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#1
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What if the Middle East had no oil?
Here's a question I just thought up of, seeing how gas prices are at all time highs, and that we're sucking up to the Middle East to give us oil, how about this? What would happen if the Middle East had absolutely no oil? There would be nothing but dry, scorching, useless desert. That would seriously screw Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq and basically every middle eastern country.
Also, would the boundaries of the Middle East be different because of this? How about gas prices? Would they be even more expensive than they are now? Or cheaper? Would there still have been an Iraq war if Iraq had no oil? I am inclined to doubt that. So what do you think? |
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#2
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This is kind of ASB. The oil is there because of geographic and biological history, and removing it would take magic.
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#3
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All right; I'll change it then. I always get confused on what category to put it under. I only joined two days ago so I'm still getting used to the site, sorry about that.
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#4
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I understand. I didn't mean to sound harsh.
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#5
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At least in the Before 1900...
Say the climate was subtly different, say the moon went out slower, thus making the world spin faster, so the climate would be screwd... Not at all expensive, the oil (due to the climate shift) would probably end up in northwest Arizona |
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#6
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At least in the Before 1900...
Say the climate was subtly different, say the moon went out slower, thus making the world spin faster, so the climate would be screwd... Not at all expensive, the oil (due to the climate shift) would probably end up in northwest Arizona |
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#7
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Yeah, but the chances of a climactically screwed world coming up with anything remotely resembling humans is zilch.
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#8
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If the Middle East had no oil and everything else was the same until the beginning of the 20th century?
Well, no Kuwait. The British founded Kuwait as a separate Entity because of the oil fields there. If there weren't any, it would most probably part of an independent Iraq, which was still in their sphere of influence, but not as westernized as Kuwait would become. Perhaps a larger Turkey. Ataturk drawed the borders of modern Turkey after the "National Pact". It consisted also some areas in northern Iraq, in mainly Kurdish-settled regions (which was no contradiction for the Turks, because up to the late 20th century, they simply described the Kurds as "Mountain Turks"). If I recall it correctly, Kinross wrote in his Ataturk-biography that the British wanted to keep the oil fields in northern Iraq within their sphere of influence. Certainly a more backward Middle East, perhaps a larger Israel. Let's say it frankly: the main reason why everyone is so sensitive when it comes to the Arabs is because they are the owners of the lifeblood of our modern societies. Without oil money, I don't see that those states in the Persian Gulf would have modernized within the space of some decades. You would probably have some more modern societies, but the Arab peninsula (especially Wahabite Saudi-Arabia) would perhaps be the Arab equivalent to Afghanistan. And without the means to pressure the West, it would be far easier to ignore their caprices and less probable that someone would feel urged to pressure Israel on any matters. This are my thoughts, and I bet there would be more. |
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#9
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I think Yemen is a good example of what the Arabian Peninsula would look like without oil. Worse than Sub-Saharan Africa. Iraq would probably look like a slightly poorer Syria or Egypt.
Iran is the interesting question. Even without its government being the victim of oil exploitation schemes, it's likely to become a Cold War battleground. With a competent government (Mossadegh's regime I'm not entirely sure about), Iran could possibly play the U.S. well enough to support development pretty well. When and how the inevitable conflicts as Iran rises to Great Power status (which in OTL began around 2004) are hard to predict. The collapse of the Soviet Union might be delayed, as their oil resources will be that much more valuable. An equally convincing argument could be made that increased foreign oil trade could hasten the collapse of the Soviet regime, but I like the picture of a nominally Communist regime like today's China holding the world hostage with its oil production monopoly. Probably a serious effort would be made by the U.S. and Europe to develop alternative fuel sources. |
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#10
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They would be better of.
Oil tend to be nationalized. Then two things happen. First of all, its a controlled economy. It frightens people of so they dont dare to invest. The controlled portion of the economy also tends to grow thus destroying any chance of a working economy. The wealth also tend to be spread around making a large class of nonworking citizens. Thus, no wealth is created. Arabia would be better of without oil but the best solution would be if the money gets in the hands of western oil companies. |
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#11
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Quote:
The Arab regimes would turn even more fundamentalist than they already are, as they have nothing else to back their society with other than religion. So, my main point was, if you thought Arabia was bad enough as it was with oil, it would be even worse if it didn't. |
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#12
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Chad has oil.......
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#13
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Oh, I didn't know that Chad had oil, but you get my drift right? Arabia would be as lifeless as the areas of the Sahara desert that have no oil. Nobody would give a damn what happens to 3rd world countries without oil anyhow, that's what I think.
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#14
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Chad doesn't have much oil, although I understand these high prices are causing exploration and expansion to happen......
Yes, Arabia would be mostly screwed. The Persian Gulf would be a backwater, so no UAE as a shipping magnate. Maybe Oman gets control of the Indian Ocean trade? Iraq would be a local power, if I understand their situation correctly, as a food producer. |
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#15
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If The Middle East had no oil its economic, political, military, and strategic importance would be about zero, especially compared to today.
Would Islam have grown to become what it is today in OTL, and would international terrorism be what it is today in OTL? In this regard the world would politically be a very different place. Middle Eastern Oil and the politics behind it have been a very big factor in making the world of OTL what it is. If the Middle East had never had oil, that means we would be getting oil from the other places in the world that have oil. Would those places have had enough oil to build and maintain the modern world as we know it? It may also be possible that if oil had never formed in The Middle East, that much more of it would have formed in the other places in the world that have oil. So the world's total oil supply might still be close to what it is in OTL. With no oil in The Middle East it is also possible that large amounts might have formed in places in the world that don't have any oil in OTL, which would again change the political global worldwide political situation. If oil was only in the other non-Middle Eastern parts of the world where it is in OTL and in only the same amounts as in OTL, we might have already switched to another source of energy. I think the question "What if the Middle East had no oil?" brings up lots of other questions. I don't think anything about history would be different until the very late 19th and early 20th Centuries. It wasn't until then that oil became part of the picture, Middle Eastern oil really entered the picture big time in the 1920's I think. I think the Middle East in TTL would be a more peaceful place today. There would still probably be tension between Israel and her Arab neighbors, but wuthout oil the countries in that part of the world would never have been able to buy the kinds of weapons, build up the kinds of armies, or have the influence thay have in today's world. A world where The Middle East had never had oil would be a very different world than it is in OTL. |
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#16
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Quote:
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#17
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This POD would have to go back even further. Moses made the Jews walk for forty years just to find the one spot safely clear of vast sources of oil wealth. In this world Israel could be almost anywhere in the region...
__________________
P.J. O'Rourke: We also elected some amateur politicians. However, politics is like vivisection—disturbing as a career, alarming as a hobby.
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#18
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I actully think many places would be better off. Less influence for Arabia, but I could imagine Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Iran thriving.
__________________
Started a new TL: A concise history of Thule: from the 5th century till modern times. link |
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#19
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A more interesting TL might arise if the petroleum-based economy never arose (e.g. no Baku Oil Boom in 1872, no Alfred Nobel, etc.). If the Middle East oil resources simply weren't exploited, it is possible that the Ottoman Empire would last longer (even if a conflict like WWI occurs, the only reason the other Great Powers would have to dismantle it would be to safeguard the rights of Christians and control over the Suez - resulting in a diminished Ottoman Empire, to be sure, without the Balkans, Armenia, or Egypt, but one that still has control over much of the Arab world).
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Even damnation is poisoned with rainbows. |
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#20
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If there was no oil in the Middle East, the Middle East would remain a backwater like it was after Vasco de Gama etc found how to reach the Far East directly to by Chinese and Indonesian and Indian etc products directly instead of the Middle East being middlemen.
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