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WAR ON
BLACKMAIL
by Martin D.
Weiss, Ph.D.
Editor, Safe Money
Report & MoneyandMarkets.com
March 26, 2007
Martin
Weiss here with an urgent update on the breaking Iran crisis and its
potential impact on your money.
On
Friday, precisely when the United Nations was preparing to slap new,
tougher sanctions on Iran, President Ahmadinejad’s gunships captured
15 British sailors and marines on a routine patrol off the waters of
southern Iraq.
And
just in the past 24 hours, Iran’s leaders have unleashed the most
venomous diatribes against the West since their capture of U.S. embassy
hostages nearly 28 years ago:
British
officials are hoping — and praying — that the Iranians will come to
their senses and release the hostages within the next few days.
However,
on Saturday, even as British diplomats were trying to reason with
Iranian officials in London, the U.N. Security Council in New York not
only voted unanimously to pass the new sanctions against Iran ... but
also promised even tougher punishment within 60 days.
This
confirms and double-confirms everything Larry Edelson has been warning
you about.
Our
view: Even if the current hostage crisis is resolved, there’s nothing
of substance that could soon end the broader, brewing conflict with
Iran.
Some
analysts still hope the Iranians will finally respond favorably to the
carrots the U.N. continues to offer.
But
don’t hold your breath, because, right now ...
Iran’s
leaders are waging a war of blackmail!
And
they seem to believe they have all the blackmail weapons they need to
manipulate the U.S. and its allies:
Blackmail
Weapon #1
The British Hostages
Never
forget: Iran’s nearly 3-decade conflict with the West was born in a
similar hostage crisis.
On
November 4, 1979, militant Iranian university students stormed the
American diplomatic mission in Tehran, took 66 captives, and began the
most bitter hostage crisis in modern history.
Had
this occurred in virtually any other nation, diplomatic protocol would
have prompted the government, no matter how hostile to the West, to
condemn the students and compel the hostages’ release.
But,
to the West’s utter dismay, the newly minted Iranian revolutionary
government did precisely the opposite. It rallied to the support of the
students. It prolonged the hostage crisis for an unprecedented 444 days.
And it created the rift between Iran and the U.S. that’s still at the
heart of the conflict today.
In
1980, an attempted U.S. hostage rescue effort, Operation Eagle Claw,
crashed and failed in the desert of southern Iran, killing eight
American Marines. President Carter lost his bid for re-election. Any
semblance of diplomatic ties between the two countries was destroyed.
But
one man, widely suspected to be a student leader of the hostage crisis
(see photo), not only became an Iranian hero, but later, also rose to
power as Iran’s president.
His
name: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the same man who is now presiding over the
latest round of hostage taking.
Menzies
Campbell, leader of the Liberal Democrats in Britain, says “The United
Kingdom will not be blackmailed.” But that’s precisely what Iran is
doing.
Blackmail
Weapon #2
Strait of Hormuz
Iran’s
capture of the 15 British sailors and marines sent U.S. crude oil
futures to a three-month high above $62 a barrel on Friday.
But
that strange incident, occurring in the northwest corner of the Persian
Gulf, pales in comparison to the potential stranglehold that Iran could
gain over the West at the opposite end of the Gulf, in the Strait of
Hormuz.
The
Strait of Hormuz handles 17 million barrels per day of oil,
approximately one third of the world’s sea-borne crude oil shipments.
And there’s growing fear among U.S. experts that Iran can easily
harass, probably disrupt, and possibly choke off, those huge supplies.
Indeed,
the Arab nations in the region are so concerned about this threat,
they’re scrambling to build a massive pipeline that could bypass the
Strait of Hormuz. But that will take years to complete.
David
Ochmanek, a senior policy analyst at the RAND Corp. in Washington,
doesn’t think the Iranian navy is powerful enough to cut off the oil
flow.
But
according to Congressional testimony this week by Ariel Cohen of the
Heritage Foundation, Iran could shut down the Strait by simply lacing it
with anti-ship mines. The impact on energy markets: “Significant, if
not disastrous.”
Indeed,
Iran has a plethora of weapons to disrupt tanker traffic in the Persian
Gulf. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have underwater mines and missiles
that they say “could sink large U.S. warships.” They’re trained to
strike U.S. ships using attack boats, mini-submarines and even jet skis.
They also have underwater demolition teams that can attack offshore
platforms.
Unquestionably,
the Strait of Hormuz is the choke point in the global trade of
crude oil. And according to Erik Kreil, an analyst at the U.S. Energy
Information Administration, “the world has never seen anything close
to the size of the Strait of Hormuz closure.”
If
the Strait closed down, he says, it would have approximately FOUR times
the impact of the largest oil supply disruption in history — the 1991
invasion of Kuwait by Iraq, which shut down about 4.5 million barrels
per day.
Another
big problem: There’s now so much military hardware in the Gulf, even
the smallest of incidents could escalate dangerously.
The
U.S. and Britain know that. So does Iran. That’s why, this weekend,
Tehran warned — again — that it will “not be able to control the
consequences” if it’s attacked.
Blackmail
Weapons
#3 and #4
Hamas and Hezbollah
Hamas
is still the dominant faction in the Palestinian Territories. And
despite a much-celebrated pact with its rival faction, Fatah, its
militants continue to attack neighboring Israel.
Meanwhile,
just 20 days ago, on March 6, Iranian President Ahmadinejad met with
Hamas political leader Khaled Mashaal to “solidify and tighten”
their relationship ... plan strategies against the West ... and prepare
for the broader conflict they see on the near horizon. At the same time
...
Hezbollah
still controls much of Lebanon. Its political influence in the country
surged dramatically in the wake of its war with Israel last year. And
this year, it is dangerously close to toppling the U.S.-backed Lebanese
government. Its single largest political sponsor and arms supplier:
Iran.
Between
these two terrorist organizations — Hamas and Hezbollah — Iran
wields two more powerful blackmail weapons that it can deploy at almost
any time.
It
can use them to torpedo fledgling Mid-East peace negotiations. It can
use them to sabotage U.S. interests throughout the region. It may even
be able to mobilize Hamas or Hezbollah operatives to help launch
terrorist attacks and assassinations in the U.S. and Western Europe.
Blackmail
Weapon #5
Shiite-Controlled Iraq
The
longest war of the 20th Century was neither World War I nor World War
II. It was the protracted, 8-year conflict pitting Iran’s Shiite
ayatollahs against Iraq’s Sunni dictator — Saddam Hussein.
What
were Iran’s goals and dreams throughout that conflict? To topple
Hussein ... to replace him with a friendly Shiite Islamic Republic ...
and to build a powerful, new Shiite crescent across the Muslim world.
In
its long war against Saddam, Iran failed. The war ended inconclusively.
Saddam remained in power. Iraqi’s Shiite population sank further into
a state of powerless poverty.
Ironically,
however, since 2003, Iran has been accomplishing each of its goals
without firing a single shot. The undeniable reality:
While
the U.S. has occupied Iraq militarily,
Iran has been occupying Iraq politically.
Consider
the facts:
Fact
#1. Iraq’s largest and most powerful political party is the
Shiite’s Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI).
But guess how and where SCIRI was born! It emerged from an insurgent
group backed by Iran during the Iran-Iraq war!
It
was founded in Tehran, Iran’s capital.
It
draws most of its political philosophy, strategies and tactics from
Iran.
It
is Iran’s pride and joy in Iraq.
In
contrast, SCIRI’s support for the U.S. in Iraq is based exclusively on
an alliance of convenience to fight a common enemy — the Sunni
insurgency. As soon as that fight is won — or lost — its ties with
the U.S. will fade, and its deeper, broader alliance with Iran will
prevail.
Fact
#2. Iraq’s U.S.-supported prime minister, Nouri Kamel al-Maliki,
lived in exile in Iran and is closely aligned with Iran’s current
leadership.
Fact
#3. In the U.S.-sponsored government of Iraq, the most powerful
ministries are aligned with Iran.
Fact
#4. Iraq’s entire southern region, including oil-rich Basra,
has closer commercial, religious and cultural ties with Iran than most
Canadian border provinces have with the United States.
Even
with the U.S. in Iraq, Iran has already established virtually
all of the alliances and structures it hoped to create during the
Iran-Iraq war.
This
is a truly powerful blackmail weapon, and Iran has barely begun to wield
it. But it can. And it probably will.
Worst
of all:
Nuclear Blackmail
Most
Americans and Europeans seem to underestimate the consequences of this
Saturday’s events on First Avenue and 42nd Street in Manhattan.
When
the U.N. Security Council voted to impose new sanctions on Iran, it did
more than just pinch a few nerves among Iran’s leaders. It targeted
the core of Iran’s military endeavors — its arms exports, its elite
Revolutionary Guards, and the state-owned bank that finances its
overseas operations.
The
U.N. resolution bans arms exports from Iran. It freezes financial assets
of 28 Iranian individuals and entities. And it has specifically targeted
commanders and companies associated with Iran’s Revolutionary Guard,
broadening its scope beyond nuclear activities.
Now,
finally, you’d think this increasing pressure would force Iran to the
bargaining table. But given the many blackmail weapons at its disposal,
it’s more likely that Iran will decide it still has all the leverage
it needs to ...
Pursue
its nuclear ambitions ...
Make
further inroads into Iraq ...
Persist
in its support for Hamas and Hezbollah, and possibly ...
Continue
to detain the 15 British hostages.
Recently,
there’s been widespread discussion in the U.S. media about growing
dissatisfaction in Iran with Ahmadinejad’s hard line foreign policy,
leading to some hope that he will fall from grace.
Yes,
that could happen.
Someday.
But
right now, Iranians have done nothing to restrain him — let alone
remove him from power.
An
unwelcome omen: During mass demonstrations marking the 28th anniversary
of the Iran’s Islamic Revolution last month, banner after banner
continued to support the country’s nuclear activities.
What
to do ...
The
potential impact of this escalating crisis on your money is
far-reaching. It could quickly drive oil prices to new all-time highs.
And it could set the stage for an upsurge in inflation the likes of
which have not been seen since the late 1970s.
In
anticipation of that possibility ...
First,
continue to avoid long-term bonds or any investment that locks you in to
a fixed yield. For your cash, stay short term and liquid, favoring
Treasury bills or a Treasury-only money market fund.
Second,
protect yourself from the inflationary consequences of an oil-price
surge — not only with investments that are tied to oil, but also with
those linked to gold, silver, uranium and other scarce natural
resources.
Third,
diversify internationally, spreading your money among countries that (a)
are far removed from the looming Mid-East dangers, (b) enjoy the
steadiest and fastest economic growth despite higher energy costs, and
(c) will be among the foremost beneficiaries as China begins to invest
its massive foreign reserves.
Good
luck and God Bless!
Martin

© 2007 Martin D. Weiss,
Ph.D.
Editorial Archive
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