Iran: Oh, No; Not Again
by Chris Martenson
Recently
by Chris Martenson: Worse
Than 2008
In each of
the years 2008, 2009, and 2010, significant worries emerged that
Western nations might attack Iran. Here again in 2012, similar
concerns are once again at the surface.
Why revisit
this topic again? Simply because if actions against Iran trigger
a shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz, through which 40% of the world's
daily sea-borne oil passes, oil prices will spike, the world's teetering
economy will slump, and the arrival of the next financial emergency
will be hastened. Even if the strait remains open but Iran
is blocked from being an oil exporter for a period of time, it bears
mentioning that Iran is the third largest exporter of oil in the
world after Saudi Arabia and Russia.
Once again,
I am deeply confused as to the timing of the perception of an Iranian
threat, right now at this critical moment of economic weakness. The
very last thing the world economies need is a vastly increased price
for oil, which is precisely what a war with Iran will deliver.
Let me back
up. The US has already committed acts of war against Iran, though
no formal declaration of war has yet been made. At least if
Iran had violated US airspace with stealth drones and then signed
into law the equivalent of the recent US bill that will freeze any
and all financial institutions that deal with Iran out of US financial
markets, we could be quite confident that these would be perceived
as acts of war against the US by Iran.
And rightly
so.
U.S. imposes
sanctions on banks dealing with Iran
Dec 31, 2011
(Reuters)
President Barack Obama signed into law on Saturday a
defense funding bill that imposes sanctions on financial institutions
dealing with Iran's central bank, while allowing for exemptions
to avoid upsetting energy markets.
The sanctions
target both private and government-controlled banks including
central banks and would take hold after a two- to six-month
warning period, depending on the transactions, a senior Obama
administration official said.
Sanctioned
institutions would be frozen out of U.S. financial markets.
(Source)
The impact
of this law was quite pronounced and immediate, with the Iranian
rial falling sharply against the dollar in the first few days after
the bill was signed into law.
Iran's rial
falls to record low on U.S. sanctions
Jan 3, 2012
Jan 3 (Reuters)
The Iranian rial fell to a record low against the dollar
on Tuesday following U.S. President Barack Obama signing a bill
on imposing fresh sanctions against the country's central bank.
The new U.S.
sanctions, if fully implemented, could hamper the world's major
oil producer's ability to sell oil on international markets.
The exchange
rate hovered at 17,200 rials to the dollar, marking
a record low. The currency was trading at about 10,500 rials
to the U.S. dollar last month.
Some exchange
offices in Tehran, when contacted by Reuters, said there was no
trading taking place until further notice.
"The rate
is changing every second ... we are not taking in any rials
to change to dollar or any other foreign currency" said Hamid
Bakhshi in central Tehran.
(Source)
That represents
a more than 63% decline in just a month. Assuming that Iran
trades its oil in dollars, this will not necessarily cripple its
economy, but the specter of hyperinflation looms large whenever
a currency falls by that much. With hyperinflation comes economic,
social, and political instability, and these are, of course, precisely
the aims of the US in imposing the sanctions. And of course,
everything that Iran imports will become hideously expensive
quite rapidly.
The US is deliberately
poking and prodding Iran right now. Given the glacial pace of nuclear
development, we must ask ourselves, why now?
The Story
As with most
things today, there is a story created for public consumption that
justifies waging war against Iran. The main narrative goes
something like this: Iran is trying to develop nuclear weapons,
and this is intolerable, so it must be stopped.
In November
2011, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) issued a report,
long denied under the prior director's tenure (Mohamed ElBaradei),
finally declaring that Iran was unequivocally trying to build a
nuclear weapon:
U.N. Agency
Says Iran Data Points to A-Bomb Work
November
8, 2011
United Nations
weapons inspectors have amassed a trove of new evidence that they
say makes a “credible” case that “Iran has carried out activities
relevant to the development of a nuclear device,” and
that the project may still be under way.
The long-awaited
report, released by the International Atomic Energy Agency on
Tuesday, represents the strongest judgment the agency
has issued in its decade-long struggle to pierce the
secrecy surrounding the Iranian program. The findings, drawn from
evidence of far greater scope and depth than the agency has previously
made public, have already rekindled a debate among the Western
allies and Israel about whether increased diplomatic
pressure, sanctions, sabotage or military action could stop Iran’s
program.
(Source)
I've not yet
read the report, but I am concerned about the gap between the headlines
I've seen that say Iran is building a nuclear bomb and carrying
out "activities relevant to the development of a nuclear device."
For example, much has been recently made of the fact that
Iran has enriched some uranium to the 20% grade, but there is a
huge leap between that and the 90%+ grade needed for a nuclear device.
Iran had told the world it needed the 20% grade for a medical reactor,
and then created a fuel rod for that reactor. To say that
enriching to the 20% grade is the same thing as trying to build
a bomb is not accurate and possibly deceptive.
As a signatory
to the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) treaty, Iran has
every legal right to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes, such
as making nuclear fuel rods for a research reactor, and Iran is
claiming that all their current work is towards this end.
Maybe it is;
maybe not. But even if a nuclear bomb is being pursued,
there's nothing in the NPT that provides for military action to
pre-emptively prevent any nation-state from carrying out such development
work. In fact, if a preemptive strike is carried out, it will
be done without the benefit of any international laws or treaties
that could justify the action.
Also left out
of the narrative is any explanation of why it was okay for Pakistan
to develop nuclear weapons or why North Korea is permitted to hold
them.
The simple
answer is because they don't have any oil. A quick view
of the US military presence surrounding Iran, coupled with the Iraqi
experience of being attacked for supposed weapons of mass destruction
that did not exist (nor were used by Iraq to threaten the US), reveals
why Iran may be so motivated to develop a nuclear weapon:

If Iraq had
a nuclear weapon in 2002, it is quite doubtful the US would have
invaded a lesson that has not gone unnoticed.
While I am
not a supporter of the current repressive theocratic regime in Iran,
I strongly believe that it is up to the people of any nation to
decide for themselves what sort of system they will choose to live
under. The Arab Spring, as messy as it was, is vastly preferable
to the blunt instrument of an externally driven war.
The Curiosity
The most curious
thing about this story is the apparent lack of awareness among US
officials about how the oil markets work. I know they
know better, but the context-free repetitions in articles such as
this next one almost literally drive me crazy:
Geithner
to Seek China’s Support on Iran
Jan 9, 2012
U.S. Treasury
Secretary Timothy F. Geithner will urge Asia's
two biggest economies to cut Iranian oil imports and
seek to narrow differences with China on trade and currency disputes
on a visit to Beijing and Tokyo this week.
(Source)
The idea that
the world can just stop buying Iranian oil, as though it were the
same thing as boycotting McDonald's and buying Burger King
instead, is just ridiculous. The world oil markets are far
too tight for that.
How is it that
China is supposed to cut its Iranian oil imports, exactly? Oil
is a fungible product. If China cuts its oil imports from Iran,
it will simply have to buy the missing amount of oil from someplace
else. The 2.6 million barrels a day that Iran exports cannot simply
be instantly replaced at this time from other spare capacity elsewhere
in the world. It doesn't exist at the moment. Where will it come
from?
Perhaps Geithner
is offering something behind the scenes, like providing China with
extra petroleum from the US strategic reserve while events unfold
(unlikely). But barring that, it is a remarkably naïve request as
it stands and is curious on its own.
The Powder
Keg
With the Persian
Gulf being so small, and so many tense parties crammed into that
tiny arena, the chance of some sort of mischief arising is quite
high. One twitchy trigger finger such as the one that
caused the USS Vincennes, thinking it was under attack by a jet
fighter in 1988 during the Iran-Iraq war, to shoot down an
Iranian passenger airliner and the hounds of war may be let
loose.
And it's not
just the US. Practically everybody who's anybody has naval
assets positioned for whatever may happen next:
Western
forces react to Iran's Strait of Hormuz threat
Jan 9, 2012
TEHRAN, Jan.
9 (UPI) A buildup of Western naval forces in the Persian
Gulf and Arabian Sea is a reaction to Iran's threat to close
the Strait of Hormuz, military experts say.
U.S.,
Russian, French and British air and naval forces moved to
the Syrian and Iranian coasts during the weekend, Israeli military
intelligence Web site DEBKAfile reported Monday.
The Russian
carrier Admiral Kuznetsov anchored earlier than planned
at Syria's Tartus port on the Mediterranean Sunday, causing
France to respond by consigning an air defense destroyer
to the waters off Tartus, DEBKAfile reported. Canada also
was sending a warship, the HMCS Charlottetown, to the Mediterranean
where it would take over from the HMCS Vancouver.
Meanwhile,
Britain has dispatched a missile destroyer to
the Sea of Oman, due to arrive at the same time as the French
Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier.
And the U.S
aircraft carrier John C. Stennis and its strike group
are cruising in the Sea of Oman at the entrance to the Strait
of Hormuz after Tehran announced it would not be allowed to cross
through.
(Source)
With all those
boats chugging around in those little bathtubs, and with various
other forces that would definitely like to see a shooting war develop
(a false flag attack is an option here), the risk is quite high
of some form of incident that would trigger hostilities.
Of course,
there are those in the war rooms of the various OECD countries who
think they have a plan for the conduct of that war, but no plan
ever survives first contact with the enemy. The one thing we
can count on is the war being messier, longer, and more expensive
by at least a factor of two than whatever is currently occupying
the minds of the war planners.
Iran's
Responses
Of course,
Iran has been none too happy over the years at being surrounded,
poked, prodded, and now finally sanctioned for having done nothing
more than cloak its nuclear program in the exact same sort of secrecy
that has surrounded literally every other nation's nuclear programs,
including Israel and Pakistan, Iran's notable nuclear neighbors.
And now, with
the aid of enhanced missile technology obtained from China and Russia,
Iran has a credible threat to make:
Iran Has
Ability to Block Strait of Hormuz, U.S. General Dempsey Tells
CBS
Jan 9, 2012
Iran has
the ability to block the Strait of Hormuz “for
a period of time,” and the U.S. would take
action to reopen it, Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman General Martin
Dempsey said.
“They’ve
invested in capabilities that could, in fact, for a period of
time block the Strait of Hormuz,” Dempsey said in an
interview aired yesterday on the CBS “Face the Nation” program.
“We’ve invested in capabilities to ensure that if that happens,
we can defeat that.”
Should Iran
try to close Hormuz, the U.S. “would take action and reopen” the
waterway, said Dempsey, President Barack Obama’s top
military adviser.
(Source)
The admission
here by the US military is that Iran has the ability to block the
Strait of Hormuz "for a period of time," which they do, is an extraordinary
admission (even if it really is stating the obvious) by the US brass.
Anti-ship missile
technology has come a long way, and an offensive missile is much
cheaper than either a large ship or defensive measures. The
Falklands war in the early 1980s taught me that the navy is an outmoded
concept if the opponent is armed with semi-decent anti-ship missiles,
and such devices have improved remarkably since then.
During the
most recent Iranian war exercises, the Iranian military test-fired
(more of a demonstration, really) their Qader anti-ship cruise missile,
which has a range of 200 km and can be fired from a small truck. To
visualize the difficulty of defending against such a technology,
just imagine how many hiding places for a small truck might exist
within this 200 km radius green circle :

In order to
neutralize the entire missile, full air superiority would have to
be established and every mobile launcher found and destroyed.
Further, Iran
has a number of submarines capable of firing a new breed of torpedo
that can achieve speeds in excess of 200 knots. As far as I
know, these are extraordinarily difficult to defend against, let
alone evade.
Of course,
China is paying close attention to the developments:
Iranian
authorities reiterate threats to close Hormuz Strait if sanctions
imposed on oil exports
Jan 8, 2012
TEHRAN, Jan.
8 (Xinhua) Iranian authorities reiterated threats to close
Strait of Hormuz if Western countries impose sanctions on Iran's
oil exports, local media reported Sunday.
(Source)
Conclusion
Once again,
regrettably and mysteriously, we find the developed world in lock-step
in its eagerness to attack Iran. "Regrettably," because Iran has
not threatened any other country, and war should never be used simply
because the current art of diplomacy is inadequate. "Mysteriously,"
because this is a particularly horrible economic moment to go about
risking much higher oil prices.
While we judge
the risks of a war, either precipitated by legitimate escalation
of frictions or by illegitimate actors seeking to cause the same,
to be very high, it is our view that such a war will not go according
to plan. Iran has many more powerful allies, namely Russia
and China, than did the extraordinarily isolated Iraq at the beginning
of the Iraq war.
Is it too waggish
to suspect that certain Western political powers would love to be
able to both divert attention from the crumbling economy and have
a scapegoat upon which to blame the next leg of the financial downturn?
Regardless
of such speculation, the risk to each of us and the economy in general
from an attack on Iran that closes the Strait of Hormuz is large
enough to warrant your attention. Should oil spike in price,
you can practically set an egg timer for the beginning of the next
leg of the financial downturn.
In Part
II: Are You Prepared for $200 Oil?, we explore what likely havoc
the high oil prices from a major conflict with Iran will wreak on
the financial markets and our petroleum-dependent lifestyle. We
also detail specific steps prudent individuals should be taking
right now, in advance of such a crisis, to position
themselves defensively.
Click
here to access Part II of this report (free executive summary,
enrollment required for full access).
January
17, 2012
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