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Will Trump go to war with Iran to save America’s oil industry?

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Will Trump go to war with Iran to save America’s oil industry?

Scott Ritter
is a former US Marine Corps intelligence officer. He served in the Soviet Union as an inspector implementing the INF Treaty, in General Schwarzkopf’s staff during the Gulf War, and from 1991-1998 as a UN weapons inspector. Follow him on Twitter @RealScottRitter

22 Apr, 2020 20:15
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FILE PHOTO: A boat of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard © Reuters / Nazanin Tabatabaee / WANA (West Asia News Agency)
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It’s believed that a US-Iran war would disrupt the flow of Middle Eastern oil and, as such, should be avoided at all costs. With US oil futures trading in the negative, has the risk of such a war suddenly become attractive?
Last week, nearly a dozen Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy (IRGCN) vessels harassed a formation of US Navy and Coast Guard ships operating in international waters in the northern Persian Gulf. According to the US Navy, approximately 11 Iranian fast patrol boats conducted “dangerous and harassing approaches” of a flotilla of six vessels, repeatedly crossing the bows and sterns of the American ships at high speeds.

Such maneuvers are not uncommon in the Persian Gulf, where the US and Iranian navies have faced off against each other several times over the years, employing similar harassing tactics, but always stopping short of actual confrontation.

As such, President Donald Trump’s tweet on Wednesday, instructing the US Navy “to shoot down and destroy any and all Iranian gunboats if they harass our ships at sea,” seemed like an unnecessary and dangerous escalation, especially given the history of the US-Iranian confrontation in the region and the potentially devastating consequences of such.

Read more
In a time of pandemic, the US prepares for war – but Iran’s weakness is grossly exaggerated
Almost immediately after Trump released his Tweet, the price of oil rebounded. Futures contracts for West Texas Intermediate (WTI) spiked to $13.49, after previously dropping to historic lows, bottoming-out at nearly negative $37. Likewise, Brent futures, which benchmark around 60 percent of global crude purchases, jumped $1.20 higher to $20.53 per barrel, after trading as low as $15.98. Normally the cause-and-effect relationship between the threat of war and the rise in oil prices would be viewed in a negative light. But these are not normal times.

Back in September 2019, a drone and missile attack blamed on Iran—with or without the assistance of Houthi rebels—hit a pair of Saudi Arabian oil facilities, forcing them to shut down and thereby cutting Saudi Arabian oil production by 5.7 million barrels of oil a day, or five percent of global production. This attack came on the heels of a series of explosions targeting oil tankers in the strategic Strait of Hormuz in May 2019, attacks that, again, were blamed on Iran.

Iran has repeatedly sent a message to the US, its Gulf Arab allies and the rest of the world, that if the US expanded its “maximum pressure” campaign by sanctioning Iran’s oil and gas industry, thereby denying Iran access to global markets, then Iran was fully capable of retaliating in kind, closing down the Strait of Hormuz to oil tanker traffic and destroying critical oil production infrastructure. That message was reiterated in the May 2019 attacks – for which Iran, however, never claimed responsibility.

Also on rt.com Energy insecurity: Trump is a hostage to internal politics and an illusory ‘free market’ in the oil price game
While President Trump’s instincts at the time were to forcefully confront Iran over its behavior, he was talked down by calmer heads within his administration, including senior officers in the US military who warned that the US was not in a position to prevent Iran from exacting a horrific toll on Middle Eastern oil production, and in doing so cripple the global economy. Simply put, the risks associated with a war with Iran far outweighed any potential gains.

That was then; this is now. The Covid-19 pandemic has resulted in a global economic shutdown which has dramatically reduced the demand for oil at a time when the world was witnessing record-high levels of production. The resulting glut has led to a collapse in the price of oil, which has been exacerbated by a price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia, initiated in an effort to drive out US shale oil producers and lock in their respective share of a shrinking market.

The Russians and Saudis were successful—too successful. With US oil continuing to be produced at record rates, contributing to a global excess production amounting to some 27 million barrels per day, the US and the world are rapidly running out of places to store the resulting glut. This has led to a crisis where the price of Western Texas Intermediate, the benchmark index for US oil, moved into negative numbers as oil traders were compelled to pay customers to take possession of oil contracts for May. A similar fate awaits June WTI contracts and, unless the global overproduction of oil ceases, this is a model that will repeat itself. Already, US producers are going into bankruptcy, triggering an economic collapse that threatens to take down a considerable portion of the US oil industry.

Also on rt.com Oil inventories near breaking point as American Petroleum Institute reports 13 million barrel build
The only way out of this economic disaster is for the world to cut back on oil production. Talks between the major oil producers earlier this month produced planned cuts of around 10 million barrels per day, leaving some 17 million barrels in daily overproduction. While there are talks about instituting additional cuts, no nation wants to sacrifice market share in order to save US shale oil, which many nations blame for much of the overproduction taking place today.

There is one way, however, to instantly remove more than 20 million barrels a day from the global economy—a war with Iran that closes the Strait of Hormuz and shuts down oil production in the Persian Gulf region. Back in 2019, this very outcome is what mitigated against a military conflict between the US and Iran. Today, with the US oil industry in crisis and facing potentially irreversible losses, a Middle Eastern war suddenly makes perfect sense.

Also on rt.com ‘Trump only wants to look strong & raise oil prices by threatening to shoot at Iranian gunboats’
Back in 2019, the US was ill-prepared for a war with Iran. In the intervening time, it has bolstered its defenses and strengthened its military presence in the Persian Gulf region to the point that, at a minimum, it can provide a modicum of protection to deployed forces while simultaneously being able to launch damaging attacks against Iran. The extent to which the US can shield its Gulf Arab allies from any Iranian counterattack is uncertain and, more to the point, irrelevant. While the US has deployed Patriot surface-to-air missile batteries to Saudi Arabia to protect critical oil infrastructure, there is little doubt that Iran would exact a terrible toll on the oil production capacity of Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf Arab states.

The consequences of such a military confrontation would be dire and immediate, with more than 21 million barrels of oil removed from the global market instantaneously, and oil prices soaring—precisely the outcome needed to save US oil producers. Whether such a war actually comes to pass has yet to be seen, but one thing is for certain—the risk-gain analysis that held that a war with Iran would be prohibitively expensive has been flipped on its head. The fact of the matter is that a US war with Iran might be the only thing that can save US oil. In a Presidential election year where Trump is desperately looking to prop up the US economy, war suddenly has become very attractive.

https://www.rt.com/op-ed/486598-trump-iran-war-oil/
 
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Scott Ritter sort of misses now is the only time US can actually have a war with Iran:

What is really going on is Iran is now vulnerable to war, to a false flag. What protected Iran for years was the derivatives market would cause a financial collapse if there was Persian Gulf War III. Iran was reported to have not cared about a tension that would have resulted in the closing of the Straits of Hormuz because the US would not want this, as it would cause an economic collapse on wall street.

Very low oil prices is what Washington needed to have their war on Iran. And with trump polling at real record lows, and biden attacking China more than trump... the neocons controlling their puppet trump are testing if they could get their war with Iran though a false flag.

Financial N-option will settle Trump’s oil war
January 6, 2020

Enter the world derivatives market, which every major player knows is a financial WMD.

The derivatives are used to drain a trillion dollars a year out of the market in manipulated profits. These profits, of course, are protected under the “too big to prosecute” doctrine.

It’s all obviously parasitic and illegal. The beauty is it can be turned into a nuclear option against the imperial masters.

I’ve written extensively about it. New York connections told me the columns all landed on Trump’s desk. Obviously he does not read anything – but the message was there, and also delivered in person.

This past Friday, two American, mid-range, traditional funds bit the dust because they were leveraging in derivatives linked to oil prices.

If Tehran ever decided to shut down the Strait of Hormuz – call it the nuclear option – that would trigger a world depression as trillions of dollars of derivatives imploded.

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) counts about $600 billion in total derivatives. Not really. Swiss sources say there are at least 1.2 quadrillion with some placing it at 2.5 quadrillion. That would imply a derivatives market 28 times the world’s GDP.

On Hormuz, the shortage of 22% of the world oil supply simply could not be papered over. It would detonate a collapse and cause a market crash infinitely worse than 1933 Weimar Germany.


https://asiatimes.com/2020/01/financial-n-option-will-settle-trumps-oil-war/
 
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It's most likely that the status quo will be kept both Iran and The US will use Iraq as a chessboard through their favored political groups and militia rather direct confrontation
 
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Nope no war between Iran and USA. Iranian oil is already sanctioned. Problem of USA is low oil price which war cannot solve.
Why?
Cause price is low not cause of high supply but cause of low demand. Every country is almost self sufficient in oil production at this point & war will not increase demand. Like Pakistan produces 30% of oil it needs according to old figures. So current travel & economic activity is being catered with that production & import is not required. The bigger problem for USA is not its oil industry but all its industries which are going down the drain. If USA is going to war with someone that will be china cause china is the real competition at the moment.
 
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Nope no war between Iran and USA. Iranian oil is already sanctioned. Problem of USA is low oil price which war cannot solve.
Why?
Cause price is low not cause of high supply but cause of low demand. Every country is almost self sufficient in oil production at this point & war will not increase demand. Like Pakistan produces 30% of oil it needs according to old figures. So current travel & economic activity is being catered with that production & import is not required. The bigger problem for USA is not its oil industry but all its industries which are going down the drain. If USA is going to war with someone that will be china cause china is the real competition at the moment.

I think the status quo will be kept Iraq,Syria and to a extent Lebanon will be the chessboard between Iranian interests and American interests will clash the US will most likely delegate Israel for that role in order for the US to focus less on the Mid East and shift to Asia Pacific to counter China
 
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Iranian oil is already sanctioned.
China buy (indirectly) Iranian oil, US army in Afghanistan buy Iranian oil (indirectly). Pakistanis buy Iranian oil indirectly, India has been granted official exception. Beyond these three countries, Iranian oil is sanctioned.
 
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I think the status quo will be kept Iraq,Syria and to a extent Lebanon will be the chessboard between Iranian interests and American interests will clash the US will most likely delegate Israel for that role in order for the US to focus less on the Mid East and shift to Asia Pacific to counter China
There is no chess board any more. USA has lost Iraq & Syria is under Arab cover of diplomacy. Iran will be not the deciding force in Syria cause Assad needs money to rebuild and that will come from Arabs not Iran. Due to covid19 no one can support funds to civil war in Syria so Syria will see peace.

tell me have you heard anything about war in syria recently?

China buy (indirectly) Iranian oil, US army in Afghanistan buy Iranian oil (indirectly). Pakistanis buy Iranian oil indirectly, India has been granted official exception. Beyond these three countries, Iranian oil is sanctioned.
get it in your thick brain you need demand for oil to buy oil. which is not there. So what will you do with oil? eat it?
 
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There is no chess board any more. USA has lost Iraq & Syria is under Arab cover of diplomacy. Iran will be not the deciding force in Syria cause Assad needs money to rebuild and that will come from Arabs not Iran. Due to covid19 no one can support funds to civil war in Syria so Syria will see peace.

tell me have you heard anything about war in syria recently?

Syria has been mum but I think deep changes will come to the way the region is worked the post WW2 Anglo-American structured Middle East is coming to an end but I refer Iraq the US will ultimately leave but not without some chessboard fights with Iran,I do see in the near future with the urging of Russia and China and Turkey sort of a reaaprochment between GCC and Iran
 
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What would happen if Israel attacked Iran? Israel and Iran are hostile states and Israel can afford to defeat Iran with support from the United States.
 
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get it in your thick brain you need demand for oil to buy oil. which is not there. So what will you do with oil? eat it?

Get in your Irani head, i'm talking of an earlier situation than current market situation, where your statement is proven wrong.
I have already made many comments in different threads on current market situation, which hints i'm no ignorant and this is perhaps first time sanctions on Iran oil exports are truly in practice, but no thanks to US.
 
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Syria has been mum but I think deep changes will come to the way the region is worked the post WW2 Anglo-American structured Middle East is coming to an end but I refer Iraq the US will ultimately leave but not without some chessboard fights with Iran,I do see in the near future with the urging of Russia and China and Turkey sort of a reaaprochment between GCC and Iran
The time for proxy war is over. if war is coming then it will be real war. Iran knows USA is weak it is just testing waters in gulf & trump is just making empty threats. If USA Iran go to war China Russia or Germany will replace it as super power.

Get in your Irani head, i'm talking of an earlier situation than current market situation, where your statement is proven wrong.
I have already made many comments in different threads on current market situation, which hints i'm no ignorant and this is perhaps first time sanctions on Iran oil exports are truly in practice, but no thanks to US.
When you are talking about past use past tense it helps to understand you. if you are talking about past hate of yours I am not interested find someone else.
 
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We are living in very interesting times... imagine when peak oil was all the rage... Iraq war was a poster child of peak oil theory. Yet, here we are today where to keep the oil industry alive a war is the call du jour(a war is literally needed to cut all the glut and perhaps even shutter certain shops... such as, Iran). The black gold seeks another victim, another killing field to keep this economy alive... to keep loading the spring that will take the humanity into dark ages. At last we are finding ourselves at a point where there is no driving engine left for world economy and those that were there are no longer in favor. Let's see how this pans out.
 
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The time for proxy war is over. if war is coming then it will be real war. Iran knows USA is weak it is just testing waters in gulf & trump is just making empty threats. If USA Iran go to war China Russia or Germany will replace it as super power.

For sure I am basically saying the US is gong to redirect its resources to countering China.Russia and Iran are not much of concern its China thats the rival to the existing and decaying American led order
 
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For sure I am basically saying the US is gong to redirect its resources to countering China.Russia and Iran are not much of concern its China thats the rival to the existing and decaying American led order
Russia is a big concern. It has been fairly safe from virus & has been helping other countries. Russia is the most dangerous country for USA at this moment. China looks strong but they took a huge hit in this pandemic.
 
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