With Bolton Firing, Is There A Chance The U.S. Lifts Sanctions On Iranian Oil?

 | Sep 11, 2019 05:27

It looks like the Saudis just can't have a few days to themselves before Donald Trump spoils the party for them.

Just as the Kingdom thought it had set its house to rights by dismissing Khalid al-Falih as energy minister and appointing the ostensibly more experienced Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman to the job, the U.S. president goes ahead and fires one of his own officials — none less than his National Security Advisor John Bolton.

Trump’s move on Tuesday had big enough implications for some to ask which of the two was greater: Abdulaziz's appointment or Bolton's sacking?

The truth really shouldn't be hard to see.

Riyadh’s new energy minister would at best bring more output cuts and price stability for global oil producers — not forgetting a potentially happy ending for the Saudi royal family’s long-awaited listing of state oil company Aramco.

Bolton Exit Could Have Complicated Outcomes For Saudis And OPEC/h3
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The exit of Bolton, an Iran hawk, could have more complicated outcomes.

Depending on how it plays out, Bolton’s departure could most significantly pave the way for the start of U.S.-Iran talks and an eventual deal that takes away sanctions imposed by the Trump administration on Tehran since November last year. The administration accuses Iran of secretly trying to develop nuclear weapons. The Islamic Republic, in return, maintains that U.S. sanctions are aimed at helping enemies like Saudi Arabia steal Iran’s oil market share.

If a U.S.-Iran deal is struck, it could, over time, bring to the global market another million barrels per day from Tehran. That would be the worst nightmare of oil bulls as it would risk unraveling the painstaking work done by OPEC over the past nine months in enforcing disciplined production cuts that restored crude prices from one of their most torrid selloffs since the financial crisis.

Aside from Iran, Venezuela, another country under U.S. sanctions, might benefit too from Bolton’s departure, as Trump seeks to extend export waivers to U.S. energy companies still doing business in the Latin America country, while he tries to flush out its dictator leader, Nicholas Maduro. Bolton had vocally opposed that plan.

Trump, in a tweet announcing the sacking of Bolton, his third national security advisor, said he “disagreed strongly with many of his suggestions, as did others in the Administration”.

If anything, Bolton’s influence in the administration was long gone, particularly after Trump’s decision in June to veto the national security advisor’s call for a military strike against Iran as retaliation for Tehran’s shooting down of a U.S. drone aircraft. The New York Times remarked that things came to a head between the two men in recent days after Bolton waged a last-minute campaign to stop the president from signing a peace agreement with leaders of the radical Taliban group.