Iran, Diplomacy and the Price of Oil
Posted on June 20, 2006
According to U.S. News and World Report the Saudis are warning the U.S. that if a diplomatic solution isn't reached with Iran, that oil prices could triple.
World oil prices could double or triple over the current painful $70-per-barrel level if diplomacy failed and military conflict broke out over Iran's nuclear ambitions, Saudi Ambassador Prince Turki al-Faisal warned this morning.Al-Faisal also noted that the U.S. came into Iraq uninvited, but that's it's important that it not leave uninvited. In other words, he thinks if we just bail out that the entire area will collapse. Which could be true. But the problem is that the entire are is already near collapse, according to our own embassy reports."We don't know" what will happen if the United States chooses a military option in Iran, al-Faisal said, but "if there is military conflict, if bombs are dropped, ships are blown up, oil facilities on our side of the gulf are targeted . . . just the idea of somebody firing a missile at an installation somewhere would shoot up the price of oil astronomically." In such a scenario, he said, Saudi Arabia "hopefully would defend our oil installations as best as we can and seek an immediate resolution," but the risks would be grave. "Not just our installations, but the whole gulf would become an inferno of exploding fuel tanks and shut-up facilities," al-Faisal said.
Al-Faisal, who has served as Washington-based ambassador to the Saudi kingdom since last year, is the son of former Saudi King Faisal. Although he has warned against military conflict in Iran previously, his remarks today were his most specific yet on the consequences of an outbreak of violence.
Speaking this morning in Washington, D.C., at the U.S. Energy Association, an organization of public and private energy companies and agencies, Al-Faisal said that Saudi analysts estimate that a $20-to-$30 premium of today's world oil price is a result of fear in the marketplace over global political problems. When asked what would be the most important foreign policy step the United States could take to address these issues, Al-Faisal said, "I think they can fix the Middle East problem, fix the Iraqi problem, and carry through with the diplomatic process on the Iranian problem. All of these things are doable." He added that "the entire world community" must become more engaged, "but the United States has the leading role on all these issues."
It's just a matter of time before the entire country is in anarchy and Iran and the Mullahs move in for the cultural kill. Then it's hello theocracy, goodbye fledgling democracy. George Bush has created such a mess in the middle east that no one really knows how we're going to fix it.