Tuesday, February 21, 2012

The West Is Losing The Chess Game With Iran

The western embargo against Iran’s oil seems to be running into a buzz saw. The success of any embargo will be conditioned on two variables: 1) whether Saudi Arabia can quickly ramp up production to meet European demand, and 2) whether China and Japan will cooperate. Now, after a two-week delay, Iran is making its own chess move by cutting off supplies to French and British oil companies. With a full European embargo now in effect, the final blow will be delivered by Iran itself. AP reports that Asia has given Europe and the U.S. a “polite” bush off, with China going so far as to increase Iranian imports.

It should be pointed out that when Libya shut down production, the Saudis took it as an opportunity to game the market and little else. Forcing higher production also comes with costs, namely it harms the oil fields. Added production would also involve heavy crude, which the market doesn’t really want. Furthermore, Saudi production is already near full capacity. Finally, shipping 0.6 Mb/d more per day to Europe will involve passage through the Strait of Hormuz, and that would be a direct affront to Iran and something Saudi Arabia might wish to avoid. One of the many under-reported stories in the West is that the Saudis have already made special arrangements to send 100% of their contracted oil to Japan and China. So it appears that the argument that Saudi Arabia will simply ramp up output to meet European demand is nothing more than cheap talk by spin doctors.

With oil spiking once again and these developments, the timing of the latest story of an LTRO bazooka couldn’t be more stunning. Besides shooting itself in the foot, Europe may now be setting up to blow its head off by delivering a new large round of LTRO so that speculators can run amok in the energy markets. Expanding the availability of cheap credit right now in exchange for toxic assets strikes me as the height of folly.

Elsewhere in this geopolitical chess game, the U.S. National Security Advisor showed up in Israel this weekend to make a plea “to let sanctions work” [Washington Post]. With its nuclear program proceeding rapidly and with effective reverse embargoes underway against Europe, Iran surely must be pleased with how the game is playing out. Elsewhere Saturday, two Iranian warships got away with delivering arms for Bashar Assad’s crackdown without U.S. or Israeli interference. They docked at Tartus port Saturday alongside a Russian naval flotilla, symbolizing their joint effort to preserve Assad.

On Jan. 20, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu advised the visiting chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin Dempsey [Debka], that the time for action against Iran was now. This week, the Israeli press (but not in the West) reported Netanyahu as saying that embargoes against Iran weren’t working. Debka, which is widely seen as a mouthpiece for Israeli views, has circulated the rhetoric, saying that Netanyahu feels cheated and betrayed by the U.S. [US-Israel Relations in Crisis]

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