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<text id=90TT2073>
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<title>
Aug. 06, 1990: The Crude Enforcer
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Aug. 06, 1990 Just Who Is David Souter?
The Gulf:Desert Shield
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 46
The Crude Enforcer
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Iraq's leader calls out the troops to frighten his neighbors
into curbing their petroleum output; his tactic will raise oil
prices--but for how long?
</p>
<p>By Lisa Beyer--Reported by William Dowell/Cairo and Robert
Kroon/Geneva
</p>
<p> "Cutting necks is better than cutting means of living. O God
Almighty, be witness that we have warned them."
</p>
<p>-- Saddam Hussein
</p>
<p> For the Western military attaches driving from Kuwait into
Iraq, the spectacle must have been an eye-popper. As the
travelers headed toward Baghdad, having been blithely waved on
by Iraqi border guards, they counted dozens, then hundreds,
then as many as 3,000 Iraqi military vehicles rumbling toward
the frontier, carrying what the foreigners estimated to be
30,000 fighting men. While representing only a fraction of
Iraq's army of 1 million, the two divisions headed for the
border outnumbered tiny Kuwait's entire armed forces by a ratio
of 3 to 2.
</p>
<p> Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was putting muscle into an
economic threat he had made a week earlier, when he promised
to do "something effective" to prevent his putative allies,
Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, from continuing to depress
oil prices by overproducing. "Iraqis will not forget the saying
that cutting necks is better than cutting means of living," he
declared. "O God almighty, be witness that we have warned
them!"
</p>
<p> In the end, his crude parade of force proved effective.
Believing the belligerent Saddam might actually follow through,
Kuwait and the U.A.E. fell limply into line last week at the
midyear meeting of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries in Geneva. Though the two gulf states were formerly
vocal advocates of relatively low oil prices, both were
intimidated by Saddam's guns into acquiescing to the first hike
in OPEC's target price in four years, from $18 per bbl. to $21
per bbl.
</p>
<p> For OPEC customers, who in recent years have been lulled
into complacency by low prices, the outcome in Geneva should
come as a wake-up call. "Happy days are here again for OPEC,"
said a Royal Dutch/Shell Group official in Geneva. While a
sharp rise in prices will be delayed by the current glut of
crude on the market, the pinch could come this fall. For the
U.S., the price nudge will be another burden on an economy that
is already dancing on recession's edge. More serious still are
the deeper implications of the suddenly changed dynamic within
OPEC. No longer is the moderate, predictable Saudi Arabia the
undisputed potentate of the oil cartel. Now the ruthless,
power-mad Saddam, one of the scariest figures on the world
stage today, has seized the title.
</p>
<p> Iraq's bully tactics provoked anger in Washington, where
indignation is already running high over the Middle Eastern
country's use of chemical weapons and its attempts to develop
nuclear arms. Both houses of Congress voted to impose economic
sanctions, with the tougher Senate bill proposing to cut off
$1.2 billion in loan guarantees and ban the sale of weapons and
sensitive technology to the country.
</p>
<p> Within OPEC, Saddam had an excuse for adopting the tough-cop
role. In an organization filled with quota cheaters, Kuwait and
the U.A.E. have been among the most incorrigible in exceeding
their agreed-upon production limits, 1.5 million bbl. and 1.1
million bbl. a day, respectively. This year each country has
been pumping as much as 2 million bbl., driving the average
price of an OPEC barrel from $20.50 in early January to a mere
$13.60 in June.
</p>
<p> In the past, Saudi Arabia had been the one to stabilize
OPEC's overall production level. As the so-called swing
producer, the rich Saudis would cut back their output to offset
the excess pumping of other members. In 1986 the Saudis got
tired of playing the sucker and flooded the market with their
unrivaled stores of crude, pushing prices down in an attempt
to punish the cheaters and force them to play straight. That
method proved of little value in taming Kuwait and the U.A.E.,
which have rich petroleum reserves and tend to favor lower
prices as a way of discouraging Western countries from pursuing
alternative energy sources. But Iraq desperately needs higher
prices, and Saddam reckoned he had something more powerful than
the Saudis' economic clout with which to frighten the
renegades: the mightiest army in the Arab world.
</p>
<p> When Iraq was fighting Iran from 1980 to 1988, Baghdad
wasn't bothered by the double-dealing of Kuwait and the U.A.E.
Much of Iraq's oil industry was shut down by the war, so crude
prices were irrelevant to the country. Baghdad even shared in
the two cheaters' profits to the extent that it received $10
billion to $20 billion in loans from them for its war effort.
But now that the cease-fire with Iran is two years old, Iraq
is rebuilding its oil industry. With an output of 3.14 million
bbl. a day, Iraq is tied with Iran for the rank of OPEC's
second largest producer. Both trail Saudi Arabia's output of
5.42 million bbl.
</p>
<p> With such a huge piece of the action, Iraq estimates that
every $1 drop in the price of a barrel of oil costs it $1
billion a year in lost revenue. The country can ill afford
those lumps as it struggles to repair the ravages of the war
and repay $40 billion in foreign debt to the West. In theory,
Iraq could boost its income by pumping more oil, just as its
wayward neighbors have. Experts believe the country's reserves
could be tapped at a rate of 5 million bbl. a day. But Iraq
lacks the modern equipment to do so and cannot manage the cost
of the investment.
</p>
<p> Making his neighbors quake serves Saddam's other prevailing
interest aside from money, which is to project himself as the
uncontested superchief of the Arab world. Says Barry Rubin,
senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy:
"Iraq wants to show that it dominates the Middle East, that
everyone has to line up behind it or else."
</p>
<p> The repercussions for Kuwait go beyond the humiliation at
Geneva. Saddam began to pull his troops back from the border
last week, but he is not nearly through with his tiny neighbor.
Among his demands are $2.4 billion in compensation for oil he
claims Kuwait has pumped from Iraqi territory, along the
countries' disputed 100-mile frontier. Saddam also wants Kuwait
to forgive Iraq's war loans and lease or cede to Baghdad the
strategic island of Bubiyan, a large sandbar in the Persian
Gulf that blocks much of Iraq's paltry 18 miles of shoreline.
No one believes Iraq is actually eager to invade Kuwait to
achieve these ends if they can be accomplished through coercion
instead. But just the threat of an incursion may be enough to
make Kuwait, with its puny military, accede to Iraq's terms.
</p>
<p> The other members of OPEC were spooked by the bellicose way
Iraq went about bridling Kuwait and the U.A.E. OPEC
Secretary-General Subroto called Saddam's means "alarming." By
threatening the overproducers, Saddam brought tensions in the
Persian Gulf to their highest level since the Iran-Iraq war.
So startled was the U.A.E. that it took the unprecedented step
of asking the U.S. to conduct joint military maneuvers, a
request Washington granted, sending two aerial refueling planes
and six combat ships for the exercise. When Baghdad denounced
this "imperialist plot," the Emirates, more shaken than ever,
denied anything out of the ordinary had taken place.
</p>
<p> Despite the stretched nerves in Geneva, OPEC's other
producers were delighted with the outcome of Saddam's antics,
since discipline on quotas will mean more money for all of
them. The 13 members agreed to cap their total output at 22.49
million bbl. a day through the end of this year, an increase
over the previous ceiling of 22.08 million but less than the
23.5 million that was actually flowing when Kuwait and the
U.A.E. were breaking the rules.
</p>
<p> Even before the OPEC meeting began, uncertainties generated
by Iraq's brinkmanship had driven the average price of OPEC oil
to $16.25 per bbl., from less than $14 per bbl. at the end of
June. But because buyers have stocked up on cheap fuel in
recent months, it will take some time before the new production
cap shoves prices as far as the new $21 benchmark. That level
may be difficult to sustain beyond the winter, when fuel demand
rises naturally, as OPEC members with spare capacity are likely
to press for new, higher quotas.
</p>
<p> For now, Japan and the countries of Western Europe, though
big oil importers, are not especially worried. They will be
cushioned against the increases because OPEC oil is paid for
in U.S. dollars, which in recent months have depreciated
against other major currencies. Japan can well absorb a price
increase because of its enormous trade surplus, which it would
like to whittle down anyway. Moreover, after the price shocks
of 1973 and '79, Japan put the brakes on oil consumption,
mainly through a serious conservation regimen, and did not
release those brakes after the crises.
</p>
<p> The U.S. has greater cause for concern. The country relies
more on foreign fuel today than it ever has, importing 49.9%
of its total consumption. If prices rise $3 per bbl., as OPEC
wants, the total U.S. import bill will be fattened by about $9
billion, to $63 billion a year. And, unlike the Japanese,
Americans tended to relax their efforts to conserve fuel once
it became cheap again. At this point, economists do not expect
a $3 oil hike to stunt economic growth seriously in the U.S.,
but even a slight shock is painful with the economy as weak as
it is. Last week the government said economic growth during the
second quarter slogged along at an anemic annual rate of 1.2%,
prompting fears of an imminent recession.
</p>
<p> While a repeat of the Arab oil embargo of 1973 seems a
distant prospect, Saddam's sudden pre-eminence within OPEC does
make it conceivable. The Iraqi despot has made clear that he
believes oil should be used as a weapon in the Arab fight
against Israel and its supporters, notably the U.S. If Saddam
were gradually able to absorb Kuwait--and Baghdad has long
claimed, without any historical basis, that the country should
rightfully be part of Iraq--he would command an additional
10.3% of the world's proven oil reserves, making his country
the unrivaled No. 2 oil power.
</p>
<p> Given that distasteful scenario, Washington's modest
intervention into the affair last week was probably prudent.
Baghdad ought to know it cannot terrorize its small neighbors
with impunity. "All the Arabs in the gulf want us to help them
against Iraq," says Rubin, "even if they can't say so." On the
other hand, it is impossible to manage a belligerent like
Saddam. America's best insurance against the tyranny of another
oil shock remains what it has always been: to reduce dependency
by conserving energy, even if prices do not go sky high.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>