Iran Poised To “Shoot Themselves In The Foot” With Oil As Weapon

December 1st, 2007 Posted By Pat Dollard.

d8t8rqu80.jpg

Iran’s potential to shut down nearly 40 percent of the world’s oil trade represents a weapon possibly more powerful than its missiles, gunboats or any arms system Tehran claims to possess.

But such a move would cut both ways in any possible military showdown with the United States.

The Islamic Republic’s overwhelming dependence on revenue from its crude exports means it could end up suffering a sharp and self- inflicted blow if it turns off the spigots and blocks Persian Gulf supply lines.

“They would shoot themselves in the foot,” said Mustafa Alani, director of national security and terrorism studies at the Dubai-based Gulf Research Center. “It’s one thing to test the market psychology, it’s another to take the actual step and stop oil exports.”

The U.S. Department of Energy estimates oil exports finance about half of the Iranian government’s budget. And while high oil prices have boosted the annual growth rate to about 5 percent, Iran’s economy has weak spots from trade restrictions on sensitive technologies.

Iran sells 2.5 million barrels of oil a day, making it OPEC’s second- largest producer. Any decision by Tehran to yank that supply off the market would by itself propel prices steeply upward.

But Iran also could squeeze supplies even further by trying to choke off the Strait of Hormuz—the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf—that serves as the transit route for more than 30 million barrels of oil a day, or nearly 40 percent of the world’s supply.

Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has threatened to shut the strait in response to U.S. military pressure. His naval commanders claim to have an array of high-tech weapons including a super-speed torpedoes and a sonar-evading, anti-ship missile.

U.S. military officials and independent experts are skeptical.

Anthony Cordesman, of the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, writes: “Iran has made so many grossly exaggerated claims about its weapons developments in the past that it seems they were designed more to try to deter U.S. military action and/or reassure the Iranian public.”

With the USS Enterprise carrier battle group already in the region—and Navy minesweepers and other support vessels ready for quick deployment—Cordesman estimates a full Iranian blockade could not last more than two weeks.

“The problem is not Iranian oil alone,” said Michael Klare, author of “Blood and Oil: The Dangers and Consequences of America’s Growing Petroleum Dependency.” “People can live with that for a while. The question is if—and for how long—Iran can disrupt the flow of oil from other countries.”

To accomplish that, Iran has weapons at hand beyond a Strait of Hormuz blockade that could account for serious cumulative damage.

Tehran, for instance, could opt to use its suspected influence among Shiite militias in neighboring Iraq. Sabotage of oil pipelines and facilities could cripple much of Iraq’s oil exports, now at close to 2 million barrels a day.

With the world already consuming close to all the oil being produced, an Iranian and Iraqi shortfall approaching 4 million barrels a day would leave demand far outstripping supply.

But Iran would also pay a hefty price if the petrodollars that now represent 80 percent of export revenues are reduced, potentially stirring civil unrest in a nation with an official unemployment rate of 14 percent—but which some analysts say could be far higher.

They include U.N. sanctions levied as a result of its refusal to halt uranium enrichment, decades of slowly tightening U.S. economic restrictions—including tough new sanctions against Iran’s military, banks and industries Washington imposed last month—and reduced trade and financial links with Europe due to U.S. pressure.

Oil consuming nations, meanwhile, have at least one ace up their sleeves: crude reserves. The United States and other members of the International Energy Agency last year had a combined 1.48 billion barrels of oil in their emergency stocks. That’s equivalent to about 600 days of Iran’s net oil exports.

At close to 700 million barrels, U.S. strategic reserves alone are enough to make up for more than two months of total crude imports—and America depends on Middle East oil for only 15 percent of its needs.

(AP)


    • Young Americans Documentary
    • Learn More About Pat
    • blogroll

      • A Soldier's Perspective
      • American Soldier
      • Ann Coulter
      • Attack Machine
      • Bill Ardolino
      • Bill Roggio
      • Black Five
      • Blonde Sagacity
      • Breitbart
      • Chicagoray
      • Confederate Yankee
      • Day by Day Cartoon
      • Euphoric Reality
      • Flopping Aces
      • Free Republic
      • Frontier Web Design
      • Hot Air
      • Hugh Hewitt
      • Ian Schwartz
      • Instapundit
      • Little Green Footballs
      • Matt Sanchez
      • Michael Fumento
      • Michael Yon
      • Michelle Malkin
      • Military.com
      • Missiles And Stilletos
      • Move America Forward
      • Mudville Gazette
      • Pass The Ammo
      • Roger L. Simon
      • Sportsman's Outfit
      • Stop The ACLU
      • TCOverride
      • The Belmont Club
      • The Big God Blog
      • The Crimson Blog
      • The Daily Gut
      • The Drudge Report
      • The PoliTicking Timebomb
      • The Pundit Review

2 Responses

  1. franchie

    Putin emulated the idea ?

  2. T Double Dash

    I just wish we could speed up the process of using other fuels. Then they would lose the little bit of leverage they have.

Respond now.

alert Be respectful of others and their opinions. Inflammatory remarks and inane leftist drivel will be deleted. It ain’t about free speech, remember you’re in a private domain. My website, my prerogative.

alert If you can't handle using your real email address, don't bother posting a comment.

:mrgreen::neutral::twisted::arrow::shock::smile::???::cool::evil::grin::idea::oops::razz::roll::wink::cry::eek::lol::mad::sad::!::?::beer: