What game is the House of Saud playing?
Pepe Escobar 
January 16, 2015 12:29    
     Reuters / Lucy Nicholson 
The House of Saud now finds itself in times of extreme trouble. Their risky oil price war may eventually backfire. The succession of King Abdullah may turn into a bloodbath. And the American protector may be musing a change of heart.
Let’s start with oil –   and some background. As much as US supply has increased by a  couple of million barrels a day, enough oil from Iran, Kirkuk in  Iraq, Libya and Syria has gone out of production; and that  offsets extra US oil on the market. Essentially, the global  economy – at least for the moment – is not searching for more oil  because of European stagnation/recession and the relative China  slowdown.    
         Reuters / Todd Korol
Since 2011, Saudi Arabia has been flooding the market to offset  the decrease in Iran exports caused by the US economic war,  a.k.a. sanctions. Riyadh, moreover, prevented OPEC from reducing  country production quotas. The House of Saud believes it can play  the waiting game - as fracked oil, mostly American, is inexorably  driven out of the market because it is too expensive. After that,  the Saudis believe they will regain market share. 
  In parallel, the House of Saud is obviously enjoying   “punishing” Iran and Russia for their support of Bashar  Assad in Damascus. Moreover, the House of Saud is absolutely  terrified of a nuclear deal essentially between the US and Iran  (although that’s still a major “if”) – leading to a  long-term détente. 
  Tehran, though, remains defiant.  Russia brushed off the attack because the lower ruble meant state  revenues remained unchanged – so there will be no budget deficit.  As for oil-thirsty East Asia - including top Saudi customer China   – it’s enjoying the bonanza while it lasts. 
  Oil prices will remain very low for the time being. This week  Goldman Sachs lowered their 2015 WTI and Brent Crude forecasts;  Brent was slashed from $83.75 a barrel to $50.40, WTI was cut  from $73.75 to $47.15 a barrel. Prices per barrel could soon drop  as low as $42 and $40.50. But then, there will be an inevitable   “U-shaped recovery.” 
Nomura bets that oil will be back to $80 a  barrel by the end of 2015. 
     Reuters / Lucas Jackson 
Punish Russia or bust 
  
US President Barack Obama, in this interview, openly admitted that he wanted   “disruptions” in the “price of oil” because he  figured Russian President Vladimir Putin would have “enormous  difficulty managing it.” So that settles the argument about  hurting Russia and US-Saudi collusion, after US Secretary of  State John Kerry allowed/endorsed King Abdullah in Jeddah to  simultaneously raise oil production and embark on a cut price  strategy. 
  Whether Kerry sold out the US shale gas industry out of ignorance  or incompetence – probably both - is irrelevant. What matters is  if the House of Saud were ordered to back off, they would have to  do it in a flash; the ‘Empire of Chaos’ dominates the  Persian Gulf vassals, who can’t even breathe without at least an  implicit US green light. 
  What is way more troubling is that the current bunch in  Washington does not seem to be defending US national and  industrial interests. If humongous trade deficits based on  currency rigging were not enough, now virtually the entire US oil  industry runs the risk of being destroyed by an oil price racket.  Any sane analyst would interpret it as contrary to US national  interests. 
  Anyway, the Riyadh deal was music for the House of Saud’s ears.  Their official policy has always been to slash the development of  all potential substitutes for oil, including US shale gas. So why  not depress oil prices and keep them there long enough to make  investments in shale gas a lunatic proposal? 
  But there’s a huge problem. The House of Saud simply won’t get  enough in oil revenues to support their annual budget with oil at  below $90 a barrel. So as much as hurting Iran and Russia may be  appealing, hurting their own golden pocketbooks is not. 
  The long-term outlook spells out higher oil prices. Oil may be  replaced in many instances; but there isn’t a replacement - yet -   for the internal combustion engine. So whatever OPEC is doing, it  is actually preserving demand for oil vs. oil substitutes, and  maximizing the return on a limited resource. The bottom-line:  yes, this is predatory pricing. 
  Once again, there’s an immense, crucial, complicating vector. We  may have the House of Saud and other Persian Gulf producers  flooding the market – but its Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and  Citigroup who are doing the shadow, nasty work via leveraged  derivative short futures. 
  Oil prices are such an opaque racket that only major oil trading  banks such as Goldman Sachs or Morgan Stanley have some idea who  is buying and who is selling oil futures or derivative contracts   – what is called “paper oil.” The non-rules of this  multi-billion casino spell out “speculative bubble” –   with a little help from those friends at the Gulf oil pumps. With  oil futures trading and the two major London and New York  exchanges monopolizing oil futures contracts, OPEC really does  not control oil prices anymore; Wall Street does. This is the big  secret. The House of Saud may entertain the illusion they are in  control. They’re not. 
    U.S. President Barack Obam.(Reuters / Kevin Lamarque)
That dysfunctional marriage 
  As if this was not messy enough, the crucial succession of the  House of Saud is propelled to the forefront. King Abdullah, 91,  was diagnosed with pneumonia, hospitalized in Riyadh on New  Year’s Eve, and was breathing with a tube. He may – or may not,  this being the secretive House of Saud – have lung cancer. He  won’t last long. The fact that he is hailed as a “progressive  reformer” tells everything one needs to know about Saudi  Arabia. “Freedom of expression”? 
You must be joking. 
  So who’ll be next? The first in the line of succession should be  Crown Prince Salman, 79, also defense minister. He was governor  of Riyadh province for a hefty 48 years. It was this certified  falcon who supervised the wealth of private “donations”   to the Afghan mujahedeen in the 1980s jihad, in tandem with  hardcore Wahhabi preachers. Salman’s sons include the governor of  Medina, Prince Faisal. Needless to add, the Salman family  controls virtually all of Saudi media. 
  To get to the Holy Grail Salman must be proven fit. That’s not a  given; and on top of it Abdullah, a tough nut to crack, already  survived two of his crown princes, Sultan and Nayef. 
Salman’s  prospects look bleak; he has had spinal surgery, a stroke and may  be suffering from – how appropriate - dementia. 
  It also does not bode well that when Salman was promoted to  Deputy Defense Minister, soon enough he was shown the door – as  he got himself mixed up with Bandar Bush’s atrocious jihadi game  in Syria. 
  Anyway, Salman already has a successor; second Deputy Prime  Minister Prince Muqrin, former governor of Medina province and  then head of Saudi intelligence. Muqrin is very, very close to  Abdullah. Muqrin seems to be the last “capable” son of  Ibn Saud; “capable” here is a figure of speech. The real  problem though starts when Muqrin becomes Crown Prince. Because  then the next in line will be picked from the grandsons of Ibn  Saud. 
  Enter the so-called third generation princes – a pretty nasty  bunch. Chief among them is none other than Mitab bin Abdullah,  62, the son of the king; cries of nepotism do proceed. Like a  warlord, Mitab controls his own posse in the National Guard.  Sources told me Riyadh is awash in rumors that Abdullah and  Muqrin have made a deal: Abdullah gets Muqrin to become king, and  Muqrin makes Mitab crown prince. Once again, this being the   “secretive” House of Saud, the Hollywood mantra applies:  no one knows anything. 
 
    Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal.(Reuters / Brendan Smialowski)  Abdullah’s sons are all over the place; governor of Mecca, deputy  governor of Riyadh, deputy foreign minister, president of the  Saudi Red Crescent. Same for Salman’s sons. But then there’s  Muhammad bin Nayif, son of the late Crown Prince Nayif, who  became Interior Minister in 2012, in charge of ultra-sensitive  internal security, as in cracking down on virtually anything. He  is the top competitor against Mitab among the third-generation  princes.    So forget about family “unity” when such juicy loot as  an oil hacienda impersonating a whole country is in play. And yet  whoever inherits the loot will have to face the abyss, and the  same litany of distress; rising unemployment; abysmal inequality;  horrendous sectarian divide; jihadism in all its forms – not  least the fake Ibrahim Caliphate in “Syraq”, already  threatening to march towards Mecca and Medina; the unspeakably  medieval Council of Ulemas (the  lashing/amputating/beheading-loving bunch); total dependency on  oil; unbounded paranoia towards Iran; and a wobbly relationship  with His Masters Voice, the US.
When will they call the cavalry? 
  And it so happens that the real ‘Masters of the  Universe’ in the Washington-New York axis are debating  exactly the erosion of this relationship; as in the House of Saud  having no one to talk to but the “puppets”, from Bush  Two minions to Kerry at most on occasion. This analysis contends  that any promises made by Kerry over the House of Saud   “cooperation” to damage Russia’s economy really mean  nothing. 
  Rumbles from ‘Masters of the Universe’ territory  indicate that the CIA sooner or later might move against the  House of Saud. In this case the only way for the House of Saud to  secure its survival would be to become friendly with none other  than Moscow. This exposes once more the House of Saud’s suicidal  present course of trying to hurt Russia’s economy. 
  As everyone is inexorably an outsider when faced with the totally  opaque House of Saud, there’s an analytical current that swears  they know what they’re doing. Not necessarily. The House of Saud  seems to believe that pleasing US neocons will improve their  status in Washington. That simply won’t happen. The neocons  remain obsessed about the House of Saud helping Pakistan to  develop its nuclear missiles; some of them – once again, that’s  open to speculation – might even be deployed inside Saudi Arabia  for “defensive purposes” against that mythical Iranian   “threat.” 
Messy? That doesn’t even begin to describe it. But one thing is  certain; whatever game Riyadh thinks it’s playing, they’d better  start seriously talking to Moscow. But please, don’t send Bandar  Bush on another Russian mission. 
Pepe Escobar’s latest  book is Empire of Chaos. Follow him on   Facebook. 
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