By Patrick J. Buchanan
In July of 1941, after Japan occupied French Indochina, the Roosevelt administration froze Japan’s assets in the United States.
Denied hard cash, Japan could not buy the U.S. oil upon which the
empire depended for survival. Seeing the Dutch East Indies as her only
other source, Japan prepared to invade.
But first she had to eliminate the sole strategic threat to her
occupation of the East Indies — the U.S. battle fleet at Pearl Harbor.
FDR’s cutoff of oil to Japan was thus a primary cause of WWII in the
Pacific, which led to hundreds of thousands of U.S. war dead, the
destruction of Japan, Mao’s triumph in China and a U.S. war in Korea.
A second stunning use of the oil weapon came in 1973. Arab members of
OPEC imposed an embargo in retaliation for Nixon’s rescue of Israel
with an airlift in the Yom Kippur war. Long gas lines helped to bring
Nixon down.
Now the oil weapon appears to be back in America’s hand.
Due to the substitution of natural gas for oil in heating homes and
buildings, horizontal drilling, and hydraulic fracking, which enables us
to bring oil and gas out of shale rock in places like North Dakota,
U.S. production has exploded. We now produce more oil than Saudi Arabia
and the benefits are not only economic, but geostrategic.
Cuba excepted, there is no more hostile regime in Latin America than
Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro, the successor to Hugo Chavez. Oil accounts
for 95 percent of his nation’s exports. Iran is almost wholly dependent
upon oil sales for hard currency. Russia is the oil and gas supplier for
much of Europe.
With the price of oil having fallen from over $100 a barrel to below
$80 this week, all three nations are suffering plunges in revenue. The
United States and Europe are also punishing Russia and Iran with
sanctions on their energy sectors.
Iran’s production has fallen sharply. Oil-drilling equipment and the
latest U.S. drilling technology that Russia has sought to bring on
stream its vast Arctic reserves are being denied to her.
As the oil weapon was used by us against Imperial Japan and by the Saudis against us, we are now wielding this sword.
We should remember that it is double-edged.
While it would seem natural for Saudi Arabia, the largest producer in
OPEC, to cut production to tighten the oil market and let prices firm
up and rise, the Saudis have continued to pump as the price has fallen.
What is Riyadh’s game?
Is the Saudi strategy to let prices fall to where it is no longer
profitable for Americans to begin new fracking? Are the Saudis thinking
of doing to the new oil-producing champion, USA, what we are doing to
Venezuela, Russia and Iran?
Riyadh may want to let the price of oil sink below where it makes
sense for energy companies to prospect for new sources of oil or invest
more billions in expanding production.
Are the Saudis out to cripple us with an oil glut?
Today, not only are Iran and Iraq producing below potential, so, too,
is Libya. And we have been bombing ISIS’ oil facilities in Syria.
A contrarian’s question: Would we not be better off if these
countries not only restored oil production, but also expanded production
and put more oil on the market than they do today?
Demand creates supply, and a world oil market where there is more
supply than demand would seem to be to America’s benefit. For we remain
the world’s largest consumer of petroleum products.
And surely it is to our benefit to enlarge both the reserves and production of oil and gas in North America.
Price pays a huge role in creating, and shrinking, supply. And price,
Adam Smith notwithstanding, is something we can control and manipulate,
even as China manipulates its currency.
In “America’s New Oil Weapon” in National Review, Arthur Herman of
the Hudson Institute urges the United States to take bold steps to
increase our supplies of oil and gas.
We should relax the rules on drilling in Alaska’s Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge, which has 10 billion barrels of oil locked up. We
should use as an economic weapon against OPEC the 700 million barrels in
the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. We should allow the export of oil from
the United States to enable us to cope with OPEC cutbacks. We should
build the Keystone XL pipeline, and the other oil and gas pipelines
between us and Canada now sitting in limbo.
What Herman is urging upon us is a new nationalism, a new way of
thinking about international economics that puts the U.S. and its allies
first, and uses our economic leverage to advance national rather than
global interests.
Something the GOP Congress might think about when Barack Obama asks
them to surrender their right to amend trade treaties with fast track.
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