Iran might try disrupting oil
flow if US attacks
Since 05-09-06
From Undersea Enterprise News Daily, 9 May 2006
Saturday, May 06, 2006 - IranMania.com
LONDON, May 6 (IranMania) - Iran may be planning to share the pain of any US
attack with the world's oil markets, according to Bloomberg.
A strike against Iran's nuclear program would probably
be met with an effort to choke off oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz,
military planners and Middle East analysts say.
The goal would be to trigger a market disruption that would force President
George W. Bush to back off.
The Iranians hope the mere threat of such action may lead oil-consuming nations
to pressure the US to resolve the dispute short of a military confrontation.
About 17 mln barrels of oil, representing one-fifth of the world's consumption,
is shipped through the strait every day.
Roiling the markets would be part of a broader retaliation that would include
terrorist attacks against US forces or other interests in Iraq and worldwide,
said Michael Eisenstadt, an Iran expert at the Washington Institute for Near
East Policy and a former Central Command analyst.
"They will not allow us to limit the conflict to `tit
for tat', us hitting their nuclear facilities, and they restricted to hitting
deployed American military,'' Eisenstadt said in an interview.
General John Abizaid, the top US commander in the Middle East, said in a written
statement to the House Armed Services Committee on March 15 that Iran is
expanding naval bases along its shoreline and now has ``large quantities'' of
small, fast- attack ships, many armed with torpedoes and Chinese-made high-
speed missiles capable of firing from 10,000 yards.
"Iran's capabilities are focusing on disrupting oil
traffic through the straits,'' Army Colonel Mark Tillman, a professor at the
National Defense University in Washington and former Central Command planner,
said in an interview. "Why else would they have these things?''
Relying on Diplomacy: The Bush administration has said it will rely on diplomacy
to persuade Iran to halt its nuclear program, which Iran says is designed to
produce electricity but the US suspects is aimed at producing a bomb.
John Bolton, US ambassador to the United Nations, told Congress on May 2 that
those diplomatic efforts so far have been frustrated by Iran's clout as the
world's fourth-largest oil supplier.
"The Iranians have been very effective at deploying their oil and natural-gas
resources to apply leverage against countries to protect themselves from
precisely this kind of pressure, in the case of countries with large and growing
energy demands like India, China and Japan,'' Bolton said.
Iran's top nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, has said his nation won't rule out
cutting oil exports in response to pressure over the nuclear dispute.
Rising Prices: Escalation of the dispute has helped to boost oil prices by 17%
over the past two months. The current price of about $70 reflects potential
disruptions over the next six to 18 months, said Jamal Qureshi, lead oil
industry analyst for PFC Energy, a risk-analysis firm in Washington.
Oil prices Friday rose to $70.63 as threats to Iranian supplies halted the
biggest two-day decline in almost a year.
Even with that, a military conflict would shock the system so "you'd very likely
get a quick spike that could very easily go to $100 a barrel,'' until the U.S.
releases oil from its strategic reserve, Qureshi said in an interview. "It could
get messy real quick.''
While Iran probably couldn't close the Strait of Hormuz, which lies between Iran
and Oman and is 34 miles at its narrowest point, it could cause havoc by
threatening or attacking individual oil tankers or terminals, analysts said.
Oil from Iran, Iraq, Qatar, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Saudi
Arabia is shipped through the Strait.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard-controlled navy "has been developed primarily to
`internationalize' a conflict by choking off oil exports through the Strait,''
Abizaid, head of the U.S. Central Command, told lawmakers.
'Pressure the US': Kenneth Katzman, a terrorism and Middle East analyst for the
nonpartisan Congressional Research Service, said that even if Iran can't block
the strait, it "can create a sense of crisis to drive up the price of oil, and
presumably'' the nations that consume all that oil "would pressure the US to
stand down or shrink from confrontation or end it quickly,''
Iran supplies China with 4% of its oil; France, 7%; Korea, 9%; Japan, 10%;
Italy, 11%; Belgium, 14%; Turkey, 22%; and Greece, 24%, according to Clifford
Kupchan, a director of the Eurasia Group in Washington, a global risk-consulting
group.
These figures "tell me that Iran for the foreseeable future will have
considerable 'petro-influence' over prospective US allies,'' Kupchan said in an
interview.
Terrorist Attacks: Eisenstadt said disrupting world oil markets might not be
Iran's "preferred avenue of response'' if attacked. "I think they are more
likely to respond in Iraq by launching terrorist attacks,'' he said. "Disrupting
oil shipments is a far second or third, but this is something we have to prepare
for.''
W. Patrick Lang, formerly the chief Middle East analyst at the Defense
Intelligence Agency, said Iran "could unleash the Shiites en masse in Iraq, and
kicking that up would place us in a very different position there. You would
have a lot of people out there in the streets with rifles.'' Shiite Muslims make
up 89% of Iran's population, and are a majority in Iraq.
Rear Admiral John Miller, deputy commander of US naval
forces in the Persian Gulf, said, the US has "the capability to keep the straits
open and clean them up if that should be required.''
"We understand the importance of keeping all the choke points'' open ``and
commerce moving,'' Miller said in a telephone interview May 3 from Manama,
Bahrain.
Missiles and Seals: The US and coalition partners have about 45 vessels in the
Persian Gulf and Red Sea region, including the USS Ronald Reagan, the Navy's
newest aircraft carrier, and five escorts, including the USS Tucson, an attack
submarine that can fire new tactical Tomahawk cruise missiles and launch Navy
Seal commandos.
Lang said the US military, in a conflict, "would be all air and naval, with no
ground operation.''
"Iran might surprise the US by sinking a tanker in the Persian Gulf or something
and then the US Navy would beat the bejesus out of them, but they could cause a
spike in oil prices for a month or two,'' Lang said in an interview.