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Al Qaeda targets US oil supplies

Analysts say the Saudi attack could be a new tactic aimed at slowing the US
economy.

By Faiza Saleh Ambah | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor


JEDDAH, SAUDI ARABIA - In two deadly attacks here in the past month,
analysts see Al Qaeda-linked groups adopting new tactics and targets -
encouraging self-organizing cells to hit soft targets in an effort to drive
away Western oil workers, damage the Saudi petroleum industry, and slow the
US economy.

Despite the weekend attack in Saudi Arabia's oil-rich eastern province in
which 22 people were killed, oil operations continued uninterrupted Monday
amid heightened security.

Oil prices hit 20-year highs of $41.85 per barrel in May but eased last week
after Saudi Arabia pledged to increase production and urged OPEC to do the
same. Oil markets, closed Monday, are expected to experience a slight spike
because of the Khobar attacks. Saudi Arabia is the world's No. 1 oil
producer and provides for more than 10 percent of worldwide consumption.

"Hurting the US economy is a longtime Al Qaeda goal and is one of the
reasons the World Trade Center in New York was targeted. They're now
striking these oil- related sites in Saudi Arabia in an attempt to keep oil
prices high and hurt the US economy," says Saud al-Sarhan, a Saudi writer
and researcher who follows Al Qaeda closely.

A statement posted on the Internet and signed by the Saudi Al Qaeda leader,
Abdul-Aziz al-Miqrin, claimed responsibility for the Khobar attack.

"Our heroic fighters were able, by the grace of God, to raid the locations
of the occupying American oil companies ... which are plundering the
Muslims' resources," it said. Mr. Miqrin also criticized the Saudi
government for "supplying the United States with oil for the cheapest
prices, according to their master's wish, so that their economy does not
collapse." A Westerner killed during the operation was dragged though the
streets, the statement said.

In a 25-hour standoff with police Saturday in Khobar, a group of armed men
attacked an office building housing major oil companies, an Arab Petroleum
Investment Corporation compound, and a compound housing oil company
executives and employees. The militants killed four Saudis, an American, and
workers from Asia, Africa, and Europe before three of them escaped and one
was captured.

The attack in Khobar was an attempt to create another exodus of foreign
workers, like the one following the Yanbu attack May 1. A group of armed
young men entered the offices of ABB Lummus killing six Westerners and a
Saudi. All 90 employees working on a refinery project jointly-owned by Saudi
petrochemical firm Sabic and Exxon-Mobil chose to leave the country with
their families.

But oil industry analysts say the Khobar attack would not have the same
effect. National Saudi oil company Saudi Aramco has been through 70 years of
wars and demonstrations and unrest, says Hassan al-Husseini, an oil analyst
and former senior planning consultant at Aramco. "Very few people, if any
will quit. A few wild-eyed fundamentalists are not going to push this
war-hardened workforce away." The company has not shut down its operations
for even one day since the 1950s, Mr. Husseini says.

Saudi Aramco employs some 54,000 people including 2,300 US and Canadian
citizens and about 1,100 Europeans, the Saudi Aramco's chief executive,
Abdullah Jumah, told Arab News. The expatriates are in top management and in
the medical and highly specialized engineering and technical fields, says
Husseini. But if they all left, oil production would not be affected he
says.

"It's a highly automated industry, there's a highly skilled Saudi labor
force, Western expatriates are a small minority, and they would be replaced
within a short period," he says.

The crackdown by Saudi security forces since an attack on Western housing
compounds in Riyadh last year has also resulted in the terrorist group
prompting go-it-alone operations and providing how-to tips on the Internet,
Al Qaeda expert Mr. Sarhan says.

Since last May, hundreds of militants have been arrested and dozens killed
in suicide attacks and in shootouts with police. Increased security and
checkpoints in all major cities and the relentless pursuit by police of some
30 trained Al Qaeda- linked fighters has netted huge weapons caches and
hampered their movements. Police have found more than 10 booby-trapped cars
set to explode, tens of thousands of dollars, and dozens of fake
identification papers.

Some analysts say that going after "soft" targets, such as housing compounds
rather than oil production facilities, is evidence of a terror group on the
ropes. They also note that the militants are now relying on the Internet to
gain and train new recruits.

In a statement on a militant website several weeks ago, the head of Al Qaeda
in Saudi Arabia encouraged young men to join Al Qaeda's jihad, or holy war,
against "the enemies of Islam" and said they did not need to get in direct
touch with group members or get permission to carry out jihad. Those
interested in jihad need only "create a cell that prepares itself and
chooses targets approved by God and then carry out the operation," the
statement by al-Miqrin says. Training tips on attacks could be found in some
of the group's literature on the Web, he adds.

Al-Miqrin also praised the Yanbu attack. "The Yanbu cell which this month
carried out the daring and successful operation is one of the best examples.
They hit the enemy in an important economic facility which had a big effect
on world oil prices which continues to this day."

"Oil is the blood of the world economy and Al Qaeda want to strike at it
through the Saudi facilities," says Abdullah Bjad al-Otaibi, a writer at
al-Riyadh newspaper.

The attacks will likely lead to a terror and security premium on oil prices
of between $5 to $10, says Ali Dakkak, a professor of petroleum economics at
King Abdul-Aziz University.

"Though OPEC's goal is currently about $25 per barrel, oil prices of $30 to
$35 dollars are more realistic given the extra costs of security and
fighting terrorism," Dr. Dakkak says.

The Qatari oil minister, Abdullah bin Hamad al-Attiya, told reporters upon
arrival in Beirut for Thursday's OPEC meeting that the oil price already
reflects anxiety about production security in Iraq and Saudi Arabia. "I can
say that the equivalent of $8 of a barrel price is the result of the factor
of fear," Mr. al-Attiya said. "We at OPEC have done our best to remove this
factor through our assurance that there won't be any supply crisis."

 
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Templar Titan