Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, October/November
1997, PAGES 70-72
Middle East History—It Happened in October
Nixon Administration Ignores Saudi Warnings,
Bringing On Oil Boycott
By Donald Neff
It was 24 years ago, on Oct. 20, 1973, that Saudi Arabia
announced it was imposing a total oil boycott against the United
States in retaliation for its support of Israel during the October
war. The action caused an economic earthquake around the world.1
Suddenly Americans and others were forming long lines at gas stations,
and the greatest transfer of wealth in world history began. The
price of gasoline soared, briefly up tenfold. It was a devastating
added cost for governments, corporations and families.
The embargo, Henry A. Kissinger later admitted, had
"the most drastic consequences" for the United States,
adding, "It increased our unemployment and contributed to the
deepest recession we have had in the postwar [World War II] period."2
What Kissinger failed to say was that he bore major responsibility
for the boycott.
The boycott could not have come as a surprise, as so
many U.S. officials of the period have pretended. Since the beginning
of 1973, Saudi Arabia's King Faisal ibn Abdul Aziz had been warning
the Nixon administration with increasing urgency that he would employ
the oil weapon unless Washington forced Israel to return Arab land
it had been occupying since 1967. As guardian of Islam's holy sites,
Faisal was particularly perturbed that Israel continued to occupy
the Haram Al-Sharif with the Al Aqsa and Dome of the Rock mosques
in Arab East Jerusalem. Haram Al-Sharif is the third holiest site,
after Mecca and Medina, to the world's one billion Muslims.
Faisal, a proud and pious man, knew Egypt and Syria
were planning war if Israel did not end its occupation. He thought
war might be averted and Arab rights restored if he could influence
President Richard Nixon to moderate U.S. support of Israel. In April
the king sent one of his top aides, Oil Minister Ahmad Zaki Yamani,
to Washington to warn officials of his seriousness about imposing
an oil boycott.3
Among other Nixon officials, Yamani met with Kissinger,
who at the time was the national security adviser in the White House.
Instead of heeding Yamani, however, Kissinger strongly advised the
Saudi not to mention the threat of an oil boycott to anyone else
because it would make the Saudis look domineering and extreme. Kissinger
was outwardly disturbed when Yamani informed him he had already
talked with some officials, including Treasury Secretary George
P. Shultz.
Nonetheless, Kissinger said, Yamani should not repeat
his threat. The Saudi suspected that Kissinger's Jewishness prevented
him from being impartial on Middle East matters and believed Kissinger
was trying to keep the facts from the American people. Yamani continued
to voice the king's message, including granting an interview to
The Washington Post. He pointed out to the newspaper that
the West was pressing Saudi Arabia to increase its oil production
up to 20 million barrels a day from its current 7.2 million. Yamani
said: "We'll go out of our way to help you. We expect you to
reciprocate."4
"You may lose everything. Time is running out."
The Post was no more impressed by the Saudi
message than Kissinger. On April 20, the Post editorially
criticized the Saudis for threatening an oil boycott and added that
"it is to yield to hysteria to take such threats as Saudi Arabia's
seriously."5
Faisal was so disturbed by the U.S. rejection of his
message that he granted for the first time in his life an interview
to American TV. He warned: "America's complete support of Zionism
against the Arabs makes it extremely difficult for us to continue
to supply U.S. petroleum needs and even to maintain friendly relations
with America."6
Israel was particularly active in encouraging Washington
to ignore Faisal. Foreign Minister Abba Eban asserted that there
was not "the slightest possibility" of an oil boycott.
He added: "The Arab states have no alternative but to sell
their oil because they have no other resources at all."7
In May, Faisal summoned to his Riyadh palace Frank Jungers,
the board chairman of the Arabian American Oil Company. He warned
the oilman about the possibility of an oil boycott. Jungers knew
the king and believed that "he never acts on a whim. He never
breaks his word. When he speaks, he never tells you anything unless
he means it." Jungers passed on Faisal's message to both the
White House and the State Department. It was ignored.8
That same month Faisal also called in four other leading
oilmen and warned them that Arab resentment of U.S. support of Israel
was rising, adding: "You may lose everything. Time is running
out." They tried to relay that message. No one in the White
House, the State Department or the Pentagon took it seriously. When
they sought to meet with Kissinger, he refused to see them.9
Otto N. Miller, the board chairman of Standard Oil of
California, tried to make the matter public by discussing it in
a company letter to the firm's nearly 300,000 shareholders and employees.
He wrote that Americans should foster "the aspirations of the
Arab people [and] their efforts toward peace in the Middle East.
There is now a feeling in the Arab world that the United States
has turned its back on the Arab people."
An Explosion of Protest
Miller made no direct mention of Israel. Yet such was
the explosion of protest by Israel's supporters—they threatened
a boycott of Standard products—that he was forced to issue
a statement saying that, of course, peace had to be based on "the
legitimate interests of Israel and its people as well as the interests
of all other states in the area."10
Another oilman, Maurice F. Granville, board chairman
of Texaco, also sought to take the issue directly to the American
people. He appealed to Americans "to review the actions of
their government in regard to the Arab-Israeli dispute and to compare
those actions with its stated position of support for peaceful settlement
responsive to the concerns of all the countries involved."
Such opaque language had no more influence than Granville.11
The warnings by oilmen, Arab leaders and Faisal to the
Nixon administration continued throughout the summer. In another
rare interview in September, Faisal told Newsweek that "logic
requires that our oil production does not exceed the limits that
can be absorbed by our economy." He meant that Saudi Arabia
was already earning enough money to meet its needs and that to honor
the U.S. request to produce more oil would be a favor to the West
at the expense of depleting Saudi Arabia's only natural resource.
He added that Washington should show its gratitude by disavowing
"Zionist expansionist ambitions."12
Despite these repeated warnings, the Nixon administration
continued to echo the Israeli claim that Saudi Arabia was not serious.
George Shultz, who later as secretary of state proved completely
incompetent in dealing with the Middle East, dismissed Faisal's
warnings as Arab "swaggering."13 Nixon himself
repeated the Israeli mantra that "oil without a market...does
not do a country much good." No one in the Nixon administration,
certainly not Kissinger or Shultz, seemed to be willing to consider
that America and most of the rest of the industrialized world were
so dependent on oil that even its partial denial would be devastating.
14
That blind attitude prevailed in Washington and Tel
Aviv up to, and beyond, the successful attack by Egypt and Syria
on Oct. 6 against territories occupied by Israel. It was a traumatic
event. The Arabs caught Israel totally unprepared. Egyptian troops
successfully crossed the Suez Canal, an amphibious operation thought
impossible by Israel and U.S. military experts, and the Syrians
captured back most of the Golan Heights in the first hours of the
assault.15
Despite the initial Arab successes, Israel remained
optimistic. So, too, did Washington. Even two hours after war had
actually broken out, the combined intelligence agencies of the United
States still did not believe hostilities were likely or that the
Arabs were capable of such coordinated action.16
The first assumption of Henry Kissinger, who barely
two weeks earlier had become secretary of state, was that Israel
would quickly prevail. As he complacently said to Alexander Haig,
President Nixon's chief of staff, America should let Israel "beat
them up for a day or two and that will quiet them down."17
The reality was that by the second day of fighting the
Syrians were threatening the very heartland of the Jewish state
from the Golan Heights and the Egyptians were decimating Israel's
forces in the Sinai Peninsula. Nonetheless, optimism continued in
Tel Aviv and Washington.
During the second day of fighting Prime Minister Golda
Meir sent a sedate message to the White House asking for a delay
on a cease-fire vote in the U.N. Security Council for at least three
or four days, time enough, it was thought, to repel the Arabs. The
request was quickly granted. That same day Israel requested a modest
amount of emergency supplies, which was also approved.18
By Oct. 9, it finally became clear to Israel that it
was in desperate straits. So great was its fear that it reportedly
armed its nuclear weapons.19 Word of Israel's perilous
position reached Israeli Ambassador Simcha Dinitz in Washington
early in the morning. He met with Kissinger in the White House within
hours and received assurances that Israel's needs would be promptly
met. 20
To be sure that Israel could quickly communicate with
him, Kissinger ordered installed in Ambassador Dinitz's office at
the Israeli Embassy a private, secure telephone line that directly
linked the secretary of state with the ambassador, a unique privilege
for a foreign country.21
Washington's blatant favoring of Israel caused acute
fears among oilmen that Saudi Arabia might carry out its threatened
boycott. On Oct. 12, the chairmen of Aramco's four parent companies—J.K.
Jamieson of Essco, Rawleigh Warner of Mobil, M.F. Granville of Texaco
and Otto N. Miller of Socal—sent a joint memorandum to President
Nixon expressing their alarm at the possibility of an oil boycott
and price rise if the United States continued its coddling of Israel.
Their memo said, in part: "We are convinced of
the seriousness of the intentions of the Saudis and Kuwaitis and
that any actions of the U.S. Government at this time in terms of
increased military aid to Israel will have a critical and adverse
effect on our relations with the moderate Arab oil-producing countries."
The White House acknowledged receiving the memo but took no action
on it.22
Instead, the next day, Oct. 13, the Nixon administration
began a massive airlift of weapons and ammunition to Israel.23
However, America's European allies, more cautious about provoking
a boycott, refused to allow U.S. planes en route to Israel to overfly
their airspace. The planes had to use America's leased base at the
Portuguese island of Lajes, neither the best nor the cheapest route.
24
Arab Capitals Threatened
By this time, Israeli forces, their morale bolstered
by open U.S. support, were slowly gaining the upper hand. They had
pushed the Syrians back beyond the 1967 cease-fire line on the Golan
Heights and, on Oct. 16, they finally broke through the Egyptian
line and a small contingent crossed the Suez Canal into Egypt proper.
The Israeli military force was now not only successfully holding
onto the Arab land it had captured in 1967 but it was threatening
the ancient capitals of Cairo and Damascus.
On the day of the Israeli crossing of the Suez Canal,
the Arab oil countries met in Kuwait and raised the price of crude
70 percent, from $3.01 to $5.11 a barrel.25 Despite that
dramatic gesture, Kissinger continued to insist that an oil boycott
was not likely. He met on Oct. 17 with a delegation of Arab foreign
ministers from Algeria, Kuwait, Morocco and Saudi Arabia. Afterwards
he somehow concluded that there would not be an Arab oil boycott
despite America's open resupplying of Israel. 26
The next day King Faisal sent a stern warning to Washington.
He said bluntly that an embargo would be placed on all oil shipments
to the United States unless Israel returned to the 1967 lines and
the U.S. stopped its arms supply to Israel.27 Despite
the Saudi warning, Kissinger decided that a way must be found for
Washington "to gain a little more time for Israel's offensive...."28
This implicitly meant that the U.S. supply operation would continue
in defiance of Faisal's warning.
Instead of returning to the former lines as the Arabs
were demanding, a massive Israeli force crossed the canal on Oct.
18, directly threatening Cairo. The invasion not only stunned the
Arabs but the Soviets too. Soviet Chairman Leonid Brezhnev sent
an urgent message to Nixon proposing a cease-fire in place and Israeli
withdrawal to the 1967 lines. Kissinger stalled to give the Israelis
more time to press their counterattack.29
Libya retaliated on the same day by announcing a total
cutoff of oil shipments to the United States and a rise in the price
of its premium oil to other countries from $4.90 to $8.25 a barrel.30
The final straw for Faisal came the next day. On Oct. 19, President
Nixon requested from Congress $2.2 billion in emergency aid to Israel,
a huge sum far beyond any previous aid to Israel.31
In effect, the United States was now saying to the Arabs
that it would finance Israel's fight to retain its illegal occupation
of their land. At no time during the war did combat take place inside
Israel itself. All the fighting was on Egyptian and Syrian soil.
An explanation for Nixon's reckless action can be found
in the fact that in October Nixon was thinking less of foreign relations
than of himself. By this time he was deep in the quagmire of the
Watergate scandal and the devastating disgrace of his vice president.
Spiro Agnew had resigned Oct. 10 after being accused of corruption.
Nixon was desperate for political support, leaving Kissinger basically
in charge of U.S. foreign policy throughout the October war.32
The next day Saudi Arabia carried out its longstanding
threat. From April to as late as Oct. 18, Faisal had been insistently
warning Washington to temper its bias toward Israel. Now he acted.
Riyadh announced at 9 p.m. local time on Oct. 20 that it was imposing
a total oil boycott against the United States, its closest Western
friend. The Saudi action had a domino effect. Abu Dhabi, Algeria,
Bahrain, Kuwait and Qatar quickly followed suit, violently disrupting
international commerce.33
As a result of the boycott, the Arabs became enormously
wealthy, largely at the expense of the United States and the West.
Yet the boycott and the war had little effect on Israel's colonial
policies. Even today it retains Syrian and Jordanian land—if
not Egypt's, which America essentially bought back from Israel with
the Sinai agreements. 34 Washington not only continued
its close support of the Jewish state but grew closer to it, despite
the heavy costs and the fact that Israel's occupation violated international
law and America's own policies.
The boycott was lifted on March 18, 1974, leaving
economies around the world shattered and many individuals living
poorer lives, Kissinger admitted: "I made a mistake."35
Skeptics might wonder whether it was a mistake, or wanton
disregard of U.S. interests during a passionate effort to help Israel.
RECOMMENDED READING:
*Cockburn, Andrew and Leslie, Dangerous Liaison:
The Inside Story of the U.S.-Israeli Covert Relationship, New
York: HarperCollins Publishers, 1991.
*Green, Stephen, Living by the Sword: America and
Israel in the Middle East, 1968-87, Brattleboro, VT: Amana Books,
1988.
*Hersh, Seymour M., The Samson Option: Israel's
Nuclear Arsenal and American Foreign Policy, New York: Random
House, 1991.
Kalb, Marvin and Bernard, Kissinger, Boston:
Little, Brown and Company, 1974.
Kelly, J.B., Arabia, the Gulf and the West, New
York: Basic Books, Inc., Publishers, 1980.
Kissinger, Henry A., Years of Upheaval, Boston:
Little, Brown and Company, 1982.
Lacey, Robert, The Kingdom, London: Hutchinson
& Co. (publishers) Ltd., 1981.
*Neff, Donald, Warriors Against Israel: How Israel
Won the Battle to Become America's Ally 1973 , Brattleboro,
VT: Amana Books, 1988.
Nixon, Richard M., The Memoirs of Richard Nixon,
New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1978.
Rubenberg, Cheryl A., Israel and the American National
Interest: A Critical Examination, Chicago: University of Illinois
Press, 1986.
Sheehan, Edward R. E., The Arabs, Israelis, and Kissinger:
A Secret History of American Diplomacy in the Middle East, New
York: Reader's Digest Press, 1976.
*Available from the AET
Book Club.
FOOTNOTES:
1 Lacey, The Kingdom, p. 413; State
Department Middle East Task Force, "Situation report #51,"
10/21/73, secret; declassified 12/31/81. Also see Neff, Warriors
Against Israel, p. 260. 2Rubenberg, Israel and
the American National Interest, p. 173.
2 Rubenberg, Israel and the American National
Interest, p. 173.
3 Lacey, The Kingdom, p. 398; also
see Neff, Warriors Against Israel, pp. 110-11.
4 Lacey, The Kingdom , p. 399.
5 Washington Post, 4/20/73.
6 Lacey, The Kingdom, p. 400.
7 Ibid.
8 Sheehan, The Arabs, Israelis, and Kissinger,
p. 69.
9 Lacey, The Kingdom, pp. 400-02.
10 Facts on File 1973, p. 654.
11 Ibid., p. 780.
12 Sheehan, The Arabs, Israelis, and
Kissinger, p. 67.
13 Ibid., p. 68.
14 Facts on File 1973, p. 741.
15 Neff, Warriors Against Israel,
p. 153; Kissinger, Years of Upheaval, p. 458.
16 "Pike Report on the Hearings of the
House Select Committee on Intelligence," written in 1976 and
published in the Village Voice, 2/16/76. Also see Kissinger,
Years of Upheaval, p. 458.
17 Ibid., p. 472.
18 Ibid., p. 477.
19 Hersh, The Samson Option, pp.
223-30. Also see Cockburns, Dangerous Liaison, p. 173; Green,
Living by the Sword, pp. 90-92. Time reported the
story as early as 1976. None of the principals involved has ever
admitted the nuclear arming incident, although former Ambassador
to Egypt Herman Eilts says Kissinger years later casually referred
to it; see Hersh, The Samson Option, p. 230.
20 Kissinger, Years of Upheaval, pp.
492-96.
21 Kalb and Kalb, Kissinger, p. 467.
22 Kelly, Arabia, the Gulf & the
West, p. 396.
23 Kissinger, Years of Upheaval, p.
514.
24 Rubenberg, Israel and the American
National Interest, p. 166.
25 Kelly, Arabia, the Gulf & the
West, 397; Lacey, The Kingdom, 406.
26 Kissinger, Years of Upheaval, p.
536.
27 Kelly, Arabia, the Gulf & the
West, 397.
28 Kissinger, Years of Upheaval, pp.
538, 541.
29 Ibid., pp. 539-40. Also see Neff,
Warriors Against Israel , pp. 249-50, 253.
30 Neff, Warriors Against Israel,
p. 257.
31 Lacey, The Kingdom, p. 413; Nixon,
The Memoirs of Richard Nixon, p. 932. Up to 1973, the largest
amount of combined economic and military aid to Israel in one year
had been $634.3 million in 1971. Israel's regular aid for 1973 had
been budgeted at $492.8 million.
32 Neff, Warriors Against Israel ,
pp. 218, 261-62.
33 Lacey, The Kingdom, p. 413; State
Department Middle East Task Force, "Situation report #51,"
10/21/73, secret; declassified 12/31/81.
34 See Donald Neff, Middle East History:
It Happened in January, "Unprecedented U.S. Aid to Israel Began
under the Sinai Agreements," Washington Report on Middle
East Affairs, January 1997.
35 Sheehan, The Arabs, Israelis, and
Kissinger, p. 69. |