| The Houthis have launched more than 100 attacks on a dozen commercial vessels over the last month. This hasn’t happened at this scale in more than two decades, an American military official told CNN. Now, the Pentagon is assembling a security initiative alongside allied countries to attempt to secure the trade routes.
“About 50 vessels go through the Suez Canal a day, and recent data suggested that, as of Monday, at least 32 had been diverted, said Chris Rogers, head of supply chain research at S&P Global Market Intelligence,” per The New York Times. Another analyst called the situation “a slow-burning disaster.” In other words: Houthis are threatening the supply chain in a major way—roughly 12 percent of global shipping traffic goes through the Suez Canal—and, well, if your Christmas packages don’t get here in time, it’s possibly the Houthi militants’ fault.
The oil angle: Because of this unfolding crisis, BP has stopped sending ships through the Red Sea. But rerouting oil tankers will impose additional costs likely to have ripple effects. “Brent crude, the international oil benchmark, has risen about 8 percent since mid-December, to above $79 a barrel,” reports The New York Times. “But the move has only partly reversed a monthslong slide in the price of oil, which hovered above $90 a barrel in September and early October.”
The Red Sea disruption is an especially big problem right now because both Russian sanctions and the war in Ukraine mean Europe depends on Middle Eastern and Asian oil to a greater degree than in years prior. Bypassing the Suez Canal and going around the Cape of Good Hope tends to raise crude oil prices by nearly $4 a barrel, Goldman Sachs analysts predict.
In some ways, pandemic supply chain snarls—and their quick resolutions—have taught us that supply chains are more resilient than we had once feared. But in other ways—American reliance on Taiwanese semiconductor manufacturing, for one, which could all go to shit if China at some point tries to seize Taiwan—we’ve found ourselves vulnerable. This bizarre situation playing out in the Red Sea might not drive oil and gas prices up too drastically, all on its own, but when piled on to the pain Americans are feeling from sky-high inflation, it’s surely unwelcome.
Colorado screws us all saves democracy: Colorado’s Supreme Court ruled late last night that Donald Trump is not eligible to seek the presidency under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which prohibits those who have engaged “in insurrection or rebellion against” the government from holding office, which means his name will be removed from the state’s Republican primary ballot.
The “provision [was] originally intended to restrain former Confederates from seeking office after the Civil War,” writes Reason‘s Eric Boehm. But late last night, “in a 4–3 ruling, the Colorado high court determined that Trump’s role in instigating the January 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol was sufficient to bar him from the presidency.” Note that Trump has been convicted of no insurrection-related crimes.
The ruling will probably be appealed to the Supreme Court but, in short, the outcome probably won’t be pretty. |