theautomaticearth | Trying to figure out what on earth is happening in the Middle East
appears to have gotten a lot harder. Perhaps (because) it’s become more
dangerous too. There are so many players, and connections between
players, involved now that even making one of those schematic
representations would never get it right. Too many unknown unknowns.
A short and incomplete list of the actors: Sunni, Shiite, Saudi
Arabia, US, Russia, Turkey, ISIS, Syria, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Kurds,
Lebanon, Hezbollah, Hamas, Qatar, Israel, United Arab Emirates (UAE),
Houthis, perhaps even Chechnya, Afghanistan, Pakistan. I know I know,
add your favorites. So what have we got, or what do we know we’ve got?
We seem to have the US lining up with Israel, the UAE and Saudi Arabia
against Russia, Iran, Syria, Hezbollah. Broadly. But that’s just a -pun
intended- crude start.
Putin has been getting closer to the Saudis because of the OPEC
production cuts, trying to jack up the price of oil. Which ironically
has now been achieved on the heels of the arrests of 11 princes and
scores of other wealthy and powerful in the kingdom. But Putin also
recently signed a $30 billion oil -infrastructure- deal with Iran. And
he’s been cuddling up to Israel as well.
In fact, Putin may well be the most powerful force in the Middle East
today. Well played?! He prevented the demise of Assad in Syria, which
however you look at it at least saved the country from becoming another
Iraq and Libya style failed state. If there’s one thing you can say
about the Middle East/North Africa it’s that the US succeeded in
creating chaos there to such an extent that it has zero control left
over any of it. Well played?!
One thing seems obvious: the House of Saud needs money. The cash
flowing out to the princes is simply not available anymore. The oil
price is a major factor in that. Miraculously, the weekend crackdown on
dozens of princes et al, managed to do what all the OPEC meetings could
not for the price of oil: push it up. But the shrinkage of foreign
reserves shows a long term problem, not some momentary blip
Another sign that money has become a real problem in Riyadh is the
ever-postponed IPO of Saudi Aramco, the flagship oil company supposedly
worth $2 trillion. Trump this week called on the Saudi’s to list it in
New York, but despite the upsurge in oil prices you still have to wonder
which part of that $2 trillion is real, and which is just fantasy.
But yeah, I know, there’s a million different stocks you can ask the
same question about. Then again, seeing the wealth of some of the
kingdom’s richest parties confiscated overnight can’t be a buy buy buy
signal, can it? Looks like the IPO delay tells us something.
And then you have the 15,000 princes and princesses who all live off
of the Kingdom’s supposed riches (‘only 2,000’ profit directly). All of
them live in -relative- wealth. Some more than others, but there’s no
hunger in the royal family. Thing is, overall population growth outdoes
even that in the royal family. Which means, since the country produces
nothing except for oil, that there are 1000s upon 1000s of young people
with nothing to do but spend money that’s no longer there. Cue mayhem.
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