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Wednesday, June 18, 2014

18 June 2014 - Wrapping Up the Trifecta 
The Strategic Picture - Part Three
The third major strategic threat to U.S. sovereignty, after our federal debt and our failure to deal with illegal immigration, is our dependence on unreliable sources of foreign energy.  This threatens our sovereignty because some of the very countries that sell us oil, use their petrodollars to fund Islamic jihadist attacks on the United States.  As well, our reliance on these foreign sources of energy puts pressure on our foreign policy process to try to solve intractable problems in places like the Middle East and Africa.  Our dependence on foreign energy overly complicates what should be a more straightforward, effective foreign policy and more secure sovereignty. 
The solution to this energy dependence is not complicated: we drill for oil everywhere we can in the United States and in its sovereign waters.  The increase in natural gas and petroleum production in the U.S. during the last decade has come from entrepreneurial drilling on private lands.  Now, the President should immediately lift the moratorium on drilling on leased federal lands, and even encourage expansion of the program by stipulating that companies that do not start exploration and drilling within a year will lose their federal leases.  He should also allow drilling in places like Alaska’s Coastal Plain, including the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR).   
The President should facilitate the building of new oil and natural gas refineries in such ports as Houston, Long Beach, and Seattle.  He should encourage this construction by taking back the billions of federal dole dollars now being wasted on failed alternate energy production and give that money back to the energy industry in the form of lower taxes.   
The President should lead out in creating a long-term accord with Canada and Mexico to coordinate their energy production and export systems with those of the United States.  This North American Petroleum Exporting Countries (NAOPEC) pact would further cement our friendship with Canada and promote a much firmer friendship with Mexico.  This last step obviously should include the immediate building of the Keystone pipeline from Canada to Texas.  The pipeline will create jobs, infuse money into the economy, and reduce our reliance on foreign oil.  Such increase in exploration and production would give the United States the independence, flexibility, and market dominance it does not now have, and would help secure our sovereignty in the world.    
In addition to increasing prosperity, a burgeoning energy industry would fortify U.S. sovereignty by reducing the flow of dollars into countries like Saudi Arabia and Iran.  These nations use dollars to fund terrorist activity against the United States, and they finance radical Islamic jihad movements in their neighboring states.  If we bought far less of their oil, the terrorists and rebels—domestic and international—would have far less money for weapons, logistics, and training.  With far less money, Middle East conflicts would continue to simmer but would explode far less often.   
The petrodollar-funded jihad of the last several decades is just the latest campaign in the thirteen-hundred-year war between Western civilization and the civilization of Islam.  Radical Islamists hate the U.S. – the Great Satan – with a fervor that most westerners refuse to understand or accept.  Using petrodollars, they plot greater, bloodier wars against us. We cannot change their minds or win their hearts; therefore, it would be prudent for us to defund their campaign. 
With fare less reliance on foreign sources of oil, our decision matrix for U.S. involvement in Middle East and Africa’s messy, centuries-old, intractable, hostile-to-infidel religious and tribal conflicts would change.  No matter the crise du jour, a compelling case for involvement would be harder for either interventionist or do-gooders to make.  We would continue to make mistakes because that is the nature of foreign policy decision-making.  But, those mistakes would not have the effects on our sovereignty that our mistakes are having now. 

Oil is our defining strategic interest in the Middle East, and it is also the fuel for Islamic jihad.  Both sides of that petro dollar erode our sovereignty.   If the President really wants his domestic and foreign policy legacy to endure the next generations, he must enable our energy independence, not stifle it. 
Then, in our increased safety and prosperity, many more Americans will be playing golf as much as he does.   
Comments can be sent to mac.coleman.colonel@gmail.com

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