Posted on 03/07/2016 3:40:27 AM PST by HomerBohn
To the casual observer, Saudi Arabia might seem like an emboldened nation that is asserting itself. Theyve been challenging Iran, fighting rebels in Yemen, threatening to invade Syria, and if some rumors are to be believed, they are currently trying to attain nuclear missiles from Pakistan. However, these arent the actions of a stable nation that is asserting its dominance in the region. These are the flailing death throes of a nation that is struggling to hang on.
Ever since global oil prices started to plummet, Saudi Arabia just hasnt been the same. Thats no surprise. Since prices fell, other oil rich nations have been hurting as well. Russias economy has been on the ropes, Canada is plummeting into a recession, and Venezuela is on the verge of total collapse. However, there probably isnt any nation on Earth that is more reliant on oil than Saudi Arabia. If anyone is going to be destroyed by low oil prices, its the Saudis.
The crux of the matter is that this country is running out of money. It doesnt look like it at first glance. Theyve only recently started to dip into their enormous savings, and their debt to GDP ratio is remarkably low. However, they are hemorrhaging money at an alarming rate. Theyve been flooding the market with cheap oil to drown out their competition (a dangerous gambit for a government that receives 80% of its revenue from oil) , and theyve been fighting several expensive proxy wars with Iran, which are not going so well. The situation is so dire that the IMF expects them to run out of money within 5 years.
For most countries this wouldnt be such a big deal. They would just go into debt and kick the can down the road until their financial system crumbled after many years. But the Saudis cant do that. Their government and their society is structured in such a way that they cant maintain anything with debt. The reason why is that they are not a traditional nation-state.
In fact, Saudi Arabia is no state at all. There are two ways to describe it: as a political enterprise with a clever but ultimately unsustainable business model, or so corrupt as to resemble in its functioning a vertically and horizontally integrated criminal organization. Either way, it cant last. Its past time U.S.decision-makers began planning for the collapse of the Saudi kingdom.
In recent conversations with military and other government personnel, we were startled at how startled they seemed at this prospect. Heres the analysis they should be working through.
Understood one way, the Saudi king is CEO of a family business that converts oil into payoffs that buy political loyalty. They take two forms: cash handouts or commercial concessions for the increasingly numerous scions of the royal clan, and a modicum of public goods and employment opportunities for commoners.
Essentially, Saudi Arabia runs on institutionalized bribery. They need cold hard cash to keep the population in line, to keep the ever-growing royal family rich and happy, and to make sure everyone is doing their job. Its not like what you see in most Western nations, where much of the population has a misplaced sense of civic duty. This system needs cash, and cant survive on IOUs.
The elites in this society demand a life of perpetual luxury, and government handouts are the only thing keeping the oppressed masses from rebelling. Once they run out of money, everything will fall apart from the bottom up.
But the financial situation isnt the only problem with the Saudi kingdom. Much of their budget is being burned up from fighting their war in Yemen, which they are losing badly. Dozens of their Blackwater Mercenaries were killed in a missile attack last month, the Yemeni rebels captured one of their military bases two weeks ago (within Saudi territory no less), and last week Yemeni forces managed to capture over a hundred Saudi soldiers.
This is a regime that rules with fear and oppression. How can they do that when their own military cant beat an insurgency in their own backyard? When the handouts and bribes grind to a halt, and their population is sick and tired of being dominated by the Saudi family, how long do you suppose it will take for them to rebel?
And on top of all that, Saudi Arabia is faced with a severe water crisis. Theyre heavily reliant on underground aquifers that arent renewable, and they use more water per person than in many Western nations (in fact, twice as much as the average person in the EU). They could run out of water in as little as 13 years. This has prompted the Saudi regime to start taxing water for the first time, partly due to the water crisis, and partly due to falling oil revenues.
As you can see, there are a lot of existential threats bearing down on Saudi Arabia. Their proxy wars with Iran are bleeding their coffers dry just as oil revenues have reached record lows, their oppressed population is restless, they cant meet the demands of their gluttonous elites, and theyre facing a nationwide environmental disaster that could grind everything to a halt.
In short, one of Americas strongest allies in the Middle East and the linchpin of the petrodollar, is facing a complete collapse, and it may happen within a decade. This could lead to chaos in the Middle East, and would have huge ramifications for the global economy. And at the end of the day, there really isnt anything that can be done to stop it.
The Saudis are going to remove their peg to the dollar sometime this year. They can’t afford to maintain the peg while they need dollars to fight their war with Iran.
This is probably not going to affect the stability of the petrodollar - after all the Saudis need foreign currency very badly - but it is going to sharply remind everybody that fiat currencies have arbitrary values based on confidence.
And the currency with the most arbitrary value is the Federal Reserve Note.
What an insightful observation you make.
No. More blood and treasure down the Middle East rathole for sure.
Who gets Mecca?
I think they also do quite a bribing of Western politicians and media people. How else to explain the West accepting the flood of Muslim immigrants, and the social chaos they cause.
If the Powers-that-Be stop having a financial incentive to put up with the Muslim invasion, then the West may start deporting them back to the Muslim world, where they will intensify the social chaos.
The quickest way to power is handouts to the politicians. Eventually sanctioned by the courts once you’ve bought enough of them. Then the floodgates open and the Oligarchs rule. Handouts to the public are a side effect.
of course Saudi Arabia is doomed to fail,
They are letting females drive.
On a small experimental stage BUT!
LOL
Thanks for cheering up the thread.
Who is “we”?
Thank you. It really hit home listening to a podcast series called "The History of Rome"; a wonderful podcast covering from the founding of Rome thru the fall of the Western empire. Human behavior just doesn't change.
It's truly despicable that the US and our allies have sided with this evil regime.
I hate to say it, but they’ll probably come to London.
Joy.
Try it this way. If Jimmy Carter had supported the Shah of Iran, and had sent the CIA to Paris to push. Button on Kohmeini and his top guys, we would be in a different place.
And lets not forget if Obama had supported the Iranian electoral protests in 2009.
That was the fruit of the hard-won democracy in Iraq. A genuine move for democratic revolution in neighboring Iran.
But Obama betrayed the protesters and left them to the mercies of the Besijji rape-police.
And as we all know he walked away from a SOFA for Iraq and instead filled the country with ISIS.
There are no words for how abominable this president has been.
WE = the WEST
“At present, due to Obamas imbecilic treachery and love of the Koran and the pretty call to prayer the middle east will remain a muddled and highly dangerous place”.
They're coming here and flooding the West so...the Middle East will be highly volatile but we won't have to wait long for them to reach our shores and Universities, ooops, they're already here.
Spot on
Saudi Arabia has two products to sell, oil and sand. However, since we no longer use hourglasses, there is not much of a market for sand.
This will NOT set well with the Muslim Clerics and their end time theology Cosmo Vision. They have said that Islam would triumph, i.e. Islam at the Mecca..
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