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Thursday, October 31, 2013

ARAMCO and the House of Saud

by Dean HendersonSaudi Aramco


The only thing that was more striking than this nation’s collective response to the Arab Spring – both from the paranoid right and the jaded left – was the cumulative journalistic ignorance displayed concerning Middle Eastern politics.
Pundits compare revolutionary Iran, where a still-nationalized oil sector has Big Oil licking it’s profit-inflated lips, to Algeria and Yemen, where CIA intrigues installed reactionary governments to replace progressive one’s which opposed the Gulf War in 1991.  They compare socialist Syria with US puppet monarchies in Bahrain and Jordan.
There are generally two types of Arab governments in the Middle East.  The democratic ones have been our enemies.  The monarchs and dictators have been our friends.  And the game has been all about oil.
(Excerpted from Chapter 3: House of Saud and JP Morgan: Big Oil & Their Bankers)
With 261 billion barrels of crude oil lying beneath its soil, Saudi Arabia remains the lynchpin in the international oil grab presided over by the Rothschild/Rockefeller-controlled Four Horsemen.  If revolution in the Middle East really hits its stride, then it must pay a visit upon the most crooked monarchy of all – the House of Saud.
As Joseph Story, Middle East analyst and former ARAMCO executive once said, “Only one factor is involved in where the price of oil is going to go, and that is Saudi Arabia”.
In 1933 Standard Oil Company of California (Socal) negotiated the first oil concession in Saudi Arabia with Saudi Finance Minister Abdullah Sulaiman.  The Saudis were to get a 30,000 British pound loan and 5,000 pounds for the first year’s rent, all payable in gold.  But US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) had just embargoed gold exports in response to the Great Depression and Socal’s request for an exemption was turned down by FDR’s Secretary of State, Dean Acheson.
Socal circumvented the embargo by procuring the gold from the London branch of Morgan Guaranty Trust.  When the Saudis asked Socal officials what they should do with their newfound wealth, Socal recommended depositing it at Morgan Guaranty Trust.  The Saudis complied.
The only thing that was more striking than this nation’s collective response to the Arab Spring – both from the paranoid right and the jaded left – was the cumulative journalistic ignorance displayed concerning Middle Eastern politics.
In 1938 Socal, which later changed its name to Chevron, struck oil in both Saudi Arabia and Qatar and founded the Arabian American Oil Company (ARAMCO).  Chevron quickly brought in Standard Oil of New Jersey (later Exxon), Standard Oil of New York (later Mobil) and Texaco as partners.  This American half of the Four Horsemen would grow ARAMCO into the largest oil company in the world, nearly three times the size of Royal Dutch/Shell. While British Petroleum (BP) and Royal Dutch/Shell, the two European Horsemen, owned the biggest share of the Iraqi Petroleum Company and dominated the Iranian Consortium, the US Horsemen now had their talons into the biggest prize yet, ARAMCO.
Other agreements were struck in the region as well.  Chevron and Texaco formed a marketing arm known as Caltex, while jointly owning Bahrain Petroleum Company.  BP joined with the Mellon family-controlled Gulf Oil to develop oilfields in Kuwait.  By 1949, BP and Royal Dutch/Shell controlled 52% of Middle East oil reserves, while five US oil giants – Exxon, Mobil, Chevron, Texaco and Gulf-controlled 42%.
ARAMCO soon boasted both the largest oilfield in the world at Ghawar and the biggest offshore field in the world at Safaniya.  It also laid claim to expansive oilfields at Berri and Abqaiq.  All told, ARAMCO now controls over one-quarter of the world’s crude oil reserves.  In the wake of the 1973 Arab oil embargo, ARAMCO embarked on the most expensive single industrial project in the history of mankind, a massive petrochemical and refining complex at Jubail.  The company also runs the world’s largest deep water port at Ras Tanura on Saudi Arabia’s Persian Gulf shoreline.
The Saudi government claims to have nationalized its domestic oil sector.  The glossy ARAMCO World, which tends to show up in public libraries and dentist offices throughout the US, is the propaganda arm of the company.  It boasts that the Saudi government took a 25% stake in ARAMCO by 1973, increased its stake to 60% in 1974 and by 1980 owned 100% of ARAMCO, now known as Saudi ARAMCO.  The real story is a bit more complex.
Until at least 1988, the four US oil giants operated ARAMCO, even if the Saudi government did, in fact, own it.  Exxon’s 1990 10K filing to the US SEC lists Exxon Overseas Corporation as a wholly-owned subsidiary, then states that Exxon Overseas owns a 28.33% stake in Arabian American Oil Company.  Until he suffered a massive stroke, King Fahd had chaired the Supreme Council of Saudi ARAMCO, but board members include the former chairmen of Exxon and Chevron as well as a prominent US banker.
No matter who actually owns ARAMCO, the Four Horsemen still call the shots through management contracts, service agreements and joint venture activity.  These downstream niches are where the real profit margins are to be found and the Four Horsemen have generally been moving in this direction since the early 1980’s in their worldwide operations.
Saudi ARAMCO joint ventures include a huge refinery at Yanbu known as Mobil Yanbu Refining Company and an equally massive refinery at Jeddah which is 50%-owned by Royal Dutch/Shell.  Mobil owns a majority interest in Luberef, a Saudi base oil refiner and in Petrolube, a blender which exports to over 40 different countries.  Mobil and Royal Dutch/Shell are 50% owners of two ethylene crackers, one at Yanbu and one at Jubail Industrial City.
Shell owns 50% of Saudi Petrochemical Company and Saudi Arabian Markets & Shell Lubricants, 49% of both Al Jomaih & Shell Lubricating Oil and Modern Automotive Services Company, and 25% of Peninsular Aviation Services Marketing.  Motiva is a Shell/Saudi joint venture in the US, with refineries at Norco and Convent, Louisiana.
Exxon owns and operates both the Al Jubail Petrochemical Company – by far the largest facility in Jubail Industrial City – and Exxon Chemical Arabia, Inc.  Its Essochem Belgian subsidiary has a joint venture with the wealthy Saudi Algosaibi family known as Oil Field Chemical Company.
Texaco has two joint ventures with Saudi ARAMCO in the United States: Texas Refining & Marketing and Star Enterprises.  Sappco-Texaco Insulation Products is a venture between Texaco and Saudi Olayan Group, which is controlled by Sulaiman Olayan.  As of 1990, Texaco got 92% of its US-bound crude oil from Saudi Arabia.
By 1949, BP and Royal Dutch/Shell controlled 52% of Middle East oil reserves, while five US oil giants – Exxon, Mobil, Chevron, Texaco and Gulf-controlled 42%.
According to Platt’s Oilgram News, Saudi ARAMCO also supplies Big Oil with discount crude, giving them $5/barrel off the posted spot price of whichever grade of crude the Horsemen are buying.  ARAMCO official James McPherson resigned in disgust because the company was holding back from direct competition with the US Horsemen.  McPherson then revealed a $17 million ARAMCO tax fraud to Saudi authorities.
Abdullah Tariki, Saudi Director of Petroleum and Minerals, went public with the charges and announced new transit fees that would be charged the Horsemen to compensate for the rip-off.  Within days of the proclamation Tariki was driven from office by King Fahd himself.
ARAMCO’s lawyer was John McCloy, who chaired both Chase Manhattan and the World Bank.  McCloy helped David Rockefeller whisk the Shah out of Tehran and was one of six “Wise Men” who advised President Johnson.  He was also an influential member of the Warren Commission, which “investigated” the Kennedy assassination.
As of 1990 ARAMCO produced over 8 million barrels of crude oil a day, ensuring the Saudi role as “swing producer”.  During the 1991 Gulf War ARAMCO underwent another expansion and now cranks out an unprecedented 10 million barrels a day.  With the Shah deposed, the Saudi half of the Twin Pillars took on much greater significance.
While the Israelis and the US State Department attempt to use the Egyptian revolution as cover to foment counter-revolutionary protests in Iran and Syria, real revolution commences on the streets of Algiers, Sana’a, and Amman.
Protests have already reached Bahrain – one of the British-installed monarchies that guard the Persian Gulf oilfields for the Illuminati bankers.  If trouble spreads to Saudi Arabia things will get very interesting.  At that point neither the cynicism nor the ignorance of the Western colonial masters will make a damn bit of difference.  We will be on the cusp of global revolution.

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