.
If Iran burns, or if neighboring Iraq descends further into
anarchy, expect scattered strikes against oil installations,
ports and power plants the world over. There will be more
trouble in Nigeria and Ecuador. Hotspots will
get hotter
with conflicts spreading far and wide. With so much happening,
renewed conflict in little-known Chad - among the five poorest
nations in the world but one with a billion in crude reserves -
may not blip on our media radar.
The
Ides of March have passed and it has left us with bad omens
for the coming months. The game of energy geopolitics is taking
new turns and uncertainties, including the option of a tactical
nuke attack on Iran's Natanz, Isfahan, and Bushehr complexes. If
Iran gets hit, the anti-American Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez may deliberately divert oil supplies to nations like
China, depriving the US of 15 per cent of its oil imports.
Highly unlikely but there are other variants to this game.
Al Qaeda may bomb targets within Iran, and blame it on the
United States, or it could sink a few tankers in the Straits of
Hormuz and blame it on the Persians. Neither the United States
nor Iran need to fight in a best-case scenario - if an
extraneous culprit can be identified and a standoff reached in
time. A Straits of Hormuz blocked by sunken tankers either way
will immediately reduce global oil supplies by 20-25 per cent
per day. Perhaps more, depending on which estimates you have
been reading.
The United States, after all, has the largest strategic
petroleum stockpile in the world, and its powers would be
aggrandized through this energy buffer. Is that good news? Well,
should US soldiers die in a Middle East artificially contrived
and subverted by Britain? Cut a deal with Tehran! After all,
Iran might have been a US partner today if not for Winston
Churchill. The CIA only stepped in later, in 1953. The tussle
started over the Anglo-Persian Oil Company, which no longer
exists by that name, but the bone of contention has gone on to
include tactical nukes.
Like changed names, the United Kingdom's role in global
subversion has been well-masked by Uncle Sam's schoolboy
misadventures.
Trust the Brits to ramp up their global terror machine again
and expect Uncle Sam to receive the annual rogue superpower
award. Expect a scramble for oil worldwide, providing targets of
opportunities to militants, criminals, and state-sponsored
terrorists. When this happens, the current national and
international structures would be blown out of shape.
Within this nightmare world, ordinary folks would gladly
welcome some order, or a New World Order. That plan was readied
long back - lock, stock and barrel. Long before the United
States of America came into being!
Welcome to the year when the artifice of civilization begins
its slide into a natural state of barbarity.
Mathew Maavak is a Malaysian journalist and a recent
visiting fellow at Jakarta's Centre for Strategic and
International Studies. He was trained in psychological warfare,
propaganda, crisis management, media crisis and security-related
issues at the University of Leeds, United Kingdom. Contact him
at mathew@maavak.net
Kuala Lumpur, April 21, 2006
Originally drafted in early April.
Copyright @ Mathew Maavak 2006
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