Four
news stories in four days sum up the Obama presidency and help explain why the
world and U.S. economy are in such a mess. President Obama just returned from
his two-week beach and golf vacation at Martha’s Vineyard. It took him a month
from the time special forces located journalist James Foley to approve a rescue
mission – by which time Foley had been moved (and was subsequently beheaded).
Mr.
Obama may pursue a sweeping international climate change deal that bypasses
Congress. But on dealing with ISIS terrorist butchers months after they swept
through Iraq, “We don’t have a strategy yet.”
President
Obama has ordered limited air strikes to “contain” (but not defeat) Islamic
State terrorists who have shot, crucified and beheaded thousands of
men, women and children in Iraq and Syria. However, he still has no plans for
protecting the United States from the energy terrorism that jihadists are
planning.
The
president’s failure to “connect the dots,” to see and prepare for potentially
devastating attacks on U.S. and global citizens and energy supplies, is an
inexcusable threat to our security. Preparations for massive energy terrorist
attacks around the world are increasingly open and obvious. Now that Mr. Obama
is back in the White House for a few days, hopefully to deal with real crises
literally exploding around the world (from the Middle East to Afghanistan to
Nigeria and beyond), let me connect some dots for him.
With
Iraqi and other oil fields in jihadist hands, petroleum has become the mother’s
milk of Islamic terrorism. Along with drug trafficking and bank robbery, it
provides financing to arm, feed, train and pay terrorists on a scale that makes
Leonardo DiCaprio’s Blood Diamond
loot look like chump change.
Islamic
State butchers are raking in an estimated $2 million or more every day by selling oil on the black
market, from wells they have seized in Iraq and Syria. “This could fetch them
more than $730 million a year, enough to sustain operations far beyond Iraq,”
Iraq Energy Institute Director Luay al-Khatteeb told CNN in late
August. More captured Syrian oil fields could raise ISIS oil revenue to $1.2
billion a year, says Theodore Karasik, research director
at the think tank INEGMA in Dubai. Or worse.
ISIS
conquest of Iraqi Kurdistan’s Kirkuk area could boost the terrorists’ oil
production from 30,000 barrels a day now to as much as 1 million barrels a day:
$11 billion a year, if they can
peddle their oil at (say) a way-below-market $30 per barrel to countries that
are naïve, support terror or ignore human rights.
That
could buy unfathomable terrorism – on levels portended by a laptop computer
that moderate Syrian forces found in an ISIS hideout. Amid some 34,000 files,
it includes manuals
on car theft, disguises and bomb making, documents on how to develop biological
weapons and “weaponize” bubonic plague, and a radical Muslim cleric’s fatwa justifying weapons of mass
destruction, “even if it wipes them and their descendants off the face of the
Earth.” Detonate the bio-bombs in malls, air conditioning intakes and similar
places, the manuals advise. With laboratories in Mosul, Iraq and Raqqa, Syria
now in ISIS hands, these neo-SS lunatics could well turn their caliphate dreams
into Western World nightmares.
Even
just a few such attacks would shut down commerce, the way 9/11 and the DC
sniper did.
Should
the Islamic State conquer the rest of Iraq and other Arab and Muslim lands, it
could also cause major oil price increases that would cripple economies
worldwide. By then vastly wealthier than Genghis Khan, such an empowered
Islamic State could even decide to impose an oil embargo on the U.S. and other
nations – as Arab oil exporters did for six months in 1973 and 1974, with
devastating effects.
Other
terrorist groups are fighting to control oil and natural gas supplies
elsewhere. And Qatar – whose oil and gas have made it the richest country in
the world, on a per capita basis – is acting as the terrorists’ ATM, bankrolling their
activities, while playing the “good-guy” host of the 2022 FIFA World Cup.
So
what can America do to prepare? First, recognize the threat and develop a
strategy – not just to contain ISIS, but to eliminate its threats. Mr. Obama
has already missed several opportunities, but the U.S. has the necessary capabilities.
He needs to use them, and find some leadership skills to rally and recruit
allies.
Second,
secure our southern border. A friendly border control agent chatted me up ten
days ago about the $10 poster I was bringing back from Canada. His attentiveness
to the Quebec-NY border was gratifying. But meanwhile thousands are still
streaming across our Mexican border, with minimal safeguards, despite reports
of Korans, prayer rugs and
English-Arabic dictionaries being found on these “immigrant” trails. (As to
offending Hispanics, they don’t want to get blown up or murdered with bubonic
plague, either.)
Third,
develop more U.S. oil and natural gas – and persuade Europe to start fracking.
The United States consumed 18.6 million barrels of oil a day in 2013, the U.S.
Energy Information Administration says. Better vehicle fuel mileage, other
energy conservation efforts and the Obama economy have reduced oil imports from 12.6
million barrels per day in 2005 to 7.5 million this year. But even though
America’s oil (and natural gas) production continues to climb, we still import about one-third of our
oil.
Reducing
foreign oil dependence can be accomplished via continued energy conservation,
switching to natural gas, building more nuclear and coal power to generate
electricity for hybrid and electric cars, and brewing more ethanol and
biodiesel (while ignoring their food, economic and environmental costs). But
these will barely make a dent, compared to more drilling and fracking on
onshore and offshore federal, state and private lands – and pipelining more oil
from our stable neighbor and longtime ally, Canada.
Unfortunately,
President Obama has thus far been loath to do any of this. Yes, domestic oil
and gas production has risen under his watch. However, the increase has come
from state and private lands, while production has fallen significantly on lands under
federal government control.
President
Obama and many Democrats in Congress and state governments continue to oppose
drilling for oil off our East and West Coasts, and in Alaska and our Western
states. They oppose construction of the Keystone XL pipeline, which could
safely transport 830,000 barrels of oil a day from Canada (plus Montana and
North Dakota oil) to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries, thereby reducing risks of more
rail accidents. Many of these same Democrats also oppose hydraulic fracturing,
which could greatly increase U.S. oil and gas production for many decades to
come.
Tapping
into our nation’s vast oil and natural gas supplies would even allow us to
export oil, natural gas and refined products. That would help our allies and trading
partners become less dependent on terror-sponsoring oil producers and Russian “oiligarch”
blackmailers – until they can get their act together on fracking. Such sales
would also reduce our trade deficit and create much-needed American jobs.
History
shows that even today’s friendly oil producers can become tomorrow’s
adversaries. We were importing 554,000 barrels of oil a day from Iran, at the peak in 1978, before
Islamic extremists took the country over and held our diplomats hostage. Our
imports from Persia have been zero ever since.
Too
many “environmentalists” reflexively oppose all oil and natural gas production,
all the time. They refuse to admit that we cannot slash our reliance on these
two fuels from 64% today to zero in a few years – and cannot bring new oil and
gas supplies online in just a few years, in the midst of a crisis.
Khalid A. Al-Falih, CEO of Saudi Aramco, the
world’s biggest oil producing company, recently told an energy conference in
Norway that even without terrorist threats the world will need to produce 40
million more barrels of oil a day within the next 20 years – just to replace
what we are depleting. Finding enough to supply billions of people striving to
rise up out of abject poverty will take far more than that.
Instead
of waiting for an energy 9/11 to hit, President Obama and members of Congress
are duty-bound to act now on all these steps, and more, to protect America’s
national security. They must stop ignoring the imminent and growing threats of
energy and energy-funded terrorism that America and the world face – before we
run out of time to prepare for and prevent the potential onslaughts.
The
president, Secretary of State John Kerry, EPA and too many politicians are too
focused on overblown dangers from climate
change. They need to wake up to the terrorist train that is raging toward us.
Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the
Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power - Black death.
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