Crude Awakenings: Global Oil Security and American Foreign
Policy. By Stephen A. Yetiv. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press,
2004. 256p. $35.00.
Steve Yetiv's central argument is that oil stability has improved
in recent years in the sense that the market is resilient, enjoying a
self-reinforcing equilibrium by its ability to deter, mitigate, and
contain threats to supplies. The author explicitly distinguishes oil
supply stability from oil price stability, as oil prices have become more
volatile while supply volumes have stabilized. Implicitly, he argues that
price flexibility stabilizes supplies and that the world oil market has
become more competitive and less rigid, so that relations between oil
exporters and importers have become more pragmatic and less politicized.
Attention is on the physical availability of oil: Disruptions are
unlikely, not on oil prices or their impact on incomes, inflation rates,
and trade balances, but historically, oil has always been available in the
world market, at a price. The book would have benefited from a more
systematic elaboration of the key argument, early on. He examines the oil
market from the perspective of international relations, emphasising the
projection of U.S. military power in the Middle East.