I've lost nothing, as Libyan oil production and reserves are so minuscule in comparison to even Iraq that your point is embarrassing. Your original point being that if Middle Eastern oil was shut off suddenly the US would collapse under it's own imports. You are trying to argue in circles to distract people from your original blunder on real world facts and politics.
Well that took a long time to refute
In fact, I'm gonna spend a little more time on this, as you still don't seem to get it.
My original point (that US is dependent on Middle East oil) is accurate. Let us in fact ignore for the time being the earlier evidence I presented that showed that Middle Eastern oil reserves account for over 50% of the world's total oil reserves. Let's just focus for the time being on the current production.
You stated that the USA only imports 11% of its oil from the Middle East (you didn't produce evidence of any description, but I'll assume this is true). This 11% alone means the USA is dependent quite heavily on Middle East: if you lose 11% of the oil you need, you're gonna have rolling blackouts across most of the country, as well as much escalated fuel costs. The effects of this loss alone would be dramatic. But far more dramatic would be the effect that the loss of Middle Eastern oil would have on the price of oil world wide - And seeing as the US is buying oil from abroard, that is gonna have a huge effect on you. Hopefully I don't need to lecture you on basic economics: it should be obvious that if production of oil falls, and demand stays constant, the price increase will be significant. If the production falls by say a quarter, which is a conservative estimate of what the Middle East produces, the price increase would be astronomical. And as the world's biggest consumers and importers of crude oil, you're gonna feel this increase more than anyone else.
You later argued that you could simply increase production to cope with this drop in supply. To cope with a drop in production of the size I am referring to, you would start depleting your remaining oil reserves very quickly. And you don't have that much to deplete. I'm not even gonna discuss the potential environmental problems of this drilling, or the fact that the oil you are trying to access in the US is far more costly to produce than that in the Middle East. At best, an increase in drilling is going to only relieve market pressure fractionally, and is only going to be a short term solution. And when you do deplete your reserves, which wouldn't take too long, you are going to have a problem ten times worse than the one you started off with.
To conclude, the USA is heavily dependent on foreign oil, and, like all major importers, is particularly dependent on the Middle East.