The
real reason Obama rejected Keystone, Former House intel chairman points to unholy
alliance, by Michel Maloof, 11/14/15, WND
WASHINGTON – Concern by Saudi Arabia
that the United States is achieving energy independence may have been a major
reason why the Obama administration rejected construction of the Canadian
Keystone XL Pipeline through the U.S. after six years of consideration, a
former House Intelligence Committee chairman says in an exclusive new report in
Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.
The Keystone XL Pipeline would have
brought oil from Canada’s shale reserves in Alberta to Nebraska, creating an
estimated 9,000 well-paying construction jobs.
But former Republican Rep. Pete
Hoekstra told G2 Bulletin that President Obama rejected the project because he
needs the help of Riyadh to resolve the four-year Syrian conflict, which has
turned into a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran.
In rejecting the pipeline, Obama
said it would transport “dirty oil” and wouldn’t make a long-term economic
contribution to the U.S. economy. But Hoekstra, who led the House intel panel
from 1993 to 2011, believes there’s another reason.
While Obama is “playing to his
green, anti-fossil fuel, climate-change crowd,” he needs Saudi help in Syria,
said Hoekstra, who now heads Hoekstra Global Strategies.
“For me,” Hoekstra said, “the bottom
line is [Obama] was never going to approve this project. “His allies never
wanted it, and the Saudi argument just gives him one more reason to do what he
was going to do anyway,” Hoekstra said.
Over the past year, the Saudis have
been putting pressure on the Obama administration to halt its drive toward
energy independence. The Saudis have seen their market share of oil production
threatened by U.S. oil producers who have increased output using new shale-oil
technologies, driving down prices.
The Saudis can’t cut their own
production, because the other oil-producing countries would swoop in and take
market share.
As they watch the compromise of the
source of their vast wealth, the Saudis have put considerable pressure on Obama
to find a solution to the four-year-old Syrian crisis.
The Sunni Saudis want the ouster of
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, a Shiite Alawite who is allied with Riyadh’s
major sectarian enemy, Shiite Iran.
In turn, Obama needs Riyadh to help
maintain the fragile anti-ISIS coalition to which Saudi Arabia and the other
Arab countries belong.
Obama lost considerable Saudi
support in 2011 after his refusal to help Saudi-backed Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak, who was ousted and succeeded by Muslim Brotherhood-backed Mohamed
Morsi.
http://www.wnd.com/2015/11/the-real-reason-obama-rejected-keystone/
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