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Juan Cole

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Why Washington's Iran Policy Could Lead to Global Disaster

Posted: 04/12/2012 10:57 am

What History Should Teach Us About Blockading Iran

Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com

It’s a policy fierce enough to cause great suffering among Iranians -- and possibly in the long run among Americans, too.  It might, in the end, even deeply harm the global economy and yet, history tells us, it will fail on its own.  Economic war led by Washington (and encouraged by Israel) will not take down the Iranian government or bring it to the bargaining table on its knees ready to surrender its nuclear program.  It might, however, lead to actual armed conflict with incalculable consequences.   

The United States is already effectively embroiled in an economic war against Iran.  The Obama administration has subjected the Islamic Republic to the most crippling economic sanctions applied to any country since Iraq was reduced to fourth-world status in the 1990s.  And worse is on the horizon.  A financial blockade is being imposed that seeks to prevent Tehran from selling petroleum, its most valuable commodity, as a way of dissuading the regime from pursuing its nuclear enrichment program. 

Historical memory has never been an American strong point and so few today remember that a global embargo on Iranian petroleum is hardly a new tactic in Western geopolitics; nor do many recall that the last time it was applied with such stringency, in the 1950s, it led to the overthrow of the government with disastrous long-term blowback on the United States.  The tactic is just as dangerous today.

Iran’s supreme theocrat, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has repeatedly condemned the atom bomb and nuclear weapons of all sorts as tools of the devil, weaponry that cannot be used without killing massive numbers of civilian noncombatants.  In the most emphatic terms, he has, in fact, pronounced them forbidden according to Islamic law.  Based on the latest U.S. intelligence, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta has affirmed that Iran has not made a decision to pursue a nuclear warhead.  In contrast, hawks in Israel and the United States insist that Tehran’s civilian nuclear enrichment program is aimed ultimately at making a bomb, that the Iranians are pursuing such a path in a determined fashion, and that they must be stopped now -- by military means if necessary. 

Putting the Squeeze on Iran

At the moment, the Obama administration and the Congress seem intent on making it impossible for Iran to sell its petroleum at all on the world market.  As 2011 ended, Congress passed an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act that mandates sanctions on firms and countries that deal with Iran’s Central Bank or buy Iranian petroleum (though hardship cases can apply to the U.S. government for exemptions).  This escalation from sanctions to something like a full-scale financial blockade holds extreme dangers of spiraling into military confrontation.  The Islamic Republic tried to make this point, indicating that it would not allow itself to be strangled without response, by conducting naval exercises at the mouth of the Persian Gulf this winter.  The threat involved was clear enough: about one-fifth of the world’s petroleum flows through the Gulf, and even a temporary and partial cut-off might prove catastrophic for the world economy.

In part, President Obama is clearly attempting by his sanctions-cum-blockade policy to dissuade the government of Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu from launching a military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities.  He argues that severe economic measures will be enough to bring Iran to the negotiating table ready to bargain, or even simply give in. 

In part, Obama is attempting to please America’s other Middle East ally, Saudi Arabia, which also wants Iran’s nuclear program mothballed.  In the process, the U.S. government and its allies have even had Iran’s banks kicked off international exchange networks, making it difficult for that country’s major energy customers like South Korea and India to pay for the Iranian petroleum they import.  And don’t forget the administration’s most powerful weapon: most governments and corporations do not want to be cut off from the U.S. economy with a GDP of more than $15 trillion -- still the largest and most dynamic in the world. 

Typically, the European Union, fearing Congressional sanctions, has agreed to cease taking new contracts on Iranian oil by July 1st, a decision that has placed special burdens on struggling countries in its southern tier like Greece and Italy.  With European buyers boycotting, Iran will depend for customers on Asian countries, which jointly purchase some 64 percent of its petroleum, and those of the global South.  Of these, China and India have declined to join the boycott.  South Korea, which buys $14 billion worth of Iranian petroleum a year, accounting for some 10 percent of its oil imports, has pleaded with Washington for an exemption, as has Japan which got 8.8 percent of its petroleum imports from Iran last year, more than 300,000 barrels a day -- and more in absolute terms than South Korea.  Japan, which is planning to cut its Iranian imports by 12 percent this year, has already won an exemption.

Faced with the economic damage a sudden interruption of oil imports from Iran would inflict on East Asian economies, the Obama administration has instead attempted to extract pledges of future 10 percent-20 percent reductions in return for those U.S. exemptions.  Since it’s easier to make promises than institute a boycott, allies are lining up with pledges. (Even Turkey has gone this route.) 

Such vows are almost certain to prove relatively empty.  After all, there are few options for such countries other than continuing to buy Iranian oil unless they can find new sources -- unlikely at present, despite Saudi promises to ramp up production -- or drastically cut back on energy use, ensuring economic contraction and domestic wrath. 

What this means in reality is that the U.S. and Israeli quest to cut off Iran’s exports will probably be a quixotic one.  For the plan to work, oil demand would have to remain steady and other exporters would have to replace Iran’s roughly 2.5 million barrels a day on the global market.  For instance, Saudi Arabia has increased the amount of petroleum it pumps, and is promising a further rise in output this summer in an attempt to flood the market and allow countries to replace Iranian purchases with Saudi ones. 

But experts doubt the Saudi ability to do this long term and -- most important of all -- global demand is not steady.  It’s crucially on the rise in both China and India.  For Washington’s energy blockade to work, Saudi Arabia and other suppliers would have to reliably replace Iran’s oil production and cover increased demand, as well as expected smaller shortfalls caused by crises in places like Syria and South Sudan and by declining production in older fields elsewhere.  

Otherwise a successful boycott of Iranian petroleum will only put drastic upward pressure on oil prices, as Japan has politely but firmly pointed out to the Obama administration.  The most likely outcome: America’s closest allies and those eager to do more business with the U.S. will indeed reduce imports from Iran, leaving countries like China, India, and others in Asia, Africa, and Latin America to dip into the pool of Iranian crude (possibly at lower prices than the Iranians would normally charge). 

Iran’s transaction costs are certainly increasing, its people are beginning to suffer economically, and it may have to reduce its exports somewhat, but the tensions in the Gulf have also caused the price of petroleum futures to rise in a way that has probably offset the new costs the regime has borne.  (Experts also estimate that the Iran crisis has already added 25 cents to every gallon of gas an American consumer buys at the pump.)

Like China, India has declined to bow to pressure from Washington.  The government of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, which depends on India’s substantial Muslim vote, is not eager to be seen as acquiescent to U.S. strong-arm tactics.  Moreover, lacking substantial hydrocarbon resources, and given Singh’s ambitious plans for an annual growth rate of 9 percent -- focused on expanding India’s underdeveloped transportation sector (70 percent of all petroleum used in the world is dedicated to fuelling vehicles) -- Iran is crucial to the country’s future.  

To sidestep Washington, India has worked out an agreement to pay for half of its allotment of Iranian oil in rupees, a soft currency.  Iran would then have to use those rupees on food and goods from India, a windfall for its exporters.  Defying the American president yet again, the Indians are even offering a tax break to Indian firms that trade with Iran.  That country is, in turn, offering to pay for some Indian goods with gold.  Since India runs a trade deficit with the U.S., Washington would only hurt itself if it aggressively sanctioned India.

A History Lesson Ignored

As yet, Iran has shown no signs of yielding to the pressure.  For its leaders, future nuclear power stations promise independence and signify national glory, just as they do for France, which gets nearly 80 percent of its electricity from nuclear reactors.  The fear in Tehran is that, without nuclear power, a developing Iran could consume all its petroleum domestically, as has happened in Indonesia, leaving the government with no surplus income with which to maintain its freedom from international pressures. 

Iran is particularly jealous of its independence because in modern history it has so often been dominated by a great power or powers.  In 1941, with World War II underway, Russia and Britain, which already controlled Iranian oil, launched an invasion to ensure that the country remained an asset of the Allies against the Axis.  They put the young and inexperienced Mohammed Reza Pahlevi on the throne, and sent his father, Reza Shah, into exile.  The Iranian corridor -- what British Prime Minister Winston Churchill called “the bridge of victory” -- then allowed the allies to effectively channel crucial supplies to the Soviet Union in the war against Nazi Germany.  The occupation years were, however, devastating for Iranians who experienced soaring inflation and famine.

Discontent broke out after the war -- and the Allied occupation -- ended.  It was focused on a 1933 agreement Iran had signed with the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC) regarding the exploitation of its petroleum.  By the early 1950s, the AIOC (which later became British Petroleum and is now BP) was paying more in taxes to the British government than in royalties to Iran for its oil.  In 1950, when it became known that the American ARAMCO oil consortium had offered the king of Saudi Arabia a 50-50 split of oil profits, the Iranians demanded the same terms.

The AIOC was initially adamant that it would not renegotiate the agreement.  By the time it softened its position somewhat and began being less supercilious, Iran’s parliamentarians were so angry that they did not want anything more to do with the British firm or the government that supported it. 

On March 15, 1951, a democratically elected Iranian parliament summarily nationalized the country’s oil fields and kicked the AIOC out of the country.  Facing a wave of public anger, Mohammed Reza Shah acquiesced, appointing Mohammed Mosaddegh, an oil-nationalization hawk, as prime minister. A conservative nationalist from an old aristocratic family, Mosaddegh soon visited the United States seeking aid, but because his nationalist coalition included the Tudeh Party (the Communist Party of Iran), he was increasingly smeared in the U.S. press as a Soviet sympathizer.

The British government, outraged by the oil nationalization and fearful that the Iranian example might impel other producers to follow suit, froze that country’s assets and attempted to institute a global embargo of its petroleum.  London placed harsh restrictions on Tehran’s ability to trade, and made it difficult for Iran to convert the pounds sterling it held in British banks.  Initially, President Harry Truman’s administration in Washington was supportive of Iran.  After Republican Dwight Eisenhower was swept into the Oval Office, however, the U.S. enthusiastically joined the oil embargo and campaign against Iran. 

Iran became ever more desperate to sell its oil, and countries like Italy and Japan were tempted by “wildcat” sales at lower than market prices.  As historian Nikki Keddie has showed, however, Big Oil and the U.S. State Department deployed strong-arm tactics to stop such countries from doing so. 

In May 1953, for example, sometime Standard Oil of California executive and “petroleum adviser” to the State Department Max Thornburg wrote U.S. ambassador to Italy Claire Booth Luce about an Italian request to buy Iranian oil:  “For Italy to clear this oil and take additional cargoes would definitely indicate that it had taken the side of the oil ‘nationalizers,’ despite the hazard this represents to American foreign investments and vital oil supply sources.  This of course is Italy’s right.  It is only the prudence of the course that is in question.”  He then threatened Rome with an end to oil company purchases of Italian supplies worth millions of dollars.

In the end, the Anglo-American blockade devastated Iran’s economy and provoked social unrest.  Prime Minister Mosaddegh, initially popular, soon found himself facing a rising wave of labor strikes and protest rallies.  Shopkeepers and small businessmen, among his most important constituents, pressured the prime minister to restore order. When he finally did crack down on the protests (some of them staged by the Central Intelligence Agency), the far left Tudeh Party began withdrawing its support.  Right-wing generals, dismayed by the flight of the shah to Italy, the breakdown of Iran’s relations with the West, and the deterioration of the economy, were open to the blandishments of the CIA, which, with the help of British intelligence, decided to organize a coup to install its own man in power.

A Danger of Blowback

The story of the 1953 CIA coup in Iran is well known, but that its success depended on the preceding two years of fierce sanctions on Iran’s oil is seldom considered.  A global economic blockade of a major oil country is difficult to sustain.  Were it to have broken down, the U.S. and Britain would have suffered a huge loss of prestige.  Other Third World countries might have taken heart and begun to claim their own natural resources.  The blockade, then, arguably made the coup necessary.  That coup, in turn, led to the rise to power of Ayatollah Khomeini a quarter-century later and, in the end, the present U.S./Israeli/Iranian face-off.  It seems the sort of sobering history lesson that every politician in Washington should consider (and none, of course, does).

As then, so now, an oil blockade in its own right is unlikely to achieve Washington’s goals.  At present, the American desire to force Iran to abolish its nuclear enrichment program seems as far from success as ever.  In this context, there’s another historical lesson worth considering: the failure of the crippling sanctions imposed on Saddam Hussein’s Iraq in the 1990s to bring down that dictator and his regime.

What that demonstrated was simple enough: ruling cliques with ownership of a valuable industry like petroleum can cushion themselves from the worst effects of an international boycott, even if they pass the costs on to a helpless public.  In fact, crippling the economy tends to send the middle class into a spiral of downward mobility, leaving its members with ever fewer resources to resist an authoritarian government.  The decline of Iran’s once-vigorous Green protest movement of 2009 is probably connected to this, as is a growing sense that Iran is now under foreign siege, and Iranians should rally around in support of the nation. 

Strikingly, there was a strong voter turnout for the recent parliamentary elections where candidates close to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei dominated the results.  Iran’s politics, never very free, have nevertheless sometimes produced surprises and feisty movements, but these days are moving in a decidedly conservative and nationalistic direction.  Only a few years ago, a majority of Iranians disapproved of the idea of having an atomic bomb.  Now, according to a recent Gallup poll, more support the militarization of the nuclear program than oppose it.  

The great oil blockade of 2012 may still be largely financially focused, but it carries with it the same dangers of escalation and intervention -- as well as future bitterness and blowback -- as did the campaign of the early 1950s.  U.S. and European financial sanctions are already beginning to interfere with the import of staples like wheat, since Iran can no longer use the international banking system to pay for them.  If children suffer or even experience increased mortality because of the sanctions, that development could provoke future attacks on the U.S. or American troops in the Greater Middle East. (Don’t forget that the Iraqi sanctions, considered responsible for the deaths of some 500,000 children, were cited by al-Qaeda in its “declaration of war” on the U.S.) 

The attempt to flood the market and use financial sanctions to enforce an embargo on Iranian petroleum holds many dangers.  If it fails, soaring oil prices could set back fragile economies in the West still recovering from the mortgage and banking scandals of 2008.  If it overshoots, there could be turmoil in the oil-producing states from a sudden fall in revenues. 

Even if the embargo is a relative success in keeping Iranian oil in the ground, the long-term damage to that country’s fields and pipelines (which might be ruined if they lie fallow long enough) could harm the world economy in the future.  The likelihood that an oil embargo can change Iranian government policy or induce regime change is low, given our experience with economic sanctions in Iraq, Cuba, and elsewhere.  Moreover, there is no reason to think that the Islamic Republic will take its downward mobility lying down. 

As the sanctions morph into a virtual blockade, they raise the specter that all blockades do -- of provoking a violent response.  Just as dangerous is the specter that the sanctions will drag on without producing tangible results, impelling covert or overt American action against Tehran to save face. And that, friends, is where we came in.

Juan Cole is the Richard P. Mitchell Professor of History and the director of the Center for South Asian Studies at the University of Michigan.  His latest book, Engaging the Muslim World, is available in a revised paperback edition from Palgrave Macmillan. He runs the Informed Comment website. To listen to Timothy MacBain's latest Tomcast audio interview in which Cole discusses the consequences of sanctions on Iran, click here, or download it to your iPod here.

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This post has been modified since its original publication.

 
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06:44 PM on 05/14/2012
Bravo Professor Cole. Iran will not likely bow to the economic sanctions. Israel seems intent on starting a war with Iran with the US as its major ally. But once attacked Iran could likely inflict major damage to Baku, Israel, and Saudi Arabia igniting a larger regional conflict. So it will be interesting to see how long the sanctions are allowed to run before shooting starts. My guess is 3 or 4 months, sometime before the November elections in the US.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Moose Luck 99
GEOENGINEERINGWATCH DOT ORG
05:29 PM on 05/05/2012
http://larouchepac.com/obamawatch

Obama's Lying: Told Netanyahu to "Go Ahead, Strike Iran"

http://larouchepac.com/node/22576

"The placement of new strike weapons in the south and northwest of Russia against [NATO] missile defense components, including the deployment of Iskander missile systems in Kaliningrad region, is one possible way of incapacitating the European missile defense infrastructure," Makarov said. Taking into account the "destabilizing nature of the missile defense system... the decision on the pre-emptive use of available weapons will be made during an aggravation of the situation," he said. The secretary of Russia's Security Council, Nikolai Patrushev, added that, by 2020, the NATO system would have the capability to intercept a portion of Russia's ICBM force. "The geographical regions and technical characteristics of these missile defense systems create the foundations for additional dangers, especially considering the current and future levels of high-precision armament of the United States," he said. "There are just no targets for the missile defense shield other than Russia."
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Ajax Johnson
Am I myself or is it just me?
03:25 PM on 04/16/2012
Here's what they're really worried about, along with replacement of the dollar for oil trading.

An unlikely source

http://www.jewishjournal.com/opinion/article/american_enterprise_institute_admits_the_problem_with_iran_is_not_that_it_w/
12:52 PM on 04/16/2012
Good article, but it does not actually give us what the writer set out to do. It does not describe the reasons why there is a likelyhood of an armed conflict in the Middle East as a result of current policies. The magnitude of it in a worse case scenario is frightening in both geographic and time scales.

http://zoltansustainableecon.blogspot.com/2012/03/true-dangers-of-iran-our-cultural.html
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Ajax Johnson
Am I myself or is it just me?
03:42 PM on 04/16/2012
Good post. The US is being consumed and those you speak of in the US are unwittingly helping others to consume it. Perhaps some wittingly by US and Israeli expansionism under the guise of "fighting" terrorism and WMD.
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KarmaPatrol
Riverboat Gambler, satellite whisperer. Independe
07:35 AM on 04/16/2012
If China and India are not onboard, or even some of our own Asian allies need exemptions, then it's kind of foolish. Again, since it was such a "great idea" to farm our jobs and finances overseas, China and India will increasingly flex their muscles. Especially when it comes to Asia and everything east of Israel.
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pmag88
water and carbon and a bunch of other stuff
06:58 AM on 04/16/2012
We aren't going to war with Iran and for the same reasons we walked away from Vietnam and we have a truce with China and NK. That ship sailed 60 years ago.

This is all bullshit hype to drive the price of oil and to keep certain groups on all sides sated enough with the outcome that peace is maintained.

You want freedom you need to get off the grid or contribute to a sustainable grid that you have a real stake in.

Many think the powers that be have some grand plan. They don't. They make deals with the devil and we all end up in hell.
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Ajax Johnson
Am I myself or is it just me?
03:45 PM on 04/16/2012
Maybe not grand. Maybe Grande or Venti. Look up PNAC and who they are.
iflew
Pro Publiae Bonae
10:37 PM on 04/15/2012
George Schultz was a very important presidential advisor to a president who had a lot of trouble making decisions. George had a way of saying that a long shadow of power was necessary to cast over the negotiating table. Today's Iran and allies are nothing like the Russia with which George negotiated. The U.S. is no longer casting a shadow as fearful to Iran as its shadow was when the U.S. negotiated nuclear disarmament with Russia. Russia had cities and manufacturing centers. It relied on rail and highways. Iran is a fold of mountains and valleys with a largely decentralized population and manufacturing. Russia had a political ideology which its own citizens didn't trust. Iran has a religious based government. Its ideology extends beyond its borders. Any long distance war has major logistics needs, and a war with probable logistics problems requires politcal support. The U.S. citizens may no longer support such a war, even for oil.
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parsi
Once you label me you negate me--Søren Kierkegaar
10:07 PM on 04/15/2012
dear Mr. Cole: How about IRI and Israel cutting the middleman (the US) and sign a sort of "peace" treaty where both countries promise not to use nuclear arms or not to engage in proxy war (hamas, Hezbollah, Jendallah, Syria, MEK,e tc. ). Do you think Israel and Iran would agree to such a proposal in the name of peace??
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audioenhanced
If wanting to keep all of human race alive is raci
03:32 AM on 04/16/2012
Hardly, Israel doesn't want peace, and the U.S. have been in Israel's pockets since before the 67 war, what Israel does want is what they accuse others of, the elimination of Arabs, and the U.S. to do it for them.
Israel should be facing war crimes now, if not for the U.S. who refuse to acknowledge Palestine as a nation, the remainder of the world does, but due to this technicality Israel cannot be charged, however it does not change the fact that the crimes were committed, only that the U.S. continues to let them murder without repercussion.
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/world_now/2012/04/icc-rebuffs-palestinians-war-crimes-case-against-israel.html
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parsi
Once you label me you negate me--Søren Kierkegaar
02:18 PM on 04/16/2012
I did not know Palestine was Iran...Israeli-palestinian issue has nothing to do with the long-term interest of Iranian people. The IRI is the most anti-Iranian regime in recent history. Their only concern is their own fil -th y survival so they can line their pockets with the oil revenues.

Leave Iran and Iranian alone...Do you own fight in Liberating Palestine. Why should Iran be sacrificed for Palestine. Don't You people have shame??

NO GAZA, NO Lebanon, Only Iran.
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Mark Dobbins
I may be dumb but I'm not that dumb
10:04 PM on 04/15/2012
Let's continue to develop our own energy resources through the technological breakthroughs of shale drilling while continuing to pragmatically reduce energy consumption. Then and only then can we safely ignore what goes on in the Middle East; it will no longer have the strategic importance that it does now. Then China and others will have to take on the responsibility of keeping OPEC oil flowing safely east.
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audioenhanced
If wanting to keep all of human race alive is raci
03:37 AM on 04/16/2012
I don't think the problem is for the U.S. to ignore problems in the middle east, or the world for that matter, but the reasoning for the interest in the middle east hasn't been the problems,it has been of a personal nature and how it can play into both Israel's and the U.S. advantage both politically and more over financially.
09:53 PM on 04/15/2012
It's not Washington's Iran Policy, it's Israel's Iran Policy. Israel want's to be the only country in the region with nuclear weapons so the can continue their grandstanding. I find it really embarrassing that they have so much control over the US government.
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audioenhanced
If wanting to keep all of human race alive is raci
03:45 AM on 04/16/2012
I agree, the Israeli Lobby is undermining the very reason U.S. came to exist, freedom of the rule of another nation , instead of the British nation having rule, it is now the Israeli nation, not good for a nation so proud of their freedom
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Liz Norman
Pro Constitution/BoR
09:29 PM on 04/15/2012
History has shown that the effort a country goes through to attain nuclear energy/weapons capability usually results in that nation not using those weapons because they understand the destructive nature nuclear energy represents. A nation that would use them now would be a pariah to all the nations of the world and could not expect to survive. Even North Korea, with all its saber rattling, hasn't used them.

The people and countries we all need to worry about are the ones that skip that learning curve and jump right to having nuclear weapons. They don't understand the danger of having them really represents and therefore are not restrained from using them.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
09:12 PM on 04/15/2012
Iran with the bomb, would they use it on another country. If they would this country use thier on them. I believe that is Irans decision. If Isreal feel threaten and does something that is thier choice. Maybe it is time to sit back and watch. We do not need the oil we have the pipeline. No that right that oil is being sold to china now. Not to worry green energy will take over.
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unfoxworthy
We:ScottOlsens,the misfits,out to change the world
08:34 PM on 04/15/2012
IN the not to distant future - as other countries become more signficant players in the world market - the US will find itself eating the refuse from its ego-centric policies.
DO we think for a second that other countries don't see the resource use (per capita) of US citizens?
DO we think for a second that other countries don't see the waste (per capita) of US citizens?
We may feel we have some sort of God-given right to play with others' destinies, as we are in Iran,
but arrogance always carries the liabilty of short-sightedness.
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07:26 PM on 04/15/2012
A very good article.

However, it must be added that as long as excuses are made for warmongering politicians in both political parties and especially right now for Obama/Hillary, then thermonuclear is a possibility.

Russia and China are smart enough to know that any possible invasion of Iran or N. Korea would not stop the Anglo-American Western Powers from trying to completely surround them with nukes.

Especially now since their imperial financial system of worthless derivatives is hopelessly bankrupt.