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250 comments on Saudi Arabia and that $1000 bet
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250 comments on Saudi Arabia and that $1000 bet
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Forget ye not the reddits and the diggs, nor the link farms. This is a debate that needs to get as many eyes as possible...let's help Euan get readers!
Can someone please disprove this one? Show me the pipeline is officially in use or really isn't in use so I can relax.
The Saudi-Iraq pipeline
This says it was repaired and ready to go in 2002.
http://www.menewsline.com/stories/2002/june/06_18_3.html
Something is not right here. The above article says it was repaired and ready to go in 2002. Yet in 2003 there appears to have been a media campaign to state that the pipeline was unusable as it had not been touched since since 1990 when it was closed and had massive corrosion.
http://www.gasandoil.com/goc/news/ntm34663.htm
Is this one of those things you don't want to touch or you'll die like in "Syriana"?
Is it possible that stolen Iraqi Oil is being pumped to and laundered through Saudi Arabia?
My personal bet is that Kuwait is Iraq's laundry. Both based on some interesting photo interpretation from a retired Air Force colonel, and the fact that Kuwait and Iraq 'share' an oil region.
This doesn't mean that Kuwait has to have a monopoly, of course - supporting the invisible hand that runs our affairs is part of what makes the Bush League tick.
Would be very ironic. First, provoke an invasion..
Only one complaint with this theory, though: Why would Kuwait be dropping their reserves numbers, either officially or unofficially?
Reserves are one thing, oil/cash flow another.
Here is how my theory goes -
1. Kuwait is on par with Saudi Arabia in terms of its American connection - without KSA's Mecca hole card
2. After Iraq's invasion. Kuwait's infrastructure was rebuilt - and the people doing the rebuilding certainly had a longer term perspective than just the next quarterly report (remember, Bush I was in charge - and just by coincidence, a second Bush is now in charge, courtesy of several Bush I Supreme Court appointees).
3. According to international law, you just can't invade and steal a nation's resources - not that Bush II cares that much about laws, as we've seen, but there are still some constraints - notice the unsuccessful Chavez regime change.
4. After having overbuilt Kuwait's exporting infrastructure while no one was really paying attention, pointing out that the Iraqis are to blame for a drop in their exports is simple, as it certainly contains an element of truth.
5. Everybody except the Iraqis splits the cash, and drives off into the sunset. The invisible hand at work.
Actually, this is the sort of theory which could be proven to a degree - there are enough physical elements which can be checked. For example, if Kuwait had facilities to load 4 tankers a day before the Iraqi invasion, and they were rebuilt with the capacity to load 8 afterwards - or if the tanker loads from Kuwait increased measurably after the U.S. invasion. Or rig activity on the border between the two countries.
This also leads to a certain amount of speculation about reserves - perhaps the Kuwaitis were also counting on an oil bonanza to allow them to keep up the pretense that their reserves were still large, with production to match. But then, the amount of Iraqi oil to plunder was less than planned on - reality seems to be a real weak point in much of the Bush League's planning, in my opinion (ah, roses - the smell of victory). This information would be much harder to confirm, obviously.
"This information would be much harder to confirm, obviously"
I found rig count data back to 1998.
Don't see any obvious anomolies - unless, of course, the rigs have been moved to the iraqi border.
Or it was directly after GWI - anyone with better/longer data?