innonimatu
the resident Cassandra
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2006
- Messages
- 15,374
Whomp said:Any export of natural gas will create a problem where their oil wells need it for reinjection and it has not been available for maintainence issues in the past.
(...)
So it remains open to question whether Iran will continue gas exports should their oil exports decline due to lack of reinjection.
This is why, like the Soviet Union, we don't have to do anything.
Funny that you should mention the Soviet Union. It, like Iran, was starting to leverage on energy resources to influence Europe, before it collapsed. Russia is now continuing that policy very successfully, and nobody doubts its ability to keep doing so for many years. Russia will soon supply almost all the natural gas consumed in Western Europe.
Iran's reserves are about half those of Russia. And just across the Persian Gulf (actually, right in the Persian Gulf) lies Qatar, with the same estimated reserves. Iran can easily meet current contracts and more, with the proper investments. And within less than a decade many smaller reserves should run out, and Iran will have no lack of interested investors.
The argument that Iran will somehow keep mismanaging things and consume all its oil and gas production defies reason Iran can and will fix its infrastructure and policies, when the return from taking those steps becomes worthwhile. Revenue from exports is worthwhile, and Russia managed to make its energy industry very lucrative - theres no reason Iran cannot do so, given time. Its not currently doing so for two reasons: big gas deals are effectively frozen, pending resolution of this security crisis, and foreign investment is necessary but will also not happen until Iran presents a more predictable scenario.
The US doesnt want Iran to collapse internally and later re-emerge, like the USSR/Russia, or to carry out reforms, like China. It wants a weak, divided, controllable Iran. And only war will do that, like it was done to Iraq in 1991-92. The need to tie things up in Iraq will set the time for it, early this year seems likely.
The problem for the US is, Iran may actually resist trough a war, and come out in a stronger position. To what degree can a war be escalated? Disrupting central government enough to cause it to collapse, killing political elites in the process, destroying industries will the US dare go that far? It makes the talk of using nuclear weapons easier to understand. But how to justify escalating to this level (mass slaughter of civilians)? By drawing Iran into Iraq with limited provocations, and spinning a later attack on Iran as a defensive war? This would justify why the US is turning a blind eye on iranian interference in Iraq, or even helping it to encourage Iran to invade after a limited attack, thus justifying a much larger one later?
One thing is certain, moral qualms will not limit escalation. They didnt prevent the destruction of Iraq form 1991 onwards.