Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
The End of the World as You Know It
and the Rise of the New Energy World Order
by Michael T. Klare Oil at $110 a barrel. Gasoline at $3.35 (or more) per gallon. Diesel fuel at $4 per gallon. Independent truckers forced off the road. Home heating oil rising to unconscionable price levels. Jet fuel so expensive that three low-cost airlines stopped flying in the past few weeks.
This is just a taste of the latest energy news, signaling a profound change in how all of us, in this country and around the world, are going to live -- trends that, so far as anyone can predict, will only become more pronounced as energy supplies dwindle and the global struggle over their allocation intensifies.
It's strange that the
business and geopolitics of energy takes up so little space on American
front pages -- or that we could conduct an oil war in Iraq with hardly
a mention of the words "oil" and "war" in the same paragraph in those
same papers over the years. Strange indeed. And yet, oil rules our
world and energy lies behind so many of the headlines that might seem
to be about other matters entirely.
Take the food riots now
spreading across the planet because the prices of staples are soaring,
while stocks of basics are falling. In the last year, wheat (think
flour) has risen by 130%, rice by 74%, soya by 87%, and corn by 31%,
while there are now only eight to 12 weeks of cereal stocks left
globally. Governments across the planetary map are shuddering. This is
a fast growing horror story and, though the cry in the streets of Cairo
and Port au Prince might be for bread, this, too, turns out to be a
tale largely ruled by energy: Too many acres turned over to corn (and
sugar cane) for the creation of biofuels; a historic drought in
Australia and other climate-change-induced extremes of weather -- a
result of the burning of fossil fuels -- that have affected crop
yields; and many new middle-class consumers, in China and elsewhere,
coming on line, with a growing desire for meat, the production of which
is heavily petroleum based.
From resource wars to oil wars
(the subjects of his last two books), Michael Klare, Tomdispatch's
energy expert, has long been ahead of the curve when it came to ways in
which our planet was being reshaped at the most basic level. Today, he
offers Tomdispatch readers a peek into some of the key themes in his
staggering new book, Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet: The New
Geopolitics of Energy. If you want to grasp the true shape of our shaky
world, of where exactly we've been and where we might be going, this is
a book not to be missed. It offers the profile-in-formation of a
shape-shifting planet, a planet in transition and on a road to nowhere
pretty. Check out as well, the latest Tomdispatch brief video (produced
by TD's Brett Story) -- in which Klare discusses key issues in his new
book -- by clicking here. - Tom
The End of the World as You Know It and the Rise of the New Energy World Order
by Michael T. Klare
Oil
at $110 a barrel. Gasoline at $3.35 (or more) per gallon. Diesel fuel
at $4 per gallon. Independent truckers forced off the road. Home
heating oil rising to unconscionable price levels. Jet fuel so
expensive that three low-cost airlines stopped flying in the past few
weeks. This is just a taste of the latest energy news, signaling a
profound change in how all of us, in this country and around the world,
are going to live -- trends that, so far as anyone can predict, will
only become more pronounced as energy supplies dwindle and the global
struggle over their allocation intensifies.
Energy of all
sorts was once hugely abundant, making possible the worldwide economic
expansion of the past six decades. This expansion benefited the United
States above all -- along with its "First World" allies in Europe and
the Pacific. Recently, however, a select group of former "Third World"
countries -- China and India in particular -- have sought to
participate in this energy bonanza by industrializing their economies
and selling a wide range of goods to international markets. This, in
turn, has led to an unprecedented spurt in global energy consumption --
a 47% rise in the past 20 years alone, according to the U.S. Department
of Energy (DoE).
An increase of this sort would not be a
matter of deep anxiety if the world's primary energy suppliers were
capable of producing the needed additional fuels. Instead, we face a
frightening reality: a marked slowdown in the expansion of global
energy supplies just as demand rises precipitously. These supplies are
not exactly disappearing -- though that will occur sooner or later --
but they are not growing fast enough to satisfy soaring global demand.
The
combination of rising demand, the emergence of powerful new energy
consumers, and the contraction of the global energy supply is
demolishing the energy-abundant world we are familiar with and creating
in its place a new world order. Think of it as: rising powers/shrinking
planet.
This new world order will be characterized by fierce
international competition for dwindling stocks of oil, natural gas,
coal, and uranium, as well as by a tidal shift in power and wealth from
energy-deficit states like China, Japan, and the United States to
energy-surplus states like Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela. In the
process, the lives of everyone will be affected in one way or another
-- with poor and middle-class consumers in the energy-deficit states
experiencing the harshest effects. That's most of us and our children,
in case you hadn't quite taken it in.
Here, in a nutshell, are five key forces in this new world order which will change our planet:
1.
Intense competition between older and newer economic powers for
available supplies of energy: Until very recently, the mature
industrial powers of Europe, Asia, and North America consumed the
lion's share of energy and left the dregs for the developing world. As
recently as 1990, the members of the Organization of Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD), the club of the world's richest
nations, consumed approximately 57% of world energy; the Soviet
Union/Warsaw Pact bloc, 14% percent; and only 29% was left to the
developing world. But that ratio is changing: With strong economic
growth in the developing countries, a greater proportion of the world's
energy is being consumed by them. By 2010, the developing world's share
of energy use is expected to reach 40% and, if current trends persist,
47% by 2030.
China plays a critical role in all this. The
Chinese alone are projected to consume 17% of world energy by 2015, and
20% by 2025 -- by which time, if trend lines continue, it will have
overtaken the United States as the world's leading energy consumer.
India, which, in 2004, accounted for 3.4% of world energy use, is
projected to reach 4.4% percent by 2025, while consumption in other
rapidly industrializing nations like Brazil, Indonesia, Malaysia,
Thailand, and Turkey is expected to grow as well.
These rising
economic dynamos will have to compete with the mature economic powers
for access to remaining untapped reserves of exportable energy -- in
many cases, bought up long ago by the private energy firms of the
mature powers like Exxon Mobil, Chevron, BP, Total of France, and Royal
Dutch Shell. Of necessity, the new contenders have developed a potent
strategy for competing with the Western "majors": they've created
state-owned companies of their own and fashioned strategic alliances
with the national oil companies that now control oil and gas reserves
in many of the major energy-producing nations.
China's
Sinopec, for example, has established a strategic alliance with Saudi
Aramco, the nationalized giant once owned by Chevron and Exxon Mobil,
to explore for natural gas in Saudi Arabia and market Saudi crude oil
in China. Likewise, the China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC)
will collaborate with Gazprom, the massive state-controlled Russian
natural gas monopoly, to build pipelines and deliver Russian gas to
China. Several of these state-owned firms, including CNPC and India's
Oil and Natural Gas Corporation, are now set to collaborate with
Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. in developing the extra-heavy crude of the
Orinoco belt once controlled by Chevron. In this new stage of energy
competition, the advantages long enjoyed by Western energy majors has
been eroded by vigorous, state-backed upstarts from the developing
world.
2. The insufficiency of primary energy supplies: The
capacity of the global energy industry to satisfy demand is shrinking.
By all accounts, the global supply of oil will expand for perhaps
another half-decade before reaching a peak and beginning to decline,
while supplies of natural gas, coal, and uranium will probably grow for
another decade or two before peaking and commencing their own
inevitable declines. In the meantime, global supplies of these existing
fuels will prove incapable of reaching the elevated levels demanded.
Take
oil. The U.S. Department of Energy claims that world oil demand,
expected to reach 117.6 million barrels per day in 2030, will be
matched by a supply that -- miracle of miracles -- will hit exactly
117.7 million barrels (including petroleum liquids derived from allied
substances like natural gas and Canadian tar sands) at the same time.
Most energy professionals, however, consider this estimate highly
unrealistic. "One hundred million barrels is now in my view an
optimistic case," the CEO of Total, Christophe de Margerie, typically
told a London oil conference in October 2007. "It is not my view; it is
the industry view, or the view of those who like to speak clearly,
honestly, and [are] not just trying to please people."
Similarly,
the authors of the Medium-Term Oil Market Report, published in July
2007 by the International Energy Agency, an affiliate of the OECD,
concluded that world oil output might hit 96 million barrels per day by
2012, but was unlikely to go much beyond that as a dearth of new
discoveries made future growth impossible.
Daily business-page
headlines point to a vortex of clashing trends: worldwide demand will
continue to grow as hundred of millions of newly-affluent Chinese and
Indian consumers line up to purchase their first automobile (some
selling for as little as $2,500); key older "elephant" oil fields like
Ghawar in Saudi Arabia and Canterell in Mexico are already in decline
or expected to be so soon; and the rate of new oil-field discoveries
plunges year after year. So expect global energy shortages and high
prices to be a constant source of hardship.
3. The painfully
slow development of energy alternatives: It has long been evident to
policymakers that new sources of energy are desperately needed to
compensate for the eventual disappearance of existing fuels as well as
to slow the buildup of climate-changing "greenhouse gases" in the
atmosphere. In fact, wind and solar power have gained significant
footholds in some parts of the world. A number of other innovative
energy solutions have already been developed and even tested out in
university and corporate laboratories. But these alternatives, which
now contribute only a tiny percentage of the world's net fuel supply,
are simply not being developed fast enough to avert the multifaceted
global energy catastrophe that lies ahead.
According to the
U.S. Department of Energy, renewable fuels, including wind, solar, and
hydropower (along with "traditional" fuels like firewood and dung),
supplied but 7.4% of global energy in 2004; biofuels added another
0.3%. Meanwhile, fossil fuels -- oil, coal, and natural gas -- supplied
86% percent of world energy, nuclear power another 6%. Based on current
rates of development and investment, the DoE offers the following
dismal projection: In 2030, fossil fuels will still account for exactly
the same share of world energy as in 2004. The expected increase in
renewables and biofuels is so slight -- a mere 8.1% -- as to be
virtually meaningless.
In global warming terms, the
implications are nothing short of catastrophic: Rising reliance on coal
(especially in China, India, and the United States) means that global
emissions of carbon dioxide are projected to rise by 59% over the next
quarter-century, from 26.9 billion metric tons to 42.9 billion tons.
The meaning of this is simple. If these figures hold, there is no hope
of averting the worst effects of climate change.
When it comes
to global energy supplies, the implications are nearly as dire. To meet
soaring energy demand, we would need a massive influx of alternative
fuels, which would mean equally massive investment -- in the trillions
of dollars -- to ensure that the newest possibilities move rapidly from
laboratory to full-scale commercial production; but that, sad to say,
is not in the cards. Instead, the major energy firms (backed by lavish
U.S. government subsidies and tax breaks) are putting their
mega-windfall profits from rising energy prices into vastly expensive
(and environmentally questionable) schemes to extract oil and gas from
Alaska and the Arctic, or to drill in the deep and difficult waters of
the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean. The result? A few more
barrels of oil or cubic feet of natural gas at exorbitant prices (with
accompanying ecological damage), while non-petroleum alternatives limp
along pitifully.
4. A steady migration of power and wealth
from energy-deficit to energy-surplus nations: There are few countries
-- perhaps a dozen altogether -- with enough oil, gas, coal, and
uranium (or some combination thereof) to meet their own energy needs
and provide significant surpluses for export. Not surprisingly, such
states will be able to extract increasingly beneficial terms from the
much wider pool of energy-deficit nations dependent on them for vital
supplies of energy. These terms, primarily of a financial nature, will
result in growing mountains of petrodollars being accumulated by the
leading oil producers, but will also include political and military
concessions.
In the case of oil and natural gas, the major
energy-surplus states can be counted on two hands. Ten oil-rich states
possess 82.2% of the world's proven reserves. In order of importance,
they are: Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates,
Venezuela, Russia, Libya, Kazakhstan, and Nigeria. The possession of
natural gas is even more concentrated. Three countries -- Russia, Iran,
and Qatar -- harbor an astonishing 55.8% of the world supply. All of
these countries are in an enviable position to cash in on the dramatic
rise in global energy prices and to extract from potential customers
whatever political concessions they deem important.
The
transfer of wealth alone is already mind-boggling. The oil-exporting
countries collected an estimated $970 billion from the importing
countries in 2006, and the take for 2007, when finally calculated, is
expected to be far higher. A substantial fraction of these dollars,
yen, and euros have been deposited in "sovereign-wealth funds" (SWFs),
giant investment accounts owned by the oil states and deployed for the
acquisition of valuable assets around the world. In recent months, the
Persian Gulf SWFs have been taking advantage of the financial crisis in
the United States to purchase large stakes in strategic sectors of its
economy. In November 2007, for example, the Abu Dhabi Investment
Authority (ADIA) acquired a $7.5 billion stake in Citigroup, America's
largest bank holding company; in January, Citigroup sold an even larger
share, worth $12.5 billion, to the Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA)
and several other Middle Eastern investors, including Prince Walid bin
Talal of Saudi Arabia. The managers of ADIA and KIA insist that they do
not intend to use their newly-acquired stakes in Citigroup and other
U.S. banks and corporations to influence U.S. economic or foreign
policy, but it is hard to imagine that a financial shift of this
magnitude, which can only gain momentum in the decades ahead, will not
translate into some form of political leverage.
In the case of
Russia, which has risen from the ashes of the Soviet Union as the
world's first energy superpower, it already has. Russia is now the
world's leading supplier of natural gas, the second largest supplier of
oil, and a major producer of coal and uranium. Though many of these
assets were briefly privatized during the reign of Boris Yeltsin,
President Vladimir Putin has brought most of them back under state
control -- in some cases, by exceedingly questionable legal means. He
then used these assets in campaigns to bribe or coerce former Soviet
republics on Russia's periphery reliant on it for the bulk of their oil
and gas supplies. European Union countries have sometimes expressed
dismay at Putin's tactics, but they, too, are dependent on Russian
energy supplies, and so have learned to mute their protests to
accommodate growing Russian power in Eurasia. Consider Russia a model
for the new energy world order.
5. A Growing Risk of Conflict:
Throughout history, major shifts in power have normally been
accompanied by violence -- in some cases, protracted violent upheavals.
Either states at the pinnacle of power have struggled to prevent the
loss of their privileged status, or challengers have fought to topple
those at the top of the heap. Will that happen now? Will energy-deficit
states launch campaigns to wrest the oil and gas reserves of surplus
states from their control -- the Bush administration's war in Iraq
might already be thought of as one such attempt -- or to eliminate
competitors among their deficit-state rivals?
The high costs
and risks of modern warfare are well known and there is a widespread
perception that energy problems can best be solved through economic
means, not military ones. Nevertheless, the major powers are employing
military means in their efforts to gain advantage in the global
struggle for energy, and no one should be deluded on the subject. These
endeavors could easily enough lead to unintended escalation and
conflict.
One conspicuous use of military means in the pursuit
of energy is obviously the regular transfer of arms and
military-support services by the major energy-importing states to their
principal suppliers. Both the United States and China, for example,
have stepped up their deliveries of arms and equipment to oil-producing
states like Angola, Nigeria, and Sudan in Africa and, in the Caspian
Sea basin, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan. The United States
has placed particular emphasis on suppressing the armed insurgency in
the vital Niger Delta region of Nigeria, where most of the country's
oil is produced; Beijing has emphasized arms aid to Sudan, where
Chinese-led oil operations are threatened by insurgencies in both the
South and Darfur.
Russia is also using arms transfers as an
instrument in its efforts to gain influence in the major oil- and
gas-producing regions of the Caspian Sea basin and the Persian Gulf.
Its urge is not to procure energy for its own use, but to dominate the
flow of energy to others. In particular, Moscow seeks a monopoly on the
transportation of Central Asian gas to Europe via Gazprom's vast
pipeline network; it also wants to tap into Iran's mammoth gas fields,
further cementing Russia's control over the trade in natural gas.
The
danger, of course, is that such endeavors, multiplied over time, will
provoke regional arms races, exacerbate regional tensions, and increase
the danger of great-power involvement in any local conflicts that
erupt. History has all too many examples of such miscalculations
leading to wars that spiral out of control. Think of the years leading
up to World War I. In fact, Central Asia and the Caspian today, with
their multiple ethnic disorders and great-power rivalries, bear more
than a glancing resemblance to the Balkans in the years leading up to
1914.
What this adds up to is simple and sobering: the end of
the world as you've known it. In the new, energy-centric world we have
all now entered, the price of oil will dominate our lives and power
will reside in the hands of those who control its global distribution.
In
this new world order, energy will govern our lives in new ways and on a
daily basis. It will determine when, and for what purposes, we use our
cars; how high (or low) we turn our thermostats; when, where, or even
if, we travel; increasingly, what foods we eat (given that the price of
producing and distributing many meats and vegetables is profoundly
affected by the cost of oil or the allure of growing corn for ethanol);
for some of us, where to live; for others, what businesses we engage
in; for all of us, when and under what circumstances we go to war or
avoid foreign entanglements that could end in war.
This leads
to a final observation: The most pressing decision facing the next
president and Congress may be how best to accelerate the transition
from a fossil-fuel-based energy system to a system based on
climate-friendly energy alternatives.
Michael T. Klare is a
professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College and
the author of Resource Wars and Blood and Oil. Consider this essay a
preview of his newest book, Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet: The New
Geopolitics of Energy, which has just been published by Metropolitan
Books. A brief video of Klare discussing key subjects in his new book
can be viewed by clicking here.
"An increase of this sort would not be a matter of deep anxiety if the world's primary energy suppliers were capable of producing the needed additional fuels. Instead, we face a frightening reality: a marked slowdown in the expansion of global energy supplies just as demand rises precipitously. These supplies are not exactly disappearing — though that will occur sooner or later — but they are not growing fast enough to satisfy soaring global demand."
In fact Klare offers no evidence that suppliers are incapable. Certainly at the present, supply is gaining on demand. This article is more alarmist disinformation.
"The combination of rising demand, the emergence of powerful new energy consumers, and the contraction of the global energy supply is demolishing the energy-abundant world we are familiar with and creating in its place a new world order...This new world order will be characterized by fierce international competition for dwindling stocks"
More xenophobic fearmongering. Supply is clearly not contracting. Yet more lies.
"These rising economic dynamos will have to compete with the mature economic powers for access to remaining untapped reserves of exportable energy — in many cases, bought up long ago by the private energy firms of the mature powers like Exxon Mobil, Chevron, BP, Total of France, and Royal Dutch Shell."
Yes, "many cases" 3% of proven reserves to be exact.
"Several of these state-owned firms, including CNPC and India's Oil and Natural Gas Corporation, are now set to collaborate with Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. in developing the extra-heavy crude of the Orinoco belt once controlled by Chevron. In this new stage of energy competition, the advantages long enjoyed by Western energy majors has been eroded by vigorous, state-backed upstarts from the developing world."
More xenophobic claptrap. Western big oil has for decades relied on fees, markups and "spreads" for it's earnings. They are happy to generate income from transport, refining and retailing. Expansion of supply only reduces their margins. They are happy to let others make these risky development investments. When supply eventually exceeds demand they can pick up these assets for pennies on the dollar from upstarts that depend on higher prices. Oil like any commodity IS cyclical. The history of the industry contains six similar cycles.
"By all accounts,[???] the global supply of oil will expand for perhaps another half-decade before reaching a peak and beginning to decline."
This is nothing more than the gospel according to Klare.
"Most [any evidence???] energy professionals, however, consider this estimate highly unrealistic. "One hundred million barrels for 2030 is now in my view an optimistic case"
First he claims that production will peak shortly from the current 85 million barrels, then he claims that one estimation of 100 million barrels in 2030 supports his contention. His readers are required to have an awfully short attention span, though I guess he could be relying on their ignorance of current levels.
"major energy firms...drill in the deep and difficult waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean. The result? A few more barrels of oil or cubic feet of natural gas at exorbitant prices"
Actually the production cost of deep water oil is under $25/barrel hardly "exorbitant". "A few more barrels" is Klare's terminology for hundreds of billions of barrels.
"Will energy-deficit states launch campaigns to wrest the oil and gas reserves of surplus states from their control — the Bush administration's war in Iraq might already be thought of as one such attempt — or to eliminate competitors among their deficit-state rivals? The high costs and risks of modern warfare are well known and there is a widespread perception that energy problems can best be solved through economic means, not military ones. Nevertheless, the major powers are employing military means in their efforts to gain advantage in the global struggle for energy, and no one should be deluded on the subject."
Here it is Klare who is attempting to "delude" his readers by pretending that the wars in the Middle East are for "control of oil" not wars for greater Israel.
"What this adds up to is simple and sobering: the end of the world as you've known it."
Klare uses the words "dire" and "catastrophe" in almost every paragraph throughout the article and finally closes with a baseless Malthusian prognosis.
"An increase of this sort would not be a matter of deep anxiety if the world's primary energy suppliers were capable of producing the needed additional fuels. Instead, we face a frightening reality: a marked slowdown in the expansion of global energy supplies just as demand rises precipitously. These supplies are not exactly disappearing — though that will occur sooner or later — but they are not growing fast enough to satisfy soaring global demand."
In fact Klare offers no evidence that suppliers are incapable. Certainly at the present, supply is gaining on demand. This article is more alarmist disinformation.
"The combination of rising demand, the emergence of powerful new energy consumers, and the contraction of the global energy supply is demolishing the energy-abundant world we are familiar with and creating in its place a new world order...This new world order will be characterized by fierce international competition for dwindling stocks"
More xenophobic fearmongering. Supply is clearly not contracting. Yet more lies.
"These rising economic dynamos will have to compete with the mature economic powers for access to remaining untapped reserves of exportable energy — in many cases, bought up long ago by the private energy firms of the mature powers like Exxon Mobil, Chevron, BP, Total of France, and Royal Dutch Shell."
Yes, "many cases" 3% of proven reserves to be exact.
"Several of these state-owned firms, including CNPC and India's Oil and Natural Gas Corporation, are now set to collaborate with Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. in developing the extra-heavy crude of the Orinoco belt once controlled by Chevron. In this new stage of energy competition, the advantages long enjoyed by Western energy majors has been eroded by vigorous, state-backed upstarts from the developing world."
More xenophobic claptrap. Western big oil has for decades relied on fees, markups and "spreads" for it's earnings. They are happy to generate income from transport, refining and retailing. Expansion of supply only reduces their margins. They are happy to let others make these risky development investments. When supply eventually exceeds demand they can pick up these assets for pennies on the dollar from upstarts that depend on higher prices. Oil like any commodity IS cyclical. The history of the industry contains six similar cycles.
"By all accounts,[???] the global supply of oil will expand for perhaps another half-decade before reaching a peak and beginning to decline."
This is nothing more than the gospel according to Klare.
"Most [any evidence???] energy professionals, however, consider this estimate highly unrealistic. "One hundred million barrels for 2030 is now in my view an optimistic case"
First he claims that production will peak shortly from the current 85 million barrels, then he claims that one estimation of 100 million barrels in 2030 supports his contention. His readers are required to have an awfully short attention span, though I guess he could be relying on their ignorance of current levels.
"major energy firms...drill in the deep and difficult waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean. The result? A few more barrels of oil or cubic feet of natural gas at exorbitant prices"
Actually the production cost of deep water oil is under $25/barrel hardly "exorbitant". "A few more barrels" is Klare's terminology for hundreds of billions of barrels.
"Will energy-deficit states launch campaigns to wrest the oil and gas reserves of surplus states from their control — the Bush administration's war in Iraq might already be thought of as one such attempt — or to eliminate competitors among their deficit-state rivals?
The high costs and risks of modern warfare are well known and there is a widespread perception that energy problems can best be solved through economic means, not military ones. Nevertheless, the major powers are employing military means in their efforts to gain advantage in the global struggle for energy, and no one should be deluded on the subject."
Here it is Klare who is attempting to "delude" his readers by pretending that the wars in the Middle East are for "control of oil" not wars for greater Israel.
"What this adds up to is simple and sobering: the end of the world as you've known it."
Klare uses the words "dire" and "catastrophe" in almost every paragraph throughout the article and finally closes with a baseless Malthusian prognosis.