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The Why of Chokingly High Oil Prices: Bush Together with Saudi Arabia Spells Disaster for America [View All]

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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-12-08 08:06 PM
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The Why of Chokingly High Oil Prices: Bush Together with Saudi Arabia Spells Disaster for America
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/raymond-j-learsy/the-why-of-chokingly-high_b_101262.html

Raymond J. Learsy

The Why of Chokingly High Oil Prices: Bush Together with Saudi Arabia Spells Disaster for America


Posted May 12, 2008 | 05:29 AM (EST)

snip//


We have all been endlessly informed by the oil producers and their allies why prices are where they are. The dollar, peak oil, geopolitical tensions, booming world demand, difficulty in accessing oil, refinery capacity. The litany has become familiar. We hear less about a teetering American economy, slowdowns in other industrialized countries weighing on oil consumption, the potential impact of new discoveries such as those in Brazil, warmer winter weather and on. The background music on both sides of the issue continues unabated.

The truth is much simpler. OPEC is manipulating the global oil supply just to keep prices high. It does it by taking oil off the market. Whether it is also actively impacting the price of oil by manipulating trading in oil futures either directly, or by individual members, or through surrogates and/or straw men on otherwise opaque commodity markets is an open question. What is known is that the cartel pulled back 1.7 million barrels a day of supply early last year after the Bush administration, in effect, gave producers its implicit blessing to push prices up from their then languishing $49.90 a barrel. The high sign came in our oilman president's 2007 State of the Union address when he announced his plans to double the size of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to 1.45 billion barrels thereby signaling that the administration would do nothing of meaningful consequence to counter OPEC's tactics. In terms of restraining the price of oil, in terms of the well being of our economy, this policy shift has been an unmitigated disaster. All was further exacerbated by President Bush's stated opposition to the NOPEC legislation, Congress' attempt to remove the sovereign immunity exemption which placed OPEC's collusionary tactics outside the reach of American law, the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commision. He made it clear to one and all that he would veto he such legislation if came to his desk. Reasons? You would probably have to go to a pretzel maker to untangle the twists and turns sorting out the reasons why. Perhaps it has much to do with a predilection to being helpful to his oil patch comrades in arms.

As the price of oil shot up subsequent to the Bush announcement, OPEC, perhaps more as gesture, "reinstated" 500,000 barrels a day effective eleven months later during November of last year (though 200,000 of this quantity mysteriously disappeared after January), not nearly enough in quantity nor early enough in time to bring prices down, witness the continued and steepening upward spiral of oil prices. Now the talk has been of further cuts or at best the status quo by OPEC. Why? Because a U.S. recession and a world economic slowdown would lessen demand, and prices might actually retreat, cutting into the producer's enormous profits. This past weekend the Financial Times quoted Abdalla El- Badri mouthing OPEC's now oft repeated mantra that the market was well supplied, "There is clearly no shortage of oil" he said, perpetuating a smokescreen of obfuscation behind which OPEC has chosen to hide and a rationalization for doing nothing.

To add insult to injury the administration's resident "Heckuvajob Brownie!" Energy Secretary Sam Bodman stated unequivocally only a few days ago that he would continue to fill the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (STP). Then with further studied insight advised us after heart to heart discussions with that other dysfunctional government agency, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), that he was convinced there was no reason to suspect manipulation was the cause in whole or in part in determining the price of oil and its derivatives as traded on the commodity futures exchanges.

Meanwhile, the United States continues to pick up the $100 million plus-a-day tab to protect Gulf oil shipments and Saudi Arabia. Just days ago Defense Secretary Gates pride fully announced sending our second and newest aircraft carrier through the Straits of Hormuz as a "reminder" to Iran. Reminding Shia Iran of what exactly? Certainly not least to think twice about aggressing against Sunni Saudi Arabia. This, all the while we are continuing negotiations with the Kingdom to permit us to arm Saudi Arabia with our latest and most effective weaponry.

George Bush may still be enamored with Saudi Arabia and its royal family. But, as our so-called friends immutably watch our economy sink into recession with its growing and punishing impact on households across the nation, and untold hardships being visited on developing economies around the globe, it's clear that the price of Mr. Bush's friendship has become frighteningly expensive to us and the rest of the world.
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