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 Did The Saudis And The US 
	Collude In Dropping Oil Prices,
 Poking the Russian Bear?
 
 By Andrew Topf
 
 Oil Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, January 5, 2015
 
 
 The oil price drop that has dominated the headlines in recent 
	weeks has been framed almost exclusively in terms of oil market economics, 
	with most media outlets blaming Saudi Arabia, through its OPEC Trojan horse, 
	for driving down the price, thus causing serious damage to the world's major 
	oil exporters – most notably Russia.
 
 While the market explanation is 
	partially true, it is simplistic, and fails to address key geopolitical 
	pressure points in the Middle East.
 
 Oilprice.com looked beyond the headlines for the reason behind the oil 
	price drop, and found that the explanation, while difficult to prove, may 
	revolve around control of oil and gas in the Middle East and the weakening 
	of Russia, Iran and Syria by flooding the market with cheap oil.
 
 The oil weapon
 
 We don't have to look too far 
	back in history to see Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil exporter and 
	producer, using the oil price to achieve its foreign policy objectives. 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.
 
 Turning to the current price drop, the Saudis and OPEC have a vested 
	interest in taking out higher-cost competitors, such as US shale oil 
	producers, who will certainly be hurt by the lower price. Even before the 
	price drop, the Saudis were selling their oil to China at a discount. OPEC's 
	refusal on Nov. 27 to cut production seemed like the baldest evidence yet 
	that the oil price drop was really an oil price war between Saudi Arabia and 
	the US.
 
 However, analysis shows the reasoning is complex, and may go 
	beyond simply taking down the price to gain back lost marketshare.
 
 "What is the reason for the United States and some U.S. allies wanting to 
	drive down the price of oil?" Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro asked 
	rhetorically in October. "To harm Russia."
 
 Many believe the oil 
	price plunge is the result of deliberate and well-planned collusion on the 
	part of the United States and Saudi Arabia to punish Russia and Iran for 
	supporting the murderous Assad regime in Syria.
 
 Punishing 
	Assad and friends
 
 Proponents of this theory point to a 
	Sept. 11 meeting between US Secretary of State John Kerry and Saudi King 
	Abdullah at his palace on the Red Sea. According to
	
	an article in the Wall Street Journal, it was during that meeting that a 
	deal was hammered out between Kerry and Abdullah. In it, the Saudis would 
	support Syrian airstrikes against Islamic State (ISIS), in exchange for 
	Washington backing the Saudis in toppling Assad.
 
 If in fact a deal 
	was struck, it would make sense, considering the long-simmering rivalry 
	between Saudi Arabia and its chief rival in the region: Iran. By opposing 
	Syria, Abdullah grabs the opportunity to strike a blow against Iran, which 
	he sees as a powerful regional rival due to its nuclear ambitions, its 
	support for militant groups Hamas and Hezbollah, and its alliance with 
	Syria, which it provides with weapons and funding. The two nations are also 
	divided by religion, with the majority of Saudis following the Sunni version 
	of Islam, and most Iranians considering themselves Shi'ites.
 
 "The 
	conflict is now a full-blown proxy war between Iran and Saudi Arabia, which 
	is playing out across the region," Reuters
	
	reported on Dec. 15. "Both sides increasingly see their rivalry as a 
	winner-take-all conflict: if the Shi'ite Hezbollah gains an upper hand in 
	Lebanon, then the Sunnis of Lebanon—and by extension, their Saudi 
	patrons—lose a round to Iran. If a Shi'ite-led government solidifies its 
	control of Iraq, then Iran will have won another round."
 
 The Saudis 
	know the Iranians are vulnerable on the oil price. Experts say the country 
	needs $140 a barrel oil to balance its budget; at sub-$60 prices, the Saudis 
	succeed in pressuring Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamanei, 
	possibly containing its nuclear ambitions and making the country more 
	pliable to the West, which has the power to reduce or lift sanctions if Iran 
	cooperates.
 
 Adding credence to this theory, Iranian President Hassan 
	Rouhani told a Cabinet meeting earlier this month that the fall in oil 
	prices was "politically motivated" and a "conspiracy against the interests 
	of the region, the Muslim people and the Muslim world."
 
 Pipeline conspiracy
 
 Some commentators have offered a more 
	conspiratorial theory for the Saudis wanting to get rid of Assad. They point 
	to a 2011 agreement between Syria, Iran and Iraq that would see a pipeline 
	running from the Iranian Port Assalouyeh to Damascus via Iraq. The 
	$10-billion project would take three years to complete and would be fed gas 
	from the South Pars gas field, which Iran shares with Qatar. Iranian 
	officials have said they plan to extend the pipeline to the Mediterranean to 
	supply gas to Europe – in competition with Qatar, the world's largest LNG 
	exporter.
 
 "The Iran-Iraq-Syria pipeline – if it's 
	ever built – would solidify a predominantly Shi'ite axis through an 
	economic, steel umbilical cord,"
	wrote 
	Asia Times correspondent Pepe Escobar.
 
 Global Research, a 
	Canada-based think tank, goes further
	
	to suggest that Assad's refusal in 2009 to allow Qatar to construct a 
	gas pipeline from its North Field through Syria and on to Turkey and the EU, 
	combined with the 2011 pipeline deal, "ignited the full-scale Saudi and 
	Qatari assault on Assad's power."
 
 "Today the US-backed wars in 
	Ukraine and in Syria are but two fronts in the same strategic war to cripple 
	Russia and China and to rupture any Eurasian counter-pole to a US-controlled 
	New World Order. In each, control of energy pipelines, this time primarily 
	of natural gas pipelines—from Russia to the EU via Ukraine and from Iran and 
	Syria to the EU via Syria—is the strategic goal," Global Research wrote in 
	an Oct. 26 post.
 
 Poking the Russian bear
 
 How does Russia play into the oil price drop? As a key ally of Syria, 
	supplying Assad with billions in weaponry, President Vladimir Putin has, 
	along with Iran, found himself targeted by the House of Saud. Putin's 
	territorial ambitions in the Ukraine have also put him at odds with US 
	President Barack Obama and leaders of the EU, which in May of this year 
	imposed a set of sanctions on Russia.
 
 As has been noted, Saudi 
	Arabia's manipulation of the oil price has twice targeted Russia. This time, 
	the effects of a low price have hit Moscow especially hard due to sanctions 
	already in place combined with the low ruble. Last week, in an effort to 
	defend its currency, the Bank of Russia raised interest rates to 17 percent. 
	The measure failed, with the ruble dropping another 20 percent, leading to 
	speculation the country could impose capital controls. Meanwhile, Putin took 
	the opportunity in his annual televised address to announce that while the 
	economy is likely to suffer for the next two years and that Russians should 
	brace for a recession, "Our economy will get diversified and oil prices will 
	go back up."
 
 He may be right, but what will the effect be on Russia 
	of a sustained period of low oil prices? Eric Reguly,
	
	writing in The Globe and Mail last Saturday, points out that with 
	foreign exchange reserves at around $400 billion, the Russian state is "in 
	no danger of collapse" even in the event of a deep recession. Reguly 
	predicts the greater threat is to the Russian private sector, which has a 
	debt overhang of some $700 billion.
 
 "This month alone, $30-billion 
	of that amount must be repaid, with another $100-billion coming due next 
	year. The problem is made worse by the economic sanctions, which have made 
	it all but impossible for Russian companies to finance themselves in Western 
	markets," he writes.
 
 Will it work?
 
 Whether 
	one is a conspiracy theorist or a market theorist, in explaining the oil 
	price drop, it really matters little, for the effect is surely more 
	important than the cause. Putin has already shown himself to be a master 
	player in the chess game of energy politics, so the suggestion that sub-$60 
	oil will crush the Russian leader has to be met with a healthy degree of 
	skepticism.
 
 Moscow's decision on Dec. 1 to drop the $45-billion 
	South Stream natural gas pipeline project in favor of a new pipeline deal 
	with Turkey shows Putin's willingness to circumvent European partners to 
	continue deliveries of natural gas to European countries that depend heavily 
	on Russia for its energy requirements. The deal also puts Turkey squarely in 
	the Russian energy camp at a time when Russia has been alienated by the 
	West.
 
 Of course, the Russian dalliance with China is a key part of 
	Putin's great Eastern pivot that will keep stoking demand for Russian gas 
	even as the Saudis and OPEC, perhaps with US collusion, keep pumping to hold 
	down the price. The November agreement, that would see Gazprom supply 
	Chinese state oil company CNPC with 30 billion cubic meters of gas per year, 
	builds on an earlier deal to sell China 38 bcm annually in an agreement 
	valued at $400 billion.
 
 As Oilprice.com
	
	commented on Sunday, "ongoing projects are soldiering on and Russian oil 
	output is projected to remain
	
	unchanged into 2015."
 
 "Russia will go down with the ship before 
	ceding market share – especially in Asia, where Putin reaffirmed the pivot 
	is real. Saudi Arabia and North America will have to keep pumping as Putin 
	plans to uphold his end in this game of brinksmanship."
 
 Source:
	
	http://oilprice.com/Energy/Oil-Prices/Did-The-Saudis-And-The-US-Collude-In-Dropping-Oil-Prices.html
 
 By Andrew Topf of Oilprice.com
 
 
 
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