Stability versus democracy
To understand the hype surrounding the petro-Islamic terrorism phenomena, we need to understand the prevailing global economic order and its prognosis. What the pragmatic economists forecasted about the free market capitalism has turned out to be true; whether we like it or not. A kind of global economic entropy has set into motion. The money is flowing from the area of high monetary density to the area of low monetary density. The rise of the BRICS countries is a proof of this tendency. BRICS are growing economically because their labour is cheap; labour laws and rights nonexistent; expenses on creating a safe and healthy work environment minimal; regulatory framework is lax; expenses on environmental protection negligible; taxes are low; and in a nutshell windfalls for the multinational corporations are huge.
Thus, BRICS are threatening the global economic monopoly of the western bloc: North America and Western Europe. Here we need to understand the difference between the manufacturing sector and the services sector. The manufacturing sector is the backbone of the economy; one cannot create a manufacturing base overnight. It is based on hard assets: we need raw materials; production equipment; transport and power infrastructure; and last but not the least, a technically-educated labour force. It takes decades to build and sustain a manufacturing base. But the services sector, like western financial institutions, can be built and dismantled in a relatively short period of time.
If we take a cursory look at the economy of the western bloc; it has still retained some of its high-tech manufacturing base but it is losing fast to the cheaper and equally robust manufacturing base of the BRICS nations. Everything is made in China these days, except: microprocessors, softwares, a few internet giants, some pharmaceutical products, the Big Oil and the all-important military hardware and the defence production industry. Aside from these, the entire economy of the western bloc is based on financial institutions, the investment banks like: JP Morgan chase, total assets $ 2359 billion (market capitalisation: 187 billion); Citigroup, total assets 1865 billion (Market Capitalisation: 141 billion); Bank of America, total assets 2210 billion (Market Capitalisation: 133 billion); Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, BNP Paribas and Axa Group (France), Deutsche Bank and Allianz Group (Germany), Barclays and HSBC (UK).
After establishing the fact that the western economy is mostly based on its financial-services sector, we need to understand its implications. Like I said earlier, it takes time to build a manufacturing base, but it is relatively easy to build and dismantle an economy based on financial services. What if Tamim bin Hammad Al-Thani (ruler of Qatar) decides tomorrow to withdraw his shares from Barclays and put them in some OIC-sponsored bank, in line with Shari’a? What if all the Sheikhs of GCC withdraw their petro-dollars from western financial institutions; can the fragile financial-services based western economies sustain such a blow?
We need to look for comparative advantages and disadvantages here. If the vulnerable western economy is its biggest weakness, what are its biggest strengths? The biggest strength of the western bloc is its military might. Got to give credit to the western hawks they did which nobody else in the world had the courage to do; they privatised their defence production industry. And as we know, privately-owned companies are more innovative, inventive and in this particular case, lethal. But having power is one thing; and using that power to achieve certain desirable goals is another.
Western liberal-democracies are not autocracies; they are answerable to their electorates for their deeds and misdeeds. And much to the dismay of pragmatic Machiavellian rulers; the ordinary citizens just can’t get over their antediluvian moral prejudices. To overcome this is-ought barrier they wanted a moral pretext to do what they wanted to do on pragmatic economic grounds. That’s when 9/11 took place: a blessing in disguise for the Big Oil and the military-industrial complex. Here I would like to clarify that I am not a conspiracy theorist and Bin Laden was not a CIA agent; he merely provided an opportunity to the neocons to invade the energy-rich and morally and militarily weak Middle East. By “morally weak” I mean that the Arab autocrats do not rule with the consent of the people and they are just as afraid of their own people as they are of the external threats. Thus it is very easy for the neocolonial powers to pit them against one another to exploit their financial and energy resources: the age-old, tried-and-tested ‘divide and rule’ policy.
Western liberal-democracies are not autocracies; they are answerable to their electorates for their deeds and misdeeds
The pivotal role played by the Wahabi-Salafi ideology in radicalising Muslims all over the world is an established fact as mentioned in the EU report; this Wahabi-Salafi ideology is generously funded by Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf-based Arab sheikhs since the 1973 oil embargo when the price of oil quadrupled and the Arab sheikhs’ contribution towards the spiritual ‘well-being’ of Muslims increased proportionally; these petro-sheikhs are in turn propped up by the western powers since the Cold War; thus syllogistically, the root cause of Islamic extremism is the neocolonial powers’ manipulation of the socio-political life of Arabs specifically and Muslims generally to appropriate their energy resources in the context of an energy-starved industrialised world.
Petro-imperialism and western ‘strategic interests’ in the Middle East:
In 2012, Iraq’s Maliki administration offered some oil and gas exploration and production contracts, but those were fixed-fee contracts which are more beneficial to the states where such resources are located, and not the far more lucrative production-sharing contracts which Big Oil prefers. Here the reader must keep in mind that Iraq has the Persian Gulf’s third largest ‘proven’ oil reserves of 140 billion barrels, second only to Saudi Arabia’s 265 and Iran’s 150 billion barrels (while UAE and Kuwait have 100 billion barrels each.) Western Big Oil didn’t pay much heed to the contracts and those were won by the Russian, Chinese and Indian companies, although the Big Oil does operates numerous oil fields in Southern Iraq, in and around Basra.
However, after that show of ‘audacity’ by the Maliki government, Big Oil and its collaborators in western governments and the corporate media put pro-Iran Maliki’s name in their bad books. Big Oil including Exxon, Chevron, BP and Total won their production-sharing contracts in the semi-autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan (‘semi’ here is a meaningless adjective because for all practical purposes the pro-US Barzani’s Kurdistan is fully independent of Iraqi control). There is so much oil in the Iraqi Kurdistan and the extraction cost per barrel is so minimal that a petro-poet once wrote an ode about it: that the sweet crude seeps through the mountains in brooks and streams and gathers in pools in the low-lying valleys. On top of it, thanks to the US-sponsored Kurdish Peshmerga militia since the 90s, Iraqi Kurdistan is far more stable than the rest of Iraq, and windfalls for Big Oil are enormous.
Although constitutionally the Iraqi central government is entitled to 83 per cent of the oil sales proceeds and Kurdistan can only retain 17 per cent (of total Iraqi oil sales including from Southern Iraq), when the head-honcho is on your side the laws can be bent to suit the interests of the Corporate Empire. Throughout the last year, Iraqi Kurdistan kept exporting its oil directly to the Turkish port of Ceyhan through the Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline and another pipeline is in the offing, which will further reduce its dependence on the central government in the midstream oil sector.
This, then, explains the reason why the US didn’t even get slightly perturbed when its frenemy and invaluable ally in the Syrian Jihad, the Islamic State (ISIS), overran half of Iraq and threatened Baghdad. Initially the US only made a token contribution by sending a few surveillance drones and choppers to Iraq and kept on pressurising Maliki to quit before it can fully commit to helping Iraq fight ISIS. Even when ISIS overran the al-Muthanna complex, where in one of its underground bunkers some 2500 Sarin-filled rockets are stored, the US remained nonchalant. On July 9, the Iraqi ambassador to the UN warned that ISIS has acquired 40 kgs of uranium compounds from the Mosul University but the US kept insisting that any large-scale help is contingent on Maliki’s removal from the premiership. The US only geared into action when its staunchest oil-rich ally in the region: the capital of Massoud Barzani’s Iraqi Kurdistan, Irbil, was threatened by ISIS.
In June-July 2014, when ISIS was advancing on Baghdad, American evacuees from the US embassy in Baghdad had taken refuge in Irbil’s US consulate. Irbil also hosts a secret CIA station which is in the process of being expanded. Irbil is also the hub of Big Oil’s northern Iraq operations. During its northern Iraq offensive, ISIS had also set its eyes on the oil-rich Kirkuk governorate which the Kurds seized from the control of central Iraqi government when ISIS captured Mosul. So when ISIS threatened Iraqi Kurdistan, the well-oiled US military machine geared into action. Finally the laser-guided missiles and Hell-fires started targeting ISIS’ positions; the formidable ‘frenemy’ with whom the US has a love-hate relationship; after all, it ‘liberated’ the whole of north-east Syria from the anti-US Assad regime’s control; but some lines must never be crossed no matter what; and those boundaries are the lines of the Corporate Empire’s trade and energy interests spanning the whole world but especially in the Persian Gulf, whose littoral states (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Iraq and Iran) together hold 800 billion barrels of world’s total of 1500 billion barrels of ‘proven’ oil reserves; and where 35,000 US Marinesare presently stationed in their aircraft carriers and leased military bases in Qatar, UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Djibouti and Kurdish Iraq.
The unholy alliance between the neocolonial powers and the Middle Eastern despots
A question arises that why do the neo-colonial powers prop up the Middle Eastern dictators knowing well that they are the ones responsible for nurturing Takfiri-jihadis; and is it possible that in some future point in time they will withdraw their support? Not likely, at least not in the foreseeable future. Neo-colonial powers and their corporate interests are so addicted to the scent of black gold that they would rather fight the Arab tyrants’ wars for them against their regional rivals. Presently, there are two regional powers vying for dominance in the Middle East: Saudi Arabia and Iran. Syrian Jihad is basically a Sunni Jihad against the Shi’a resistance axis. The Shi’a axis is comprised of Iran and Syria, the latter has an Alawi (Shi’a offshoot) regime, even though the majority of Syria’s population is Sunni Muslims and the Alawis only constitute 12 per cent of it. Lebanon-based Hezbollah (Shi’a) is also an integral part of the Shi’a resistance axis.
Neo-colonial powers and their corporate interests are so addicted to the scent of black gold that they would rather fight the Arab tyrants’ wars for them against their regional rivals
Regardless, Saudi Arabia has long-standing grievances against Iran’s meddling in Middle Eastern affairs, especially the latter’s support for the Palestinian cause, the Houthis in Yemen, the Bahraini Shi’a and more importantly the significant and restive Shi’a minority in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia, where 90 per cent of Saudi oil reserves and oil infrastructure is located. On top of this, Saudi Arabia also has grievances with the US for toppling the Sunni Saddam regime in Iraq in 2003 which formed a bulwark against Iranian influence in the Middle East, because of Saddam’s military prowess. In the wake of political movements for enfranchisement during the Arab Spring of 2011, Saudi Arabia took advantage of the opportunity and militarised the political movement in Syria with the help of its Sunni allies: the Gulf monarchies of Qatar, UAE and Kuwait, and Jordan and Turkey (all Sunnis).
However, why did the western powers prefer to join this Sunni alliance against the Shi’a resistance axis? It’s because the Assad regime has a history of animosity towards the west; it also had a close relationship with the erstwhile Soviet Union and it hosted a Russian naval facility at Tartus; its proxy in Lebanon, Hezbollah, is the biggest threat to Israel’s regional security. On the other hand, all the aforementioned Sunni states have always been the steadfast allies of the west along with Israel; don’t be misled by what they say in public, all the Sunni states, along with the western support, are in the same boat in the Syrian Jihad as Israel.
Hypothetically speaking, had western powers not joined the ignoble Syrian Jihad, which has claimed 190,000 lives so far, what could have been an appropriate course of action to persuade the Gulf monarchies to desist from fomenting trouble in Syria? This is a question of will; if there is will there are always numerous ways to deal with a problem. However, after what has happened in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and Syria, only a consumer of corporate media agitprop will prescribe a western military intervention anywhere in the world. But if military intervention is off the table, is there a viable alternative to enforce international justice and to persuade sovereign states to follow agreed-upon principles of international morality while pursuing their national interests? Yes there is.
The crippling economic sanctions on Iran in the last two years may not have accomplished much, but they brought to the fore the enormous power which the western financial institutions and the petro-dollar as a global reserve currency wields over the global financial system. We must bear in mind that the Iranian nuclear negotiations are as much about Iran’s nuclear program and as they are about its ballistic missile program, which is a far bigger threat to Gulf monarchies. Despite the sanctions being unfair, Iran felt the heat so much that it remained engaged in negotiations throughout the last two years, and the Iranian electorate voted the hardliner Ahmedinejad out and the reformist Hassan Rouhani won the last year’s elections. Such was the crippling effect of the sanctions that had it not been for Iran’s abundant oil and gas reserves, and some Russian, Chinese and Turkish help in illicitly buying Iranian oil, it would have defaulted by now.
All I am trying to suggest is that there are ways to arm-twist the Gulf monarchies to implement democratic reforms and to refrain from sponsoring Takfiri-Jihadi terror groups all over the Islamic world, provided that we have just and upright international arbiters who are really interested in enforcing international justice rather than pandering to the uncontrollable greed of corporate interest lobbies. However, when it comes to sanctioning Gulf despots, there is a caveat: Iran is only a single oil-rich state which has 160 billion barrels of proven oil reserves. On the other hand, the Persian Gulf monarchies are actually three oil-rich states: Saudi Arabia 265 billion barrels; and UAE and Kuwait with 100 billion barrels each; together this amounts to 465 billion barrels, almost one-thirds of the global proven oil reserves; and if we add Qatar to the equation, which isn’t oil-rich but has substantial natural gas reserves, it must take a morally very very upright arbiter to sanction all of them.
Recently, some very upbeat rumours about the Shale revolution have been circulating in the mainstream corporate media. However, the Shale revolution is primarily a natural gas revolution: it has increased the ‘probable-recoverable’ resources of natural gas by 30 per cent. Shale oil, on the other hand, refers to two very different kinds of energy resource: one, the solid kerogen; substantial resources of kerogen have been found in the US Green River formations, but the cost of extracting liquid crude from solid kerogen is so high that it is economically unviable for at least another 100 years; two, the tight oil which is blocked by the shale, it is a viable energy resource, but the reserves are so limited, around 4 billion barrels in Texas and North Dakota, that it will run out in a few years time.
Canadian oil sands and Venezuelan heavy crude is economically viable; but compared to the Middle Eastern Arab crude, about which Pepe Escobar famously quipped during the Libyan ‘humanitarian’ intervention, “Sweet Crude O’mine,” is a class apart. More than the size of the reserves it is also about the per barrel extraction cost which determines the profits of the oil companies. Moreover, the US produced 11 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil in the first quarter of 2014; more than Saudi Arabia and Russia, each of which produces around 10 million bpd; but the US still imported 7.5 million bpd during the same period, which is more than the total oil imports of the second largest importer of crude oil: China. More than the volume of oil production, the quantity which an oil-producing country exports determines its place in the ‘hierarchy of petroleum’. And the Gulf monarchies constitute the top tier of that pyramid.
Enough petro-chemistry, let us move back to politics. It is generally believed that political Islam is the precursor of Islamic extremism and Jihadism; however there are two distinct and separate types of political Islam: the despotic political Islam of the Gulf variety; and the democratic political Islam of the Turkish and the Muslim Brotherhood variety. The latter organisation never ruled Egypt except for a brief one year stint, and it would be unwise to draw any lessons from such a brief period of history. The Turkish variety of political Islam, the oft-quoted ‘Turkish model,’ is worth emulating all over the Islamic world. I understand that political Islam in all its forms and manifestations is an anathema to liberals, but it is the ground reality of the Islamic world. Liberal dictatorships, no matter how benevolent they may be, have never worked in the past, and they will meet the same fate in the future too.
The mainspring of Islamic extremism and militancy isn’t democratic political Islam, because why would people turn to violence when they can exercise their choice to vote their rulers in and also to vote them out? The mainspring of Islamic militancy is the despotic political Islam of the Gulf variety. Western powers, omniscient as they are, are fully aware of this fact; then why do they choose to support the same forces when their ostensible and professed goal is to eliminate extremism and militancy? It is because since time immemorial it has been a firm policy-principle of western powers to promote ‘stability’ in the Middle East rather than democracy or representation. They are fully cognizant of the reality that the mainstream Muslim sentiment is firmly against the US intervention in Middle Eastern affairs, especially after the end of Cold War and the dissolution of the Soviet Union, when the US after defeating a staunch rival turned its guns on the Muslim world in order to further exploit their energy resources. Additionally, US policy-makers also prefer to deal with small groups of Middle Eastern ‘strongmen’ rather than cultivating a complex and uncertain relationship on a popular level: certainly a myopic approach which is the hallmark of the so-called ‘pragmatic’ strategists.