Monday, January 5, 2009

Oil as a potential weapon

From Asharq Alawsat:
A Revolutionary Guard commander is calling on Islamic countries to use oil as a weapon to end the fighting in Gaza, echoing a similar call days earlier by lawmakers in Bahrain.

The demands by Mirfaysal Bagherzadeh, a brigadier-general in the elite Iranian military unit, are unlikely to lead to an immediate embargo as they don't come from the oil rich Persian Gulf nations' top rulers or carry the support of other major producers like Saudi Arabia.

But they do highlight the depth of anger in the region over the Israeli offensive and the threat it poses to oil prices that recently fell to their lowest levels in years.

Iran's official IRNA news agency on Sunday quoted Bagherzadeh as saying oil is "a strong factor of pressure" on supporters of Israel in the current "unequal war."
Bagherzadeh, who is in charge of war memorials and is not among the country's top oil officials, noted the West's dependance on energy resources from the Muslim world and called for a cut in crude exports to supporters of Israel, IRNA reported.

Iran's foreign ministry did not appear to distance itself from the comments when asked about them Monday.

"We do support any action for realizing two main steps: an immediate stop to the invasion and an end to the Gaza blockade," foreign ministry spokesman Hasan Qashqavi said.

The Iranian comments come days after members of Bahrain's lower house of parliament condemned Israeli attacks on Gaza and told the tiny kingdom's foreign minister that "all retaliation options" should remain open to Arab governments.

Lawmakers said Arab states should use economic weapons such as oil and the region's vast investment funds to put pressure on the West to help bring an end to the fighting.

2 comments:

Jesse Aizenstat said...

Yea, your right. It does highlight the anger in the region. Not only is the siege of Gaza a humanitarian crisis, along with all the horrors of the Israel-Palestine Nakba, but it comes at a time of vast economic turmoil.

Since the speculative oil markets are on their knees, and countries like Iran, for example, depend on high prices (90 per barrel in the 2007 budget I've heard). It is not surprise that this idea is again being talked about.

But if you really think that oil will be used as a wepond, just look at how the U.S economic meltdown has effected the grossly bloated economy in Tehran. They cant, and wont because Iran is dependent on U.S stability in global markets.

And admitting it is like Ayatollah Khomeini said after signing the cease-fire with Iraq: "worse than swallowing posing."

Good Post,
Jesse Aizenstat
www.bloggingthecasbah.com

Winston said...

LoL.... Go ahead. Starve your people and don't sell your oil.