Powerful Bullmarket In Us Stocks Looms As The US Prepares For Global Hegemony...
By Clive
Maund
Back in the late 20th century there were predictions that
the 21st century would be characterized by “resource wars” where fighting
breaks out between countries and aligned groups of countries, as they scramble
to secure increasingly scarce commodities for themselves, principally oil and
water. Barely had we entered the new century when a major resource war began,
with the big surprise being that it was not some banana republic suddenly
deciding to invade and loot its neighbor’s territory, but instead the most
powerful country on earth muscling its way around an entire region on the other
side of the planet in order to position itself to plunder its oil resources en
masse for itself.

I want it all, I want it now - but then what? - most projections show
Peak Oil to be occurring about now, or to be imminent.
We have all heard about “Peak Oil”, which is oil production peaking and then
tailing off gradually, due to finite supplies dwindling and remaining reserves
being increasingly difficult and costly to both find and extract. The timing of
the peak depends on who you listen to but is supposed to occur anytime between
a couple of years ago and about 2020 - 2030, but in any event we are
historically speaking close to it, and now, with the world population
continuing to expand and booming demand from up-and-coming economies with
massive populations like China and India, steadily increasing demand for oil is
colliding with relatively fixed or even declining supply. The result of this
can only be rising prices, which will continue to rise until demand moderates
sufficiently to bring about a rebalancing of supply and demand. The big problem
with oil is that it is so central to everything and still so incredibly cheap
in relation to the energy it supplies and its sheer usefulness, that prices
will have to rise to much higher levels before demand is choked off sufficiently
to bring about an enduring state of balance between supply and demand - only in
the case of severe global recession resulting in a big reduction in economic
activity would this upward price pressure abate, and that, of course, is
exactly what a continued steep rise in the oil price may bring about.
The United States,
more than any other country, is an economy dependant on an abundant supply of
cheap oil. The per capita use of oil in the US vastly outstrips that of most
countries in the world, the two principal reasons for this being that the
infrastructure of the country has been developed on the assumption that cheap
oil will continue indefinitely, and the other reason is that taxes on gasoline
are held are much lower levels than in many other nations for political
reasons. Back around the middle of the last century the big oil companies in
the US, with the collusion of government, set out to intentionally destroy the
public transport system in the US, in order to force the population to use
automobiles more and thus burn more gas netting more profits for oil companies,
and they were largely successful in achieving this objective. For the same
reason they also encouraged massive urban sprawl and the development of
suburbia, so that millions of people have to drive huge distances to get to
work - a reason why gas taxes have to be held at much lower levels than in
other countries such as Great Britain, where they are exorbitantly high.
Clearly, if affordable gasoline disappears, then the countless vast tracts of
suburbia in the US
will become middle class ghettoes. Once you grasp the implications of this you
will immediately comprehend why the United
States is particularly aggressive about
access to oil supplies and will stop at nothing to secure them. The United
States is structured geared to the
profligate consumption of oil and would collapse without it.

Aren’t we lucky to be alive now, instead of in AD1000 or 3000.
The oil and gas reserves of the planet, which took millions of years to form,
have been and are being plundered and burned up recklessly in the space of a
mere one to two hundred years. Like greedy children cramming a sudden bonanza
of chocolates and sweets into their faces until they have nothing left,
individuals - and corporations and governments - have selfishly and
thoughtlessly squandered this precious resource without any regard for the
needs of future generations. You only have to look around you at the vast
volumes of largely unnecessary traffic - businessmen flying halfway across the
world to sign a paper, holidaymakers taking a four hour flight to lay on a
sunbed in a gated compound and read for a week, commuters who drive for an hour
or two to get to the office and whose work will be viewed by future historians
as being of considerably less value than the energy they consumed in getting to
their workplace. The scale of unnecessary consumption and sheer waste is
mind-boggling, and, of course, it cannot and will not continue indefinitely.
Once the energy that took millions of years to form and only two hundred years
or so to burn up is gone, it’s gone. The day of reckoning will be upon us and
human beings who have bred like flies on the back of this bonanza will face
starvation by the hundreds of millions or billions if substantive measures are
not taken in time to make good the energy shortfall by means of other fuels.
This will be hard luck for the victims but great news for the planet which is groaning
under the strain of unimaginable hordes of human beings projected to reach
about 11 billion by the year 2050. Alternative energy sources such as wind and
water power, which take a lot of energy initially to create and install, may
not be available in sufficient quantity or in time to fill the massive void -
it is thought to be only Uranium that has a realistic chance of meeting the
enormous energy needs. We are now starting to feel the first winds of this
energy - food maelstrom with sharply rising global food prices, caused in part
by rising oil prices, already putting a huge strain on the world’s poor, many
of whom are on the verge of starvation, if not actually starving.

Will it come to this? - it nearly did in the early 70’s, when these
vouchers were printed but not used.
As we entered this unique century, the greatest economic and military power in
the world, the United States, still basking in the glory of facing down and
defeating the Soviet Union, had the choice of getting together with the other
nations of the world and arriving at a common and equitable agreement regarding
how to apportion and parcel out the world’s dwindling fossil fuel energy supplies
in the coming decades. Instead of taking this enlightened route it has decided
instead to adopt the primitive “me first” approach and has embarked on an
old-fashioned campaign of colonial conquest, with a few sycophants in tow such
as Britain
hoping to get “a piece of the action”. This is, of course, very bad news for
the planet, not just because of the colonial powers’ plans to make off with
most of the pie, but because of the vast misuse of resources required to secure
a disproportionate share of the pie in the first place, which has involved
considerable death and destruction, including a lot of Iraqi civilians and US
servicemen. How you view the invasion of Iraq depends entirely on your
perspective - if you are an Iraqi citizen who has lost family members you might
fairly view it as a disaster, if you are family of a dead US serviceman you
might be very sad, but proud that your young man “died defending his country
from terrorists”, if you are an ecologist you would likely be dismayed at the
destruction and pollution, such as the leveling of the town of Fallujah and the
peppering of areas of the country with depleted uranium, if you have any
humanitarian inclinations at all you might be upset by the routine
ill-treatment of prisoners and the destruction of the society and way of life
of the country, if you are Jewish you might be delighted that one more Arab
country has been neutered, if you run a company that supplies skilled
mercenaries and technical people you will be rubbing your hands together with glee
at all the extra profits rolling in, if you are a senior oil company executive
you will be popping champagne corks at the prospect of vast new reserves
waiting to be exploited. Perhaps the greatest irony is that the typical
suburban commuter in the US who was all for the war a few years back “to smoke
out and kill those goddamned terrorists” is now against it because of the
enormous cost and the material damage suffered by the army, not least the dead
and injured soldiers. Yet, if you were to sit down and calmly explain to these
average folk that the invasion of Iraq has secured such vast oil reserves for
the United States, that they will be able to continue their long commute for
many years to come and quite possibly continue their profligate lifestyle,
their faces would suddenly light up and they would exclaim that the invasion
probably wasn’t such a bad idea after all. If Bush came clean and went on
television and explained all this in an open and honest way, millions of voters
would suddenly adore him and petition Congress to amend the Constitution to
allow him to serve a third term and he would doubtless be voted back in a
landslide victory.

Day that changed the world - without the catastrophic events of this day,
the “War on Terror” would not have been possible - and neither would the
invasion of Iraq.

Defining moment: this heavily stage-managed event symbolized the conquest
of Iraq.

Mission Accomplished -
but invading was the “easy” part.

War Hero - George W Bush “struts his stuff” on the USS Abraham Lincoln,
on the high seas about 30 miles from the coast of San
Diego.
We know that the US “defense” budget, already enormous as the century started,
has ballooned to gargantuan levels, exceeding the military budgets of every
other country in the world combined. The reasons for this are not just the
resource wars already underway, but the massive increases are also a preparation
for squaring up to China and Russia with the intention of forcing them into
submission at some point in the future. We would also be remiss in not pointing
out the inclination by numerous US
congressmen to sluice vast sums of government money and contracts in the
direction of their numerous cronies in the defense and oil industries as an
important factor in escalating the defense budget. The corn-methanol industry
in the US,
which apparently uses more fossil fuel energy in its creation than you get back
in energy from the finished product, is growing as quickly as it is because
members of government are unwilling to say no to the powerful corn lobby in the
mid-west, who are in many cases their constituency. This industry, which
diverts food into the production of fuel, is a contributing factor to rising
global food prices, and gives a big 2-fingered salute to the world’s poor.

Oil chess board - no prizes for guessing where they’re headed next.
The major resource war currently underway involves the United States and its
acolytes forcibly invading and taking control of those countries in the
Mid-East that are not already client states, which the aim of completely controlling
the Mid-Eastern oilfields. The invasion of Afghanistan,
which does not have much oil, was a strategic geopolitical move. The invasion
of Iraq was
designed to secure a major prize, as Iraq
is sat on the world’s second largest oil reserves. That only leaves Iran, which
will prove to be a tougher nut to crack, more about which later, and Syria,
which will be a cakewalk, and doesn‘t have much oil and so is of limited
interest anyway. A by-product of these military adventures is the elimination
or at least neutering of Israel’s
enemies. Should the masses rise up and overthrow their feudal overlords in Saudi
Arabia, then it may become necessary to
invade that country too. Of course, it wouldn’t have looked good to the
electorate back home if one day George Bush had gone on television and
announced “Hey, the world’s running out of oil, and so you can continue to
drive around in your SUV’s and zig-zag around the country on airplanes, we are
going to invade Iraq and take their oil”. So they had to come up with something
that would make it more palatable, hence the absurdly named “War on Terror”
which sounds goofy but is good enough for the masses. The War on Terror is a
crude deception, a fig leaf, designed to provide a façade behind which to
conduct a good old-fashioned war of colonial conquest. The only reason it is
not questioned more in the mainstream media is that the government controls the
mainstream media and they do as they are told. You had to have a reason for the
War on Terror, something to lend it some credibility, and that reason was
provided by the catastrophic events of September
11th 2001.
Turning now to Iran, this is the only remaining significant country in the
Mid-East that is not already either a client state of the United States or big
western oil multinationals, like Saudi Arabia or the Gulf states, or already
subject to military occupation. It is not in compliance, and can therefore
expect to be forcibly dealt with at some point in the future. If it had no oil,
and was not perceived to be a potential threat to Israel,
it would perhaps be left alone, but it does have oil and Israel,
at least, perceives it to be a threat.
Now, it is known that Bush and Cheney would like to “finish the job” and
complete their hat trick of 3 invasions before they leave office - Afghanistan,
Iraq and Iran,
but unfortunately the US
military has been so worn down by the attrition of Iraq
that it is presently in no state to mount a sustainable invasion of Iran.
Furthermore, it makes sense to take the time to digest the gains already made
before moving on to the next campaign. This will involve straightening out the
security situation in Iraq,
at least regarding the protection of US military personnel and the oil company
operatives who are waiting in the wings to exploit the territories’ oil wealth.
Then the military can regroup and prepare themselves for pastures new. In the
meantime the “easy” option of heavy bombing of Iran,
designed to weaken it militarily and neuter it economically, with the aim,
sooner or later, of moving in to seize at least the south-western corner of the
country, where the vast bulk of Iran’s
oil is located, remains on the table. The eventual aim is thought to be to gain
control of the country as part of the long-term strategic goal of surrounding Russia,
possibly by subverting the government and installing a US-friendly puppet
regime, along the lines of the color coded governments such as the orange one
in the Ukraine
- a new Shah of Iran perhaps?
Even though an attempted invasion of Iran
before the November elections is considered most unlikely, for logistical
reasons, a bombing campaign remains a possibility. With regard to the timing of
this we must look to the mainstream media for clues. The public mind must be
prepared to accept such an operation, with clustered news items to the effect
that Iran is
responsible for attacks on US troops, on The Green Zone, and for arming the
insurgents etc.
The consequences of a bombing campaign by the US,
and possibly Britain
and Israel on Iran
are somewhat unpredictable, to say the least, but one thing we can fairly sure
of and that is that the price of oil will spike spectacularly. The price has
already been climbing steadily for weeks, which may even be due in part to
anticipation of such an attack, and a major supply disruption will send it
through the roof.
Technically, the oil price has arrived at the top of its long-term uptrend
channel, and in the absence of military action against Iran in the near future,
or a buildup towards the same, it looks set to react back across its trend
channel or at least consolidate for a while. Traders and investors in crude oil
and oil stocks should however remain aware of the risk of an attack, which if
it does take place can be expected to cause a dramatic spike. Gold and silver
would also spike in consequence.

According to their logic the US elites have good reason to feel pleased with
themselves following the successful takeover of Iraq, even if the general
public in the United States is unable at this stage to grasp what a “glorious
achievement” it is. Iraq is known to have over 100 billion barrels of oil
reserves. In addition to this the country is still relatively unexplored and
there are an estimated 200 to 300 billion barrels more waiting to be
discovered. Given that this is largely light crude, the most valuable type of
oil, it doesn’t take much effort of the imagination to figure that US forces
have seized control of one of the world’s greatest treasures, whose value
dwarfs the cost of the invasion. The invasion of Iraq would therefore be a
strong contender for an entry in the Guinness World Records as the greatest act of piracy in
the history of the world. It makes the exploits of Blackbeard
and Captain
Jack Sparrow look decidedly tame. With this being election year in
the US, various politicians try to curry favor with the voters by talking about
“bringing the troops home”. So let’s be clear about this - the troops are not
coming home until the infrastructure has been built to fully exploit Iraq oil
resources, and to this end to partition off the local population who might
otherwise interfere with production. In fact, a background level of violence is
actually desirable at this time, in order to provide the excuse to keep the
troops there. We should also not overlook the reality that the US elections are
pure spin anyway, a charade. The United States is not a democracy and has not
been for a long time. Its political system is a duopoly of power, with the same
plutocratic forces controlling both the Democrat and Republican parties, the
election being a 4-yearly circus to fool the masses into thinking that they
live in a democracy. In one sense democracy is an absurd concept anyway - how
can you allow ignorant, uneducated people the same vote as intelligent,
discriminating people? The answer is that that you can - and then you program
them to do what you want them to anyway via their favorite entertainment and
media inputs. If you spend an hour of your time going down to the polling
station to vote, you have just wasted an hour of your life, except that it can
be amusing to watch the other fools wasting their time lining up - thinking
that they are going to make a difference.
Complete control of the Mid-East, which the United States and the major oil
companies are now close to having achieved, of course confers massive power
over the rest of world, in particular over rising economic powers such as China
and India and the immense leverage that this will in time afford can be used to
steer these countries in whatever direction is desired. The US is believed to
be involved in a strategic race against time to corner the bulk of the world’s
remaining oil reserves, the control of which can then be used to dissuade
countries like China from resorting to the wholesale dumping of dollars or US
Treasuries, along the lines of “Try it and we’ll cut off your oil supply”,
which one would expect to be couched in more diplomatic language. Because of
its gargantuan levels of debt the US is acutely vulnerable now, but with time
it plans to tip the scales back in its favor partly by sales of its recently
acquired plunder. Anyone who has watched those David Attenborough nature
programs about seal colonies on beaches will know that the US is like the
“beach master”, the huge bull elephant seal, taking possession of all of the
females on the beach and jealously guarding them, while China and Russia are
the other strong contenders, who don’t quite have the strength or size to try
to assert dominance and as a result can only make gains when the beach master
suffers some drastic reversal of fortune. The irony is that China now has the
power to stop the US in its tracks, by dumping its vast dollar and Treasury
holdings, which would send the US economy straight over a cliff, but it is
unlikely it will do this because it can’t stomach the consequences to itself or
its people of doing so.
There are those who believe that the multinational oil companies and US
interests will not be left in peace in Iraq to reap the fruits of their
exploits. What these people don’t understand is that in order to make it
possible to develop Iraq’s oil infrastructure and actually ship out the oil in
quantity an apartheid system will be created across the country, which is
scheduled to be partitioned and balkanized. The indigenous people will largely
be confined to their towns and cities and specific rural areas and ruled over
by the US installed puppet government - they won’t be allowed anywhere near the
oil installations, which will be run mainly by imported technicians and service
personnel. The country will essentially be run as an oilfield, with the
original inhabitants being marginalized and viewed as incidental. The
infrastructure for this system of control is currently under construction and as
it approaches completion the vulnerability of US and coalition military
personnel and consequent casualties will decrease significantly.
This is a long article, and it is therefore important to conclude by
focusing on the most important points.
1. The resource wars of the 21st century are now well underway, with
the US and Britain leading the charge in the Mid-East, behind the façade of the
War on Terror. The goal is complete control of the Mid-East oilfields, which
will be achieved by a combination of the already existing client states such as
Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states, and the forcible acquisition of remaining oil
rich countries. Logic dictates that the next country to be appropriated will be
Iran, and although they would like to take in addition the oil rich countries
around the Caspian Sea, an attempt to do so would result in a direct
confrontation with Russia, so instead they will bide their time and likely
attempt to subvert these countries politically.
2. Peak Oil is upon us, or very close at hand. The combination of
rising population and strong increase in demand for oil from developing
countries such as China and India, coupled with inelasticity in demand for oil,
at least on the downside, is likely to force a continuing uptrend in the price
of oil, although this may be mitigated once Iraq is brought on stream in a big
way.
3. As the oil price is an underlying component of the price of food,
the price of food is likely to continue to rise, a situation that will be
exacerbated by the recently fashionable and rather bizarre practice of turning
food into fuel. This can be expected to lead to widespread unrest and possible
anarchy in many poorer countries.
4. The seizure of Iraq is widely perceived to be have been a blunder.
From the strategic standpoint of the US elites it was no such thing. The oil
reserves contained within Iraq are gigantic, and thus its acquisition was a
major economic and security leap forward for the United States. In addition its
central position within the region and the earlier acquisition of Afghanistan
make the eventual appropriation of oil-rich Iran an almost foregone conclusion.
In comparison with the US strategic planners, those in the European Union are
hopelessly naïve and ineffectual - they can’t even organize the trash collection in Naples.
5. The United States is desperately sick economically, with an
economy lamed by gargantuan debt, outsourcing and rampant speculation, and yet
somehow it manages to spend more on its military machine than every other
country in the world combined. This is only possible because the dollar has
been, up until now, the world currency, and because the US is living on the
rest of the world’s savings. The supreme irony is that the rest of the world is
financing the US takeover of the Mid-East, and in a few years countries which
have had, and have right now, the power to stop the US in its tracks by dumping
dollars and Treasuries, but can’t face the dire consequences of doing so, will
have to kow-tow to the US for oil. Once that time arrives they won’t dare dump
US paper and face the retribution of having their oil supply cut off and their
economies shut down. At present the US is only militarily the greatest power on
earth, but in a few years it looks set to assume comprehensive hegemony of the
planet, as the massive oil revenues from the spoils of the Mid-East campaigns
flow in and correct the careening deficits. China will then comply with US
demands or the oil tap will be swiveled in the off direction. Russia, currently
blessed by an abundant supply of oil and other natural resources, should do
well, but will be surrounded and eventually forced into compliance as its
resources dwindle and it becomes increasingly isolated. Britain, as the 1st
officer of the US in its wars of acquisition, will enjoy a privileged place at
the table in an increasingly resource starved world. Israel will look on with
quiet satisfaction at all of this.
6. Now we crystallize the most important point of this article, which
is what the whole thing has been leading up to. As we have already noted, the
United States is widely perceived as an economic basket case on account of its
astronomic debts and weakened domestic economy, but it is in the process of
seizing control of the world’s most important remaining oil reserves and
bringing them on line. Once it has achieved this it will not just be the
greatest military power on earth but will assume center stage as the greatest
economic power on earth as well and be completely unassailable. By that time no
other country will dare to, or perhaps even want to, dump dollars or US
Treasuries. As we have observed on www.clivemaund.com in the recent past, the
US stockmarket has refused to make new lows (apart from a fleeting intraday new
low) for a couple of months now, despite all the doom and gloom flying around,
and the volume internals of the market are bullish. So it would appear that
Smart Money is beginning to get a handle on what’s cooking as set out here. If
our evaluation of the situation is correct, and China continues to play ball by
not dumping US dollars or Treasuries, despite the Tibet provocation in the
western media, then the US stockmarket is poised for a powerful bull market
advance, as the injection of massive amounts of newly created liquidity works
its magic and eases the global financial crisis. This advance would initially
take the market back to its highs, but should later continue on to new highs.
The huge global increases in money supply are of course highly inflationary and
should continue to fuel a robust bull market in commodities, including gold and
silver, even if they get put on the back burner and continue to correct for a
while as the focus shifts to the broad stockmarket. Right now the US stock
markets are poised to break out above the crucial 1400 resistance level on the
S&P500 index, an event that could easily trigger a 400 - 500 point up day
on the Dow Jones Industrials.

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