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I I 9.5 August 13, 1979 THREATS TO US. ENERGY SECURITK THE
CHALLENGE OF ARAB OIL INTRODUCTION In recent years oil has become
qn increasingly politicized commodity- replete with ominous
national security implications for the United States.
As control of the.world oil market has been wrested away from
the international oil companies by the oil-ex porting nations,
economic(profit-making) goals have been system atically displaced
by political considerations detrimental to the economic health and
foreign policy independence of oil-importing states In October 1973
Arab oil producers unsh eathed their Ifoil weapon" against the
United States in an effort to persuade Washing ton to pressure Tel
Aviv to withdraw from the occupied territories.
In 1978-1979 militant Iranian oil workers resorted to
politically inspired strikes to topple the Shah of the oil weapon
was aimed at the Shah,it inflicted significant collateral damage on
a wide array of innocent bystanders importing states in general and
the United States in particu lar.
More recently Nigeria issued an implied threat to curb Oil ex
ports to the United States if Washington removed trade sanctions
against the new multi-racial state of Zimbabwe-Rhodesia mercurial
Colonel Qaddhdfi,not to be outdone, has ut'tered alarming if
somewhat ambiguous, warnings of a Libyan oil embargo in retaliation
for American footdragging on the sale of several transport planes a
sanction precipitated by Libya's alleged use of U.S.-supplied
equipment in its abortive intervention in Uganda on th e behalf of
warn the United States that it must do more to overcome opposition
in Israel to Palestinian self-rule if it wants moderate Persian
Gulf states to expand their oil production While the Iranian
version oil Libya's I Idi Amin Even the thy island-s t ate of
Bahrein has seen fit to Clearly, assured access to foreign oil
supplies is a.vital national interest of the United States which
has been repeatedly jeopardized in the 1970s and one that will face
additional critical challenges in the 1980s. The pur p ose of this
paper is to identify and analyze various threats to U.S. energy
security both in terms of their past use and future usability most
ominous'threat to U.S. energy security is posed in connection with
the Arab-Israeli conflict, this paper will fo c us on the Arab oil
weapon, although the energy security implications of the Iranian
revolution will also be assessed Since the ENERGY SECURITY THREATS
Energy security is essentially energy certainty. It is a _I
relative concept since absolute energy secur ity is
unobtainable.
Even nations that enjoy energy self-sufficiency are susceptible
to socio-economic disorders (e.g. coalminers' strikes) and
technical failures (e.g. the "Great Blackout" of 1965) which
subvert the certainty of energy supply e- c For net energy
importers, energy security consists of three components: certainty
of an uninterrupted flow of energy imports certainty of an adequate
flow of energy imports and certainty of a relatively stable
price'level for energy imports. Any action or potent i al action
which undermines the certainty of access to an uninterrupted,
adequate flow of energy imports at reasonably stable prices poses a
threat to national energy security. Since energy is the life force
which animates the economy and influences the de velopment of
society, a threat to disrupt a nation's energy supply is, by
extension, a threat to disrupt the intra-national social) order of
that nation and the position of that nation within the
international order.
Energy security threats take three broa d forms: embargoes
production cutbacks and drastic unpredictable price changes. Each
of these three threats imposes different. costs on the United
States, over different durations of time, in order to achieve
diverse sets of political-economic goals held b y various groups of
oil-exporting states. Although the Arab petro-political offensive
of 1973 linked all three threats together in a coordinated pro gram
of economic coercion; each threat is separate and distinct each
could be unleashed autonomously in th e future. Thereforereach mode
of energy security threat should be analyzed independently THE
THREAT OF EMBARGO I An embargo is a political act arising from a
specific set of political circumstances which dictate the manner
and duration of 3 R e r. e 9 7 it s implementation. The only oil
embargoes of the postwar era have been extensions of conflict in
the Middle East or Africa actual use of the Arab oil weapon has
been a symptom of the Arab military means.
The first .Arab attempt to use oil as a political lev er vis-a
vis Israel was 'precipitated by the 1956 'joint
Anglo-French-Israeli intervention in Egypt. Sabotage of a Syrian
pumping station at that time forced the shutdown of the Iraq
Petroleum Company pipeline from the Iraqi fields to the
Mediterranean. B e cause of the closure of the Suez
Cana1,two-thirds of Middle Eastern oil exports to Europe had to be
rerouted or were cut off The failure to cope with Israel's
"expansionism" by diplomatic or The shortfall of Arab oil was
easily made up by Western Hemisphe re suppliers, particularly
Venezuela,which was only too happy to expand production and
temporarily regain the European markets which it had previously
lost to Middle Eastern competitors.
The significant feature of the 1956 supply interruption, aside
from t he fact that it exerted a negligible impact on oil-importers
as a group due to the existence of widespread shut-in production
capacity, was the nature of the cutoff itself.. The decision to
suspend oil exports was not a deliberate decision of the oil pro
ducers, but of a transit.country (Syria) which was confronting
Israel at close range.
In 1967, military conflict again precipitated a suspension of
oil exports, but in a markedly different manner. Within two days of
the outbreak of war.every major Arab oil exporter had shut down
production, either as a result of government action (Iraq and
Kuwait) or as a result of strikes by oil workers (Libya and Saudi
Arabia The production stoppage was followed by selective embargoes
on the United States, Great Britain a nd West Germany an eff.ort
which the Saudi Arabian oil minister felt had "hurt the Arabs more
than anyone else 1 Not'only did non-Arab oil exporters expand
production to offset the decline in the Arab oil flow (Iran's oil
production increased by 23 but ev e n the United States, which had
been a net oil importer since 1948, was capable of increasing
production by one million barrels per day (MBD In 1967 there was
ample excess production capacity which could be thrown 'into the
breach as a substitute for embar g oed Arab oil. Once again the oil
weapon proved.to be a dud 1. Quoted in Walter Laqueur,The Struggle
for 'he Middle East: The Soviet Union and the Middle East
(Xammondsworth,England: Penguin Books, 1972) p. 153. r 4 Source The
Security of Middle East Oil S pecial Report (London: The Institute
for the Study of Conflict, Elay,1979) p. f. p.
I e 5 THE 1973 ARAB OIL EMBARGO By 1973 the situation had
changed radically. World demand for oil had grown faster than world
supply and excess production capacity had dwin dled significantly,
leaving fewer substitutes for Arab oil on the world petroleum
market. In the six-year interval between the third and fourth
Arab-Israeli wars come increasingly dependent on Arab oil as its
domestic energy production peaked and imports f rom non-Arab
sources could not keep pace with demand the United States had be
U.S. OIL IMPORT DEPENDENCE 1956 1967 1973 Oil imports (millions of
tons) 57.3 116.5 300.7 Oil imports as percentage of Arab oil
imports as percentage energy supply 5.6% 7.7% 17. 4 of energy
supply 1.3% 0.6 5.0 By early 1973 the Saudis could no longer resist
the temptation to flex their newly-found oil muscle.In April, the
possibility that Arab oil might again become politicized was
broached by Saudi oil minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki a l-Yamani,who
made a special trip to Washington at the behest of King Faisal
chose to remind the United States of its dependence on Arab oil on
America's Independence Day, the Fourth of July, in an interview
with two American reporters The king himself poi n tedly Warnings
continued up to October 19, when President Nixon announced that the
United States would furnish Israel with $2.2 billion in military
aid to offset losses incurred in the initial phases of the October
War. The next day, Saudi Arabia unilater ally announced the
imposition of an embargo on oil exports to the United States and
the Netherlands (later the embargo was extended to Portugal and
South Africa as a gesture of Afro-Arab solidarity).
Within a few days all members of the Organization of Ara b Oil
Exporting Countries (OAPEC) had followed. Riyadh's lead and the oil
weapon was unsheathed for the third time in less than two decades
When the embargo went into effe.ct the United States was im porting
approximately 3 MBD of crude oil and petroleum products from the
Arab world, the equivalent of 17% of total oil demand.
The embargo danaged the U.S. economy more severely than any
other single event since the Great Depression of the 1930s 2. Hans
Maull Oil and Influence: The Oil Weapon Examined,"
No. 117 (London: International Institutefor Strategic Studies 6
As a direct result of the Arab oil cutoff the Federal Energy
Administration estimated that a $10-20 billion GNP loss was in
flicted on the American economy and an additional 500,000 workers
were f orced into unemployment.3 The damage would have been
significantly greater but For the ameliorating influence of two
intervening variables. From.the very start the destructive impact
of the embargo had been cushioned by the oil industry,which
redistribute d available oil stocks in order' to "equalize the
suffering of the oil-importing states.4 By juggling oil flows to
substitute Arab oil for non-Arab oil in non-embargoed states and
vice versa in the embargoed states,the international oil industry
partially d efused the Arab oil weapon In addition there were many
leaks in the embargo itself. As much as 700,000 barrels of .Arab
oil per day leaked into the United States, the bulk of which
originated from Carribean refineries which refused to divulge their
source s . It was believed that much of this oil came from Iraq and
Libya, the two OAPEC mavericks,who had purposefully left loopholes
in their embargo policies. Due to these significant hemorrhages in
the embargo and the flexibility of the oil supply system, the U
nited States which was importing 6.2 MBD at the outset of the
October War, was still importing over 5 MBD at the height of the
embargo THE OIL WEAPON RECONSIDERED The embargo strategy suffered
from the problems of time-lag lack of control and imprecision. The
nature of the oil distribution system required OAPEC to deal with a
built-in time'lag; oil tankers loaded before the decision to
interrupt supplies continued to arrive at their destinations for
weeks after the initiation of the embargo. This gap betwe e n the
launching of the embargo and its impact made the oil weapon a
"somewhat awkward instrument of political coercion, with a tendency
to draw out a crisis sit~ation The oil weapon is likely to grow
even more awkward in the future as oil-importing states build up
their stockpiles to cushion the potential impact of an embargo
Another major drawback of the embargo as an instrument of political
coerciorL .is its essential uncontrollability. The collateral
economic damage generated by an embargo.can linger on for years
with many unforeseeable, hence uncontrollable, reper cussions. Oil
supply shortages contribute to fertilizer shortages which
contribute to food shortages at a later date. Oil shortages and the
resultant higher oii prices raise unemployment rates and aggravate
wage-price spirals. These cripple economic growth 3. "Project
Independence: A Summa-ry Federal Energy Administration, (Washington
4. Robert Stobaugh, "The Oil Companies in the Crisk Daedulus, Fall
1975, p. 187 5. Hans Maull, Op. cit. p. 15 D . c GPO 1974) p. la 7
economic implications .of an oil supply cutoff may kindle domestic
political unrest, social instability and radical revolutions not
only in countries that were targets of the embargo, but also in
many non-targeted nations as well. Once the oil weapon is .launched
it becomes a potentially unmanageable agent of punishment. Given
the fact that it is aimed at the basic functions of a society and
constitutes one of the most damaging sanctions one state can impose
on another short of an actua l war, the oil weapon has been and
probably will be used sparingly &d only as'a weapon of last
resort The most critical weakness which the Arab oil embargo
exhibited in 1973-1974 was its lack of precision. The embargo was
officially administered on the bas i s of a blacklist which
reflected the fo-reign policy of various nations vis-a-vis the
Arab-Israeli con flict. In actuality, hobever, the Arab
categorization of friendly neutral and hostile had little effect
with regard to oil supplies due to leakage in th e embargo and the
flexibility of the oil dis tribution system.
The oil-importing community resembled a giant sponge-with a
diverse set of oil distribution channels. The Arabs were able to
block the main channels of the sponge, but oil continued to flow
thr ough countless other channels since the oil companies not the
Arabs, controlled the distribution network. Instead of dessicating
the target section, the Arabs were only able to lower the oil
content of the sponge as a whole, and this was a direct result o f
the production cutbacks, not of the embargo. Lack of control over
the oil distribution netwbrk precluded any degree of effective
discrimination between oil-importing states and greatly undermined
the political targetability of the oil weapon THE THREAT O F FUTURE
EMBARGOES The United States, as Israel's staunchest ally, is likely
to be the prime target of any future OAPEC oil embargo. Since'the
United States enjoys a relatively stronger energy position than
most oil importers,it is less vulnerable to an oi l embargo and
therefore will automatically be presented with a wide spectrum of
energy hostages" in the event of another embargo, assuming the oil
distribution system remains highly adaptable to emergency supply
conditions.6 reality which will make'the Uni t ed States doubly
vulnerable to an embargo cutoff, but it would be threatened
indirectly by the debilitative effects of the oil supply cutoff on
its allies vulnerability would furnish tSe Arab oil-exporters with
additional Many of these hostages are likely to be America's
allies, a not only would it be threatened di,rectly by an oil
supply This additionalleverage, especially if America's allies
reacted by pressuring Washington to alter its foreign policy in
order to end the embargo its resolve to continue i t s support of
Israel in the face of petro economic coercion and could be expected
to maintain this posture for the indefinite future. The credibility
of the American commi't ment to Israel has already passed the
litmus test of an embargq while the Arabs ha ve already
demonstrated that they will settle for less than their declared
conditions for terminating an embargo.
Therefore, the burden would be on OAPEC, not the United States
to "free" the energy hostages from their oil supply predicament
On'the other ha nd, the United States has already demonstrated In
the event of another embargo, OAPEC would also have to contend with
a potential political backlash against the non-discriminatory
nature of the oil weapon by Third World energy hostages whose
economic deve l opment was being hamstrung by a Middle Eastern con-
flict in which they were not -involved. Moreover, as the United
States builds up its Strategic Petroleum'Reserve to its projected
ultimate level of one billion barrels, Third World energy hostages
will b ecome proportionately more endangered by the prospect of
another embargo since it would tend to be longer and mxe
severe.
Until OAPEC can develop a precise targeting capability for the
oil weapon, that weapon will remain just as m uch a threat to
neutral and even pro-Arab) bystanders as to Israelis allies. Any
embargo would therefore put a strain on Arab-EUrOpean,
Arab-Japanese, and Arab-Third World relations, as well as
Arab-American relations.
Another political constraint which O LDEC would have to consider
in any oil embargo would,be the timing of the embargo itself. In
1973 the embargo was not instituted until the United States had
begun to supply military assistance to Israel. If a similar
procedure is followed in the future, t h en the United States will
be granted temporary immunity from an interruption of oil supplies
since Washington has built up Israel's stockpiles of arms and
munitions to the point where it is conservatively estimated that
Israel could easily fight at least a two to.three week war without
requiring outside supplies and could possibly fight for months
without being resupplied by the U.S especially if Egypt remains
aloof from the conflict. This grace period would enlarge the time
lag inherent in the embargo and give the United States considerable
latitude to improve upon,its oil supply position (through
stockpiling, rationing and increased orders of crude) before it was
required to come to the aid of the Israelis, thereby exposing
itself to the risk of OAPEC emb argo.
If the Arabs preclude the United States from stealing a march on
them by imposing an embargo at the outset of hostilities rather
than waiting for American arms shipments to Israel, then they run 9
the risk of appearing overly belligerent in the eyes of energy
hostages. Furthermore, such a quick tri'gger would undermine the
deterrent capabilities of the oil weapon since the United States
would have no reason not to support Israel to the hilt once the
embargo is actually set in motion.
In addition to p olitical constraints derived from the limita
tions of the embargo as a tool of coercion OAPEC will be confronted
with a different psychological climate if it resorts to the oil
weapon again. Having already weathered the 1973-1974 oil embargo
oil-importing states will be less susceptible to being stampeded
into sauve qui peut policies in the event of a future oil em bargo.
There would be significantly less surprise and panic on the part of
consumer governments since the impact of an embargo has become a
kno w n quantity and contingency measures such as oil stockpiling,
standby energy rationing plans and international oil sharing
agreements have been emplaced. Oil-importing governments have
prepared unilateral emergency response programs on a national level
and have cooperated in developing a multinational approach to the
problem through the International Enercrv Agency, which was
established to provide a framework for a coordinated, if not
cohesive, Western response to future energy crises THE .THREAT OF
OIL PR O DUCTION .CUTBACKS The cutting edge of the Arab oil weapon
in 1973-1974 was not the embargo itself but the oil production
cutbacks which accompanied the embargo. On October 17, 1973 the
OAPEC states met in Kuwait and agreed to cut oil production
immediatel y by a minimum of 5 percent and progressively reduce
production by a similar percentage each month until the Israelis
evacuated the occupied territories. The Arabs subsequently
escalated cutbacks ahead of schedule to 25 percent in early
November, but moder a ted their oil measures in December when they
realized that the industrialized world would be forced to the brink
of economic collapse long before any progress was made in
persuading the Israelis to evacuate, if OAPEC were to apply the
letter of the Kuwait decision. Oil production cutbacks were an
extremely blunt instrument of coercion which could inflict
irreversible damage on the economies of industrialized
oil-importers in an ungovernable manner. Therefore, "the Arab oil
states were to discover that the s heer power of the oil weapon
imposed equally powerful constraints on its use 7 The production
cutbacks served three purposes: they pressured the oil importers to
modify their positions on the Arab-Israeli conflict; they pressured
America's allies to put p r essure on America to.do so; and they
facilitated the implementation of the 7 The Middle East and the
International System: Security and'the Energy Crisis I Adelphi
Paper No. 115 London: IISS, 197.5) p. 3. oil embargo by minimizing
the latitude that target countries would have in seeking
substitutes for Arab oil.
While the political impact of the oil production cutback was
considerable, the timetable of production cutbacks was not
realistically attuned to the timeframe within which the desired
policy respon ses could be obtained As a result the United States
was not exposed to the full persuasive force of the cutbacks. It
was apparent that even if Washington had acceded to Arab petro
coercion at the outset and urged Israel to evacuate, the United
States woul d continue to suffer from the effects of production.cut
backs since the cutbacks were geared.to obtaining total evacuation
a goal which would remain months away even if the United States had
altered its Middle East policy.
While production cutbacks loom as increasingly potent sanctions
vis-a-vis the United States given the growing American dependence
on imported oil, the uncontrollable repercussions of contrived oil
shortages sharply reduce the usability of this form of petro
coercion even more than they c o nstrain the recourse to an oil
embargo. Oil production cutbacks damage oil importers in a totally
indiscriminate manner; the oil-importing community as a whole is
the target group. Therefore,the individual importers whose behavior
the oil exporters are at tempting to modify have the widest
possible array of energy -hostages, a fact which the oil exporters
must consider before resorting once again to a cutback
strategy.
Oil production cutbacks designed to obtain change in the inter
national system may unpred ictably provoke change in intra-national
systems which conservative OAPEC states would find distasteful if
not dangerqus. The same symptoms of internal stress, social
instability and pol'itical tension which result in violent trucking
strikes in the Unite d States are likely to be manifested in more
virulent forms in.the less developed world where the
existing.political.order is much more vulnerable to the disruptive
socio-political fallout of energy shortages pandora's box of
troubles for energy-poor "Four t h World" states who would suffer
the most in the subsequent scramble for scarce oil supplies
sincethey could not afford tooutbid more affluent oil importers.
thrived amid economic chaos and political turmoil, would be
afforded greater opportunities to sei z e power by force or gain
power through elections not only in the less developed world, but
also in Western democracies as well.. The East-West balance of
power would almost certainly be altered in a manner prejudicial to
the national interests of the Unit e d States, and presumably
to.those of the more conservative OAPEC members, particularly Saudi
Arabia An oil production cutback would open up a Indigenous
Communist parties,which have historically I I Moreover, it would be
against the best interests of the A rab oil exporters as a whole to
subject Western Europe to another oil supply crisis, since' this
would tend to make the West Europeans more dependent on the United
States for leadership in the energy sphere,a reaction which would
limit the Arabs' politica l maneuverability in the future. An
independent West European community would be desirable from the
Arab point of view because it would enable them to reduce their
dependence on either of the superpowers.8 and usability of oil
production cutbacks OAPEC mem b ers would find theirfreedom of
action constrained by the fact that they are con tinually amassing
a higher stake in the economic health of the industrial world. Any
production cutbacks would jeopardize the value of their investments
in the West, if not ex p ose those invest ments to the threat of
expropriation. Because their own economies are being increasingly
integrated into the Western economic system they would by no means
be immune to the economic spillover effects of a general Western
economic recessio n , especially if it were accompanied by a high
rate of inflation In addition to global political constraints on
the utility As a result of the above-mentioned factors,oil
production cut backs constitute a severely limited tool of foreign
policy. Be cause o f the scale and the indiscriminate nature of the
economic damage which they inflict, production cutbacks would be
unlikely to be unleashed outside the framework of an oil embargo
and even then only in the direst of circumstances SLOWDOWNS IN THE
GROWTH RAT E OF OIL PRODUCTION in the future,a volume-control
policy will become an increasingly viable option for OAPEC states.
The bulk of excess oil production capacity in the world today is
located on Arab soil, especially in the Persian Gulf. Since new
discoveri es of oil are unlikely to outpace the projected growth
rate of global oil demand, oil-importing states as a group will be
forced to look to OAPEC in general and the Persian Gulf states in
particular for their chief incremental source of oil imports.
Gradually, OAPEC members, especially those in the Persian Gulf,
will come to possess a threat of omission as well as a threat of
commission the Arab petropowers could simply threaten not to expand
production.
Instead of using production cutbacks as a stick they could use
production increases as a carrot afford them enhanced leverage over
oil importers, but also it would tighten up the world oil market,
put an upward pressure on oil prices and assure the continuation of
OPEC's domination of world oil production W hile the utility of oil
production cutbacks will decline Instead of threatening to cut back
oil production Not only would this strategy 8. Ibid. p. 4 I r While
Arab oil exporters have not officially adopted a
politicallp-inspired volume control policy as y et, OPEC members at
the June 26 Geneva price-fixing summit publicly hinted at co
ordinated production controls as a possible means of preserving the
cartel's ordained price levels against downward pressures in the
future. Once such volume controls are ins t ituted in order to
further OPEC's economic interests, it would be a relatively small
step for.OAPEC to utilize them for.politica1 purposes, since the
preservation of the cartel is in itself a political as well as an
economic goal The concept of politicall y -defined production
ceilings is not new: the Arabs have been moving in that direction
for several years now. At least as early as 1976 the Saudis were
warning the West that they no longer had sufficient economic
incentives to produce oil at the projected r ates which the
industrialized world would desire in-the future..The Saudi
Petroleum Minister, Sheikh Yamani, noted in an interview that Saudi
oil production was fast approaching the self-imposed production
ceiling of 8.5 MBD and main tained that "we won't go beyond that
for the foreseeable future unless there are strong reasons to do so
9 Presumably these "strong reasons" were related to Saudi foreign
policy goals in the Middle East, although Yamani typically spoke in
an elliptical fashion and left oil imp orters to draw their own
conclusion.
Since then the Arabs have not been averse to manipulating the
implicit threat of slowdowns in the growth of production rates to
further their political interests. Unconfirmed reports of linkages
between U.S. Middle East policy and Arab willingness to expand oil
production have consistently surfaced in Arab capitals, and often
vis the Middle East. For example, vague hints of such linkages
occurred in the fall of 1976 during the congressional push to draw
up strong anti-b oycott measures, in the spring of 1978 during the
congressional debates over the controversial sale of F-15s to Saudi
Arabia and during the fall of 1978 in response to the Camp David
peace process.
While such implied threats have in the past been tentative ly
put forth on an unofficial basis and injected into the backdrop of
ongoing U.S. deliberations in-order to subtly alter the perceived
costs and benefits of policy options under consideration, there is
a real danger that OAPEC states may be tempted in th e future to
tacitly, if not explicitly link the rate of growth in their oil
production to U.S. foreign policy with regard to the Arab-Israeli
conflict. This form of petro-coercion would inevitably raise
Washington, at critical junctures of American policyv i s-a 9. New
York Times Magazine, Nov. 14, 1976, p. 138. .z tensions between
OAPEC and the United States and could be considered a form of
"strangulation" which Secretary of State Kissinger warned against
in Zanuary 1975 in connection with his veiled threat of a potential
military response to a politically inspired oil supply crisis.'lO I
THE THREAT OF PRICE INSTABILITY Today the real price of oil
measured in constant dollars is only marginally greater than the
price of oil in the early 1950s.
The threat to U.S. energy security does not lie in the price
level of oil per se, but in the abruptness of oil price hikes.
Unexpected gyrations ofoil prices destroy the delicate equilibrium
of the modern economy, which is largely fueled by oil. Oil price
increases dep r ess economic growth, boost unemployment, aggravate
wage-price spiralsand exacerbate the balance of payments problems
of oil importers. The massive transfer of income from consumers to
oil exporters iepresents a transfer of buying power from high
spenders to high savers. Unless compensated for, it diverts
consumer ex penditures from domestic products and reduces aggregate
demand for goods-and services which in turn leads to a general
slowdown in economic activity.
The extraordinary inelasticity of demand fo r oil and the
opportunistic exploitation of two politically-motivated oil supply
interruptions the 1973 oil embargo and the 1979 Iranian production
cutbacks have allowed OPEC to boost prices from $1.80 per barrel in
1970 to an average of about 20 per barr el in 1979, an increase of
more than 1,000 percent in less than a decade. The single biggest
surge was and December 1973 in response to the new market
conditions created I by the Arab oil embargo and concomitant oil
production cutbacks.
This sudden boost in oil prices was held accountable by many
experts for the great severity of the'1975 recession. The dramatic
change I in oil prices jarred the relative resource costs of
various products out of line and the American economy was forced i
n to a painful I transition period as the marketplace adjusted to
the new price levels A similar, though relatively less painful,
period of adjustment will follow the 50 per cent price hikes of
1979 the quadrupling of prices which occurred between October I I
In both cases this economic realignment has been accompanied by the
political problem of distributing the burden of'the price hikes
over various groups of the population which have expectations of
ever-increasing income. Market dislocations generated,by spiralling
petroleum prices have been further distorted by govern ment
regulations which have rigidly, and in some cases arbitrarily
exposed s6me groups to the full impact of higher prices while
cushion ing the impact on others As a direct result of the u
nresponsiveness of government regulations to abrupt price hikes,the
teamsters in 10. Business Week, Jan. 13, 1975, p. 69. 1974 and
independent truckers in 1979 staged violent strikes which further
penalized the national economy.
America's firs't full scale energy riot the civil disorders of
late June in Levittown, Pennsylvania was born out of frustration
with governmental regulation of the trucking industry, not at OPEC
price gouging. Clearly, radical OPEC pr.ice hikes are a potentially
destabilizing influ e nce on the domestic tranquility of the United
States, especially when the impact of such price manipulations is
further compounded by awkward, and often inappropriate,
governmental intervention in the marketplace Significantly OIL
PRICES AS POLITICAL LEVE R S Given the fact that oil has become an
increasingly politicized commodity and that this trend is unlikely
to be reversed in this century, there exists a real possibility
that OAPEC states could manipulate the price of petroleum in order
to gain political ad vantage vis-a-vis Israel. OAPEC members could
extend preferential terms to some oil importers as a reward for
their "correct" foreign policies, much as they extend preferential
terms to selected developing nations (most of them Moslem) at
present. The a vailability of preferent"l1 treatment and the threat
of its withdrawal would endow =ab oil exporters with leverage over
weak importers, but more self-sufficient oil importers would be
unlikely to bow to such price pressures The United States, in
particula r , having already survived a full-blown oil embargo
without compromising its foreign policy commitments, would be
relatively unaffected by such price blandish ments. In fact, such a
blatant attempt to entice Washington into abandoning an ally would
be self -defeating since it could be expected to trigger a severe
anti-OAPEC backlash in this country and possibly result in an even
stronger assertion of American support for Israel.
In any event Arab oil exporters would have relatively little
latitude in explici tly linking the price of oil to any desired
behavior on the part of oil-importing states As an economic cartel
OPEC sets prices at levels which will maximize the collective
revenue of cartel members without making alternative' sources of
energy, such as s ynthetic fuels, economically competitive.
Presumably, the price of oil is continually kept as close as
possible to the price at which alternative energy sources become
commercially feasible without exceeding that price; the price floor
of energy substitute s becomes the price ceiling of the cartel.
Therefore any attempt to raise prices further dce to political
considerations exposes the cartel as a whole to the risk that the
new prices will trigger the development of indigenous high-cost
energy sources in t h e oil-importing community. In the long run
sach a development would reduce OPEC oil profits and threaten the
stability of the cartel itself. In the short run it would raise
political tensions 15 5 5 between Arab and non-Arab OPEC members
since ObEC as a s ubset of OPEC would be jeopardizing the long term
economic interests of all cartel members for short or medium term
political benefits which would accrue to only a few (Arab) 'cartel
members.
Arab .oil exporters would be subject to political as well as eco
nomic constraints in attempting to tinker with oil prices according
to political criteria foreign policy considerations 'would
undoubtedly antagonize oil importers who would resent what would be
in effect an Arab tax surcharge on their foreign policies. T h e
conservative Persian Gulf OAPEC states who would exert a
controlling influence'on any future price hikes are acutely 'aware
of the dangers which sudden leaps in oil prices would impose on the
West and have taken the lead in opposing dramatic price hikes A
source close to the Saudi royal family was quoted as saying during
the political-jockeying between OPEC price hawks and moderates
which preceded the December 1976 OPEC summit conference nations to
the left takeover in Italy or France."ll conservative pr o -Western
state, political constraints and trade-offs make
politically-motivated price hikes an extremely limited tool of
foreign policy for OAPEC states taken as a group ence of the
conservative Persian Gulf states which continually re sist calls
for high e r price levels by their more radical fellow producers.
These states can and do gain some degree of leverage over the
United States by tacitly linking the.strength of their opposition
to higher prices to the extent to which they perceive Washington to
be r e straining Tel Aviv. The harder the United States attempted
to moderate Israel's behavior, the harder they would attempt to
moderate radical OPEC demands for price hikes or at least this is
the impression which they seek to promote A sudden price boost pro
m pted by Every price boost drives mor0 and more The last thing the
Saudis want is a Communist AS long as Saudi Arabia remains a
However, the threat of future price hikes may enhance the influ
While such a linkage has not officially been adopted and is neve r
likely to be, given the preference of the Saudis for subtle low key
diplomacy rather than blatant ultimatums which would.back
Washington into a corner, this pseudo-linkage has been lodged in
the minds of American policymakers and the Arabs are intent on k
eeping it there. Prior to the mid-1976 OPEC price summit the
seemingly ubiquitous "anonymous Saudi official" claimed that We are
under pressure from the radical Arab side and the United States
will leave us out on a limb if Israel refuses to make concessi
ons."12 11. Newsweek, Nov. 22, 1976, p. 89 12. U.S. News and World
Report, March 8, 1976, p. 74.
In this connection, it is by no means a coincidence that the
largest oil price hikes since 1973 have been instituted in the
aftermath of the Camp David peace t alks and the subsequent
Egyptian Israeli peace treaty (although a price rise was inevitable
in any event given the upward price pressures generated by the
Iranian oil shut.down and OPEC's desire to offset Western inflation
and the decline of the dollar OP E C has also chosen to make the
most of the implicit threat of price hikes. In October of 1976 OPEC
postponed its price con ference in order to assess the progress of
the producer-consumer dialogue at the talks in Paris between the
industrialized world and t he developing countries. While
politically-inspired price hikes constitute a relatively
ineffective method of gaining foreign policy leverage once they are
implemented, the unvoiced 'threat of future price hikes will
continue to serve as a useful prod to o il importers. Oil exporters
seem to have already learned that the constraints which limitkhe
use of price hikes for political pur poses make the threat of a
price hike, rather than the actual price hike itself, the most
effective way of influencing the be havior of oil importers THE
IRANIAN REVOLUTION AND U.S. ENERGY SECURITY The Iranian revolution
has impinged on U.S. energy security in several different ways?3
First of all ,Khomeini's Islamic Republic has become a de facto
member of OAPEC and will presum a bly join any future Arab on
embargo targeted on Israel's allies to the Shah, who quietly
supplied Israel and South Africa with oil and maintained that "In
the of peace oil is like bread. Its use should not be denied to
anybody Uthe new rulers of Iran have displayed no such reluctance
to politicize their oil exports, an entirely understandable outcqme
given the fact that they came to power via politically-inspired
strikes in the oilfields. Tehran has already embargoed all oil
shipments to Israel and South A f rica forcing both countries to
rely on the spot market to satisfy their national energy appetites,
a factor which has helped send spot market prices skyrocketing to
as much as $40 per barrel and thereby pro viding OPEC a semblance
of justification for its precipitous oil price push.
During the 1973 Arab oil embargo Iran not only continued to
export oil to the United States but in fact more than doubled its
exports from roughly 220,000 BD in 1973 to 460,000 BD in 1974.
Iranian participation in a future OAF-EC oil embargo, or merely
Iranian refusal to expand its production to partially offset Arab
Cutbacks, greatly increases the potency of the Arab oil weapon.
Moreover, because the vitriolic Khomeini regime has taken an
ardently. hard-line stance vis-a-vis Israel, the Iranian revolution
has strengthened the ranks of OAPEC hawks and increased the likeli
hood that OAPEC will unsheath its oil weapon once again, perhaps In
contrast 13. See James Phillips The Irinian Oil Crisis Heritage
Foundation Backgrounder # 76 14. mgaei ~1 Mallakh Arab-American
Relations: Conflict or Co-operation 17 even in a crisis situation
short of war Secondly,the Iranian revolution has resulted in the
pro spective long-term loss of significant oil production
capacity.
Iran, which once pr oduced 6 MBD under the Shah, is not expected
to produce much more than 4 MBD under the Ayatollah Khomeini due to
self-imposed political and technical constraints. This 2 MBD long
term loss of Iranian production will soak up much of the shut-in
production c apacity which was expected to provide a restraining
influence on OPEC price policy and cushion the world against future
supply disruptions.. Since much of the shut-in production capacity
brought on line to offset the Iranian shortfall was located in
Saudi Arabia, Riyadh's ability to dramatically alter its production
level, and thus its influence over OPEC price negotiations, has
been significantly eroded. Finally, the loss of Iranian production
has in effect telescoped time by advancing the date at which-w o
rld oil demand is expected to grow dangerously close to world
production capacity by 1-2 years.15 such a dangerous threshold
would be crossed in the mid to late 1980s. The acceleration of such
adverse trends denies the United States and other oil importer s of
valuable time needed to prepare for the chronic oil shortages and
subsequent price hikes which will signal the approaching end of the
oil era Previously it had been expected that Thirdly the Iranian
revolution has generated unsettling spillover effect s which could
further destabilize the,Persian Gulf region in the future and
possibly result in the interruption of the flow of oil once again.
The Iraqis are concerned about two potential threats posed by the
Iranian revolution to their internal security: t he possiblility
that the Iraqi Kurdish minority will be incited to renew its
separatist guerril1.a campaign by the resurgent nationalism of the
Iranian Kurds and the possibility that the Ayatollah Khomeini's
brand of radical Shi'ite activism will serve as a catalyst to stir
up Iraqi Shi'ites (85 percent of the population against the
predominantly Sunni Ba'athist regime currently in power.
Baghdad's apprehensions have been reinforced by the painful
awareness that it earned Khomeini's lasting enmity by expelling him
from the country at the behest of the Shah in 19
78. Fearing the worst about the Ayatollah's intentions with
regard to Iraqi Shi'ites and 'alarmed by the prospect that Khomeini
will be unwilling or un able to restrain Kurds in Iran from
encouragi ng and supporting a Kurdish rebellion on the other side
of the border, the Iraqis have prepared for the worst. Believing
the best defense to.be a good offense, they have crossed the border
to attack Kurdish villages within Iran,perceived to be sanctuaries
,and have renewed their 15. James Schlesinger, "Persian Gulf
Underpins the Democracies," Washington Post Feb. 11, 1979, p. D-4.
r longstanding support of Arab separatism in Iran's oil-rich
province of Khuzestan in an effort to gain leverage with which to d
issuade Khomeini from exploiting Shi'ite unrest within Iraq. As
tensions along the border rise so do the chances that oil
production and re fining installations in both countries will be
damaged and possibly shutdown by overt military conflict or covert
s abotage.
Fourthly, the Iranian revolution has deprived the West of a I
dependable ally which had been expected -(in accordance with the
Nixon Doctrine) to underwrite the security of the sea lines of
communication SLOC) through which Persian Gulf oil reache d the
West. Iran under the Shah intervened on behalf of the Sultan of
Oman to suppress a radical separatist movement in Oman's Dhofar
province and was projected to expand its naval security umbrella
from the confines of the Persian Gulf to the near reache s of the
Arabian Sea. Not only has Iran under Xhomeini disavowed its former
role as policeman of the Gulf but it has had difficulty protecting
oil installations within Khuzestan from Arab sabotage, let alone
providing for the security of the vital Straits o f Hormuz. Given
recent evidence that South Yemen is staging a military buildup
along its border with Oman in preparation for another uprising in
Dhofar province, a possible prelude to a revolution within Oman
itself, the security of the Gulf oil route is l ikely to be further
undermined in the future. The withdrawal of pro-Western Iranian
military power from the periphery of the Persian Gulf is likely to
leave the vital oil SLOCs the jugular vein pf the West vulner able
to disruption not only atthe hands of Soviet proxies such as South
Yemen and possibly Iraq, but also to small guerrilla groups such as
the PLO or the Popular Front for the Liberation of Oman I Still
another implication of the Iranian revOlution in regard to U.S.
energy security is the prospec tive impact of the political lessons
of the Iranian revolution on the long term-oil production policies
of other OPEC states in general and Gulf states in particular.
The overthrow of the Shah has vividly demonstrated the p
olitical pitfalls which accompany rapid economic development fueled
by a high rate of oil production. In view of the Iranian experience
oil exporters in the future will be more prone to think in terms of
how much social dislocation can be absorbed by thei r political
systems and this will complicate their thinking about how much oil
revenues can be absorbed by their economic systems. In order to
minimize the domestic political risks of rapid economic development
and concomitant social changes oil exporters w ill tend to revise
downward their long-term production programs A widespread tilt to
conservation-oriented oil production strategies among OPEC states
would undermine Western interests to the extent that it would
result in lower levels of oil available fo r export, higher oil
prices and larger balance of trade deficits among oil importers. It
would undermine the energy security of oil-importing states to the
extent that it resulted in a slowdown 20 In addition there is the
possibility that the oil productio n Iraq is sus of individual Gulf
OPEC states may fall hostage to clandestine groups organized by
external intelligence agencies pected to have3emplaced agents in
Iranian, Saudi and Kuwaiti oil fields; Saudi Arabia fears that the
South Yemeni intelligence s e rvices have penetrated its fields
'and Kuwait radical pro-Khomeini Shi'ite groups have been
stockpiling arms in side its own borders suspects that In 1973 the
energy supply of the West was threatened by a group of states
pursuing national foreign policy o bjectives 1979 Western supp1ie.s
were interrupted by domestic political factions within an
oil-exporting state pursuing domestic political objectives.
In the future, the West may be confronted with a nightmare
situation in which its energy supplies are thr eatened by a
subnational or transnational political organization,'possibly
organized along ethnic lines, in pursuit of international political
objectives In 1978 CONCLUSION energy importers, it is comprised of
three components: certainty of an uninterrupt e d flow of energy
imports, certainty of an adequate flow of energy imports and
certainty of a relatively stable price level for energy imports.
Excluding third party threats, the United States faces three broad
categories of energy security threats: oil em b argoes, oil
production cutbacks and drastic oil price manipulations. The
effectiveness of all three modes of threat would be limited by
political, strategic and economic con straints inherent to the oil
weapon. Unfortunately, the recent Iranian revolution has in effect
weakened several of these constraints and significantly boosted the
risk that the flow of Persian Gulf oil will be disrupted by local
conflict, internal instability or another Arab oil embargo in the
future more damaging Arab oil embargoes w i thout sacrificing its
foreign policy independence of time-lag, lack of control and
imprecision oil embargo the United States will be afforded a wide
spectrum of energy hostages oil-importing countries with weaker
energy positions who would be more depende n t on Arab oil and
therefore more herable to the dislocations in the world petroleum
market which a generalized Arab oil embargo would trigger. develop
a precise targeting capability, the oil weapon will re main just as
much a threat to neutral and even pr o -Arab bystanders as to
Israel's allies the embargo itself but the oil production cutbacks
which accompanied Energy security is essentially energy certainty.
For net The United States has already survived three progressively
The embargo strategy suffered f r om the problems In any future
OAPEC Until OAPEC can The cutting edge of theArab oil weapon in
1973-1974 was notd i 22 Finally, the Iranian revolution has
demonstrated the extent to which the energy security of the West is
dependent on the nature of the re g imes in power in oil-exporting
states. If Saudi Arabia the other "pillar" of American foreign
policy in the Persian Gulf should be transformed by a coup or
revolution into a "Super Libya then the political constraints which
deter it from once again un she a thing the oil weapon would be
severely eroded current conservative ruling coalition should
survive indefinitely there is a real danger that the momentum of
regional or domestic politics could lead Riyadh possibly provoked
by Israel or the PLO to resurrect its petro-coercive campaign
against the United States despite its serious drawbacks. Although
this paper has identified several major weaknesses of the oil
weapon, it must be remembered that in the heat of a crisis the
small number of decision makers who determine oil production in the
Persian Gulf may con clude rightly or wrongly that they have no
viable alternative to another embargo energy security Even if the
Such a conclusion would be a grim blow to Western James Phillips
Congressional Fellow