industryterm:oil embargo

  • Tillerson is working with China and Russia — very, very quietly - The Washington Post
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/tillerson-is-working-with-china-and-russia--very-very-quietly/2017/09/07/1aed4970-9416-11e7-89fa-bb822a46da5b_story.html

    Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has often been the silent man in the Trump foreign policy team. But out of the spotlight, he appears to be crafting a broad strategy aimed at working with China to resolve the North Korea crisis and with Russia to stabilize Syria and Ukraine.

    The Tillerson approach focuses on personal diplomacy, in direct contacts with Chinese and Russian leaders, and through private channels to North Korea. His core strategic assumption is that if the United States can subtly manage its relations with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin — and allow those leaders to take credit for successes — complex regional problems can be solved effectively.

    Tillerson appears unfazed by criticism that he has been a poor communicator and by recent talk of discord with President Trump. His attitude isn’t exactly “take this job and shove it,” but as a former ExxonMobil chief executive, he doesn’t need to make money or Washington friends — and he clearly thinks he has more urgent obligations than dealing with the press.

    Tillerson appears to have preserved a working relationship with Trump despite pointedly separating himself from the president’s controversial comments after the Charlottesville unrest. Although Trump didn’t initially like Tillerson’s statement, it’s said he was ultimately comfortable with it.

    The North Korea crisis is the best example of Tillerson’s diplomacy. For all the bombast of Trump’s tweets, the core of U.S. policy has been an effort to work jointly with China to reverse the North Korean nuclear buildup through negotiations. Tillerson has signaled that the United States is ready for direct talks with Kim Jong Un’s regime — perhaps soon, if Kim shows restraint. Tillerson wants China standing behind Kim at the negotiating table, with its hands figuratively at Kim’s throat.

    Despite Pyongyang’s hyper-belligerent rhetoric, its representatives have conveyed interest in negotiations, querying details of U.S. positions. But Kim’s actions have been erratic and confusing: When it appeared that the North Koreans wanted credit for not launching missiles toward Guam, Tillerson offered such a public statement. Bizarrely, North Korea followed with three more weapons tests, in a reckless rebuff.

    Some analysts see North Korea’s race to test missiles and bombs as an effort to prepare the strongest possible bargaining position before negotiations. Tillerson seems to be betting that China can force such talks by imposing an oil embargo against Pyongyang. U.S. officials hope Xi will make this move unilaterally, demonstrating strong leadership publicly, rather than waiting for the United States to insert the embargo proposal in a new U.N. Security Council resolution.

    Tillerson signaled his seriousness about Korea talks during a March visit to the Demilitarized Zone. He pointed to a table at a U.N. office there and remarked, “Maybe we’ll use this again,” if negotiations begin.

    The Sino-American strategic dialogue about North Korea has been far more extensive than either country acknowledges. They’ve discussed joint efforts to stabilize the Korean Peninsula, including Chinese actions to secure nuclear weapons if the regime collapses.

    The big idea driving Tillerson’s China policy is that the fundamentals of the relationship have changed as China has grown more powerful and assertive. The message to Beijing is that Xi’s actions in defusing the North Korea crisis will shape U.S.-China relations for the next half-century.

    Tillerson continues to work the Russia file, even amid new Russia sanctions. He has known Putin since 1999 and views him as a predictable, if sometimes bullying, leader. Even with the relationship in the dumps, Tillerson believes he’s making some quiet progress on Ukraine and Syria.

    On Ukraine, Tillerson supports Russia’s proposal to send U.N. peacekeepers to police what Putin claims are Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko’s assaults on Russian-backed forces in eastern Ukraine. The addition of U.N. monitors would help implement the Minsk agreement, even if Putin gets the credit and Poroshenko the blame.

    On Syria, Tillerson has warned Putin that the real danger to Russian interests is increasing Iranian power there, especially as Bashar al-Assad’s regime regains control of Deir al-Zour in eastern Syria. To counter the Iranians, Tillerson supports a quick move by the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces to capture the lower Euphrates Valley.

    Trump’s boisterous, sometimes belligerent manner and Tillerson’s reticence are an unlikely combination, and many observers have doubted the relationship can last. But Tillerson seems to roll with the punches — and tweets. When Trump makes a disruptive comment, Tillerson seems to treat it as part of the policy landscape — and ponder how to use it to advantage.

    Tillerson may be the least public chief diplomat in modern U.S. history, but that’s apparently by choice. By Washington standards, he’s strangely uninterested in taking the credit.

  • Awash in oil, U.S. reshapes Middle East role | Business , Middle East | THE DAILY STAR
    http://dailystar.com.lb/Business/Middle-East/2013/Oct-19/235029-awash-in-oil-us-reshapes-middle-east-role.ashx#axzz2i6SJAMzm
    Un long article passant en revue les enjeux de la politique US au Moyen-Orient dans un contexte d’une moindre dépendance pétrolière :
    – désengagement après des opérations catastrophiques en Afganistan et en Irak
    – permanence de l’enjeu de la sécurité de l’allié israélien
    – désaccord avec l’Arabie Saoudite sur la Syrie
    – concurrence avec la Chine pour le leadership dans la sécurité régionale

    Forty years after an Arab oil embargo throttled the U.S. economy, surging North American energy production has brought the United States closer to a long-dreamed “energy independence” that is reshaping its goals and role in the Middle East.
    [...]
    “Reduced energy imports do not mean the United States can or should disengage from the Middle East or the world,” then-White House National Security Adviser Tom Donilon said in a speech in April.

    “We have a set of enduring national security interests” in the region, Donilon said, citing Israel’s security, the fight against terrorism and “our historic stabilizing role in protecting regional allies and partners.”
    [...]
    The coming years could see an awkward – or even tense – geopolitical duet between the United States and China in the Middle East, testing Americans’ willingness to share responsibility – and influence.

  • The EU’s Misguided Decision To Lift Syrian Oil Embargo - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/security/2013/05/eu-decision-lift-oil-embargo-misguided-syria-war.html

    At the beginning of this month, to support the opposition, the EU decided to lift the oil embargo on Syria. Although the decision looked favorable on paper for the opposition, it quickly became clear that it was a disastrous step that would cause the situation to spin further out of control.

    Syria’s oil wells are in located in the Deir al-Zour and Hassakeh regions, close to the Iraqi border. Deir al-Zour is controlled by Sunni tribes while the PYD controls Hassakeh. The pro-al-Qaeda Jabhat al-Nusra has been increasing its domination of the Deir al-Zour region.

    We know that Jabhat al-Nusra is clashing with tribes for control of the oil wells. The latest such clash was at Masrib, causing 37 fatalities.

    The EU’s decision to buy oil from the opposition triggered battles over oil wells, contributed to the further fragmentation of the opposition, and resulted in the Free Syrian Army (FSA) being helpless in face of tribal leaders who are rapidly becoming warlords.

    #Syrie
    #énergie
    #pétrole
    #Turquie
    #Irak
    #PKK

  • BBC News - EU eases Syria oil embargo to help opposition
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-22254996

    On Monday, the Council of the European Union agreed to ease the oil embargo on Syria “so as to help the civilian population and the opposition”, according to a statement.

    The governments of member states will now be able to authorise on a case-by-case basis three types of transactions - imports of oil and petroleum products; exports of key equipment and technology for the oil and gas industry to Syria; and investments in the Syrian oil industry.

  • Première livraisons des #kissinger_cables analysés par Al-Akhbar, et ça tombe bien, ils s’intéressent à l’« arme du pétrole » (the Oil Embargo) que je commençais à peine à étudier. Du coup, je crois que je vais me mettre en vacances…
    Revisiting US-Arab Diplomacy : Operation Boulder and the Oil Embargo http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/revisiting-us-arab-diplomacy-operation-boulder-and-oil-embargo

    Contrary to the romanticized memories of Saudi King Faisal Bin Abdulaziz al-Saud’s use of an oil embargo to support the Egyptian-Syrian surprise attack on Israel in 1973, cable documents show that Faisal was vehemently opposed to using oil as a weapon to deter the West from aiding the Zionist state.

    When hostilities broke out in October 1973, US officials in the Jeddah embassy noted that Faisal was likely “dismayed at these developments because they may result in (a) setback to his efforts to diminish Arab alignment with [the] Communist Bloc, (b) increased radical criticism of SAG’s [Saudi Arabian government] generally moderate pro-US stance, and (c) perhaps even demands that SAG resort to oil weapon to assist a cause which defeated military and diplomatically on defensive.”

  • #Turkey cuts #Iranian oil buys steeply in May

    The figures show Turkey, the world’s fifth-largest buyer of Iranian oil in 2011, is holding to its pledge to cut imports from the Islamic Republic after buying and stockpiling more Iranian oil from January through April than it did last year.

    Before May, Turkey was the only buyer in Europe to increase purchases from Iran, while other European refiners cut back on imports of the crude ahead of an impending EU oil embargo due to take effect from July 1.

    to read more
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/11/us-turkey-oil-idUSBRE85A0KM20120611