Abstract Instability |
HOW
TERRORIST GROUPS BENEFIT FROM LOW OIL PRICES
Terrorists have struck in the
heart of INDONESIA; BOKO HARAM is rampaging across NIGERIA; and ISIS is …
everywhere. While the knee-jerk reaction is to ask how geopolitical chaos affects oil prices, we might ask how low oil prices cause instability that
feeds terrorism.
LOW
OIL PRICE CREATES ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL INSTABILITY
ISIS may be earning less revenue
than it could because oil prices are so low, but overall, the slump is good for
terrorism the world over, because it creates economic and political
instability.
Recently, a terrorist attack in
the center of the INDONESIAN capital, JAKARTA, killed eight people—four of
which were attackers believed to be linked to the ISLAMIC STATE.
In
NIGERIA, BOKO HARAM is reaping the benefits of a weakened state. Petroleum
exports account for 90 percent of NIGERIA’S total overseas revenue, and the
country is awaiting a doubled budget deficit next year. Consumption is at an
all-time low, employment at a high, and salaries at risk of going unpaid. It’s
an economic meltdown of which BOKO HARAM will take full advantage.
It was, after all, the original
chaos of NIGERIA and its massive corruption and income disparity between the
predominately MUSLIM north and the oil-rich CHRISTIAN south that fostered the
rise of BOKO HARAM, one of the most violent terrorist groups in the world. Now,
the state’s growing inability to fund the fight against this pervasive
terrorism is being hindered by low oil prices.
ISIS
HAS FULLY ADAPTED TO THE GEOPOLITICAL REALITIES OF OIL
Indeed, the country’s new
government is now accusing the former president of having siphoned over $2
billion in oil funds that were originally intended to fight BOKO HARAM and redirecting
it to his failed election campaign.
Enter ISIS, which has fully
adapted to the geopolitical realities of oil. The chaos of SYRIA gave them a
convenient base, and the falling price of oil gave them the regional
instability to spread across many borders. Most recently, it’s moved into LIBYA, where chaos reigns in the form of two rival governments.
(As of recently a new
“coalition” government has been formed under the pressure of the West which
will grant Western military interventions once again in LIBYA in order to
allegedly fight ISIS)
SAUDI ARABIA, which refuses to
cut oil production in the name of stabilizing the market, is in financial
trouble.
Here’s the cliffhanger: If the
low oil prices weaken the SAUDI monarchy too much, ISIS will be able to run
amok even more than it is now.
While oil money from the wealthy GULF
STATES—most notoriously, SAUDI ARABIA—has been the main funding source for SUNNI
radical groups, ISIS has broken the mold. It’s organized its own continual
source of funding through the sale of oil out of SYRIA, and is now clearly
eyeing LIBYA.
OIL
- THE DOOR TO CHAOS THAT ISIS IS LOOKING FOR
At the same time, sanctions
against IRAN have been lifted, and it’s preparing to unleash another 500,000
bpd into the already glutted market. IRAN already has significant control over SHI’ITE
radicals, and its new oil money will make this even easier.
OPEC-leader SAUDI ARABIA was
hoping that by maintaining production levels, it would retain market share and
hit back at the U.S. shale boom that threatens their position in the market.
Unfortunately for the SAUDI’S, this increase in production has failed to box
out U.S. shale producers. But it has succeeded in creating dangerous economic
and political instability.
To stay afloat, SAUDI ARABIA has
had to issue a bond package—its first since 2007—and it is expected to report
an $82-billion drop in revenues for 2015. The IMF predicts a deficit equivalent
to 20 percent of GDP for 2015, and the risk of deficit as far ahead as the next
decade.
This is the door to chaos that
ISIS is looking for, and the SAUDIS need to help close it.
By Julianne Geiger of
Oilprice.com
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