Reviewing my 2007 predictions, some of them were
great and some totally sucked. You can re-read them and see for yourself.
http://www.globalthoughts.com/predictions2007.html
I didn’t know of this guy Sarkozy in France a year
ago and the rather sickly Ayatollah Khameini in Iran didn’t die. Musharraf
didn’t get knocked off; instead, he made sure everyone else got knocked
off or kicked out for as long as possible. Anyway, let’s look ahead.
Middle East – This is the year Marwan Barghouti
gets out of prison unless Abbas personally wants this potential rival kept
there. But Abbas says he doesn’t want to remain in his job past another
year so it makes sense that this guy lets loose. Olmert is talking seriously
with the Syrians; don’t know what’s coming of it but relations have definitely
improved behind the scenes. Assad has nothing going for him in his lifetime
except to be a trapped ruler of a useless country with no legacy unless
he gets with the program and makes peace with the Israelis, and I think
he knows it. Olmert really wants to make deals with the Arabs and interestingly
nobody in Israel that matters is outright opposing him. Jerusalem and the
holy sites are on the table, right of return is not on the table but everybody
knows that anyway, and territorial swaps are a given. Iran is a problem
that the Israelis think they can deal with militarily and they are working
around the clock preparing and I think it’s a safe guess that the Americans
are playing the good cop with Iran right now trying to see if they can
secure a deal because playing bad cop strengthens the hardliners in that
country even though Ahmadinejad’s rule has been a disaster for the country’s
economy. Also, there are domestic elections in March and it strengthens
moderate elements in that country if the hardliners can’t campaign against
the US bogeyman militarily threatening the country. That explains the National
Intelligence Estimate leak in November and the moves by the Sunni states
to seek a detente with Iran but beneath the surface they are scared to
death of Iran’s nuclear plans. In the case of Egypt, talk of normalization
of relations with Iran is simply a play to get the US to treat Egypt better.
If after the elections nothing happens good, I expect military action in
the 2nd or 3rd quarter of 2008. Lebanon has as expected mulled along with
nothing happening; Hizbullah holds a veto but has to be careful how far
to push the envelope. The army chief is a good choice to be president and
the country’s army has regained a good amount of national respect. Saudi’s
new king impresses me and I expect better times ahead for that country.
Iraq is an interesting situation – the Americans are turning the corner
here because for whatever reason the Sunni leadership realized that it
would be better in the long run to pair up with the Americans and the other
Sunni nations in the region and be constructive instead of simply trying
to knock off the Shiites and the Americans and basically take on the entire
world. The Americans will try in the coming year or two to move out of
the cities and into bases along the periphery which is what I’ve been advocating.
They are trying to reach a detente with the Iranians to allow the Sunnis
and Shiites in Iraq to figure out how to get along in a united Iraq. The
Turks have shown that they will lean on the Kurds to get them to play ball
as well. The various Sunni states in the region are learning to get along
with each other against Iran. Qatar muzzled Al-Jazeera after years of using
it as a prick against the Saudis because they know at the end of the days
that their lot is closer to Saudi Arabia than to Iran. Jordan keeps a low
profile; Bush didn’t visit there. Probably best for Jordan. Inside Israel,
Olmert is very strong and Barak is not going to resign from the government.
Barak should just keep doing what he’s doing and some day he’ll be the
next prime minister unless some superstar emerges or he screws up. Polls
still show Netanyahu beating out Barak if elections were held now, so Barak
has no reason to bring down the government and lose an election. People
inside power like Olmert because he’s a clubhouse player and works assiduously
to keep everyone happy so that they will not spend their time looking to
make life hard for him. The biggest change I’ve noticed in the Palestinian
camp is that people are talking less of a 2-state solution and more about
a generalized autonomy within Israel. They are realizing that they can
get independence but might wind up doing nothing with it but fighting themselves
and that they will be at the mercy of Israel and that 2 other things are
true: The Arabs around them don’t like them and have nothing to offer because
their economies are poor; the Israelis have a winning economy. So if you
can’t beat them, join them. This means that my friend Oded who has been
saying this for 20 years now is probably going to be proven right. We are
probably looking at a long-term truce with Hamas with no peace treaty in
Gaza and some sort of arrangement between the Palestinians and Israelis
that calls for something like a neutered state and some kind of non-belligerent
situation that involves a high degree of autonomy within Israel. Gaza will
go along with this if and when the West Bank does because they will be
left out in the cold otherwise. The question is whether or not the Israelis
think they have to keep the Arabs out of Israel in order to achieve this.
If you think the Separation Wall is what keeps Israel safe, the answer
is yes. If you think that the main reason this past year had the fewest
terrorist attacks inside Israel because the Israelis prevented them, the
answer is yes. If you think the reason is that the Arabs aren’t trying
as much, the answer is no. The answer to me is a combination of the above.
The Arabs are not trying as much from certain areas, and in other areas
the Israelis are actively preventing them from succeeding. So the answer
is that autonomy is ultimately the right way to go, but that it may have
to come in stages as various portions of the Palestinian community learn
to get with the program. Remember that as soon as the Syrians and Iranians
agree to a peace with the Israelis, the Hamas in the South and the Hizbullah
in the North goes out of business. So it’s a package deal all around.
Subcontinent and Asia – Pakistan’s Musharraf
has things under control in a certain sense but the new army chief may
want to push him out this year and run things himself. He is not a person
that people tend to dislike. Bhutto to me was an overrated person who was
a lousy prime minister a decade ago; her death is no loss to Pakistan and
her party is a family fiefdom. They could have nominated a dog and it would
be the next prime minister. The army is still the nation’s best bet, especially
since the nuclear button has to be kept under control. Afghanistan seems
to be working out in some areas and stagnated in others; the jihadist war
seems to be more and more confined to Pakistan and Afghanistan as Al-Qaida
seems to be contained in other places such as Iraq and ineffectual in other
places such as Europe. The indications are that the US is preparing with
Pakistan to try to go in for the kill this year in Pakistan and this might
be the year we see the end of Bin Laden and Mullah Omar. India is focused
on its economy as it should be. Its stock market is overvalued and it is
the country’s top priority not to have it crash. Japan tries out yet another
new prime minister and China continues to do its thing very well and lays
low to ride out the Olympics. It does its best by making trade deals with
various countries that offer commodities especially in Africa, giving aid
with no strings attached and keeping out of military conflicts so as not
to drain its economy. It is also building pipelines to bring the ‘Stan
countries with their oil and gas into its orbit as suppliers. This is very
threatening to Russia. I was surprised at North Korea this year; I didn’t
expect Condi Rice to beat out Cheney in the area of foreign policy and
get the Administration to pursue a more nuanced approach to intractable
problems. North Korea is moving along in the right direction. It is trying
to secure its long-term future by being more like China than East Germany
and it has every probability of succeeding, least of all because South
Korea doesn’t want to absorb an economic basket case like West Germany
did. I continue to invest in the economies of Australia, Malaysia, Hong
Kong and Singapore and believe these are the best bets for stability in
the years ahead.
Africa, Latin America and Europe – Africa?
Mugabe is still there in Zimbabwe and basically the only thing that matters
is that China is all over the place doing deals. Their embassy in Lisbon
Portugal is huge and that’s their base for Africa. It’s just one swamp
of corruption and except for Bill Gates trying to cut down malaria it doesn’t
seem a hopeful place. Even Oprah couldn’t manage to open a school there
without someone abusing the girls. Angola is not on my radar but I understand
it’s a spot on the continent that is working as it produces lots more oil.
Latin America is not turning out as admiring as Venezuela’s Chavez would
have hoped. Even with the high oil price out there, he has peaked. Brazil
continues to do right with its economy and Argentina’s Kirchner made some
bad moves that will keep that county second-rate to its neighbors unless
his wife reverses them. I haven’t been to Mexico yet; my friend there tells
me it’s not safe. But the new president of that country seems to be making
great strides in achieving real reform in that country. If that continues,
I expect that I should find it useful to visit. In Europe, Gordon
Brown has no choice but to lay low and do things right if he wants to remain
in his chair because he will only survive if he can show competency. France’s
Sarkozy is shifting gears as he realizes that he cannot succeed in his
original agenda but could succeed in adopting more of the socialist agenda.
I don’t know if anyone can turn France around. To the extent that he can’t,
Germany will take the lead in Europe so it is France’s loss if they don’t
follow Sarkozy. Austria is a quiet giant that has been a good performer.
Russia’s Putin is very much in power even if he’s behind the scenes and
everybody seems satisfied to keep it that way. I’d vote for him. Even though
he looks like a dictator, he does have to keep various interests balanced
and that’s probably why the new guy is the consensus choice. He doesn’t
really represent any particular faction and therefore is amenable to all
of them. Russia has done well under him but too much of his success is
owed to the high price of oil. It is a country that has problems, mostly
of its own making. Europe is learning to get away from Russian gas blackmail
by creating new pipelines and dealing with countries such as Libya. China
is making moves on the ‘Stans to move those countries into its orbit and
one should keep an eye on Kazakstan to see which way the wind blows. If
Kosovo gains independence, it is a sure-fire blow to Russia keeping its
various clients in line.
Economics and Markets – I think the
Euro this year will ultimately lose ground against the dollar in the sense
that the dollar’s fall will continue for awhile but then stabilize. Oil
will drop in price significantly despite a temporary surge in the event
of a military strike against Iran (which if done by Israel instead of the
US will have very little effect on the oil market) – the fundamentals are
going against a high price of oil and it is only a matter of time before
exploration of alternative fuel sources becomes more cost-efficient. It
is said that there is as much oil in Canada as Saudi Arabia if only it
becomes more cost-efficient to extract it. Brazil has made great strides
this year in reducing the cost of producing ethanol. Global demand will
decrease this year due to recession and this will greatly affect the price
of oil. Right now the thing keeping the price up is fear of hot spots and
speculation by traders; a good number of the hot spots such as Nigeria,
piracy and Al Qaida seem to be increasingly under control.. China is responsible
for a third of the rising demand globally but China itself is a not a major
importer of oil as a percentage of the total demand, so its effect on demand
is exaggerated. The US will be in recession this year mainly due to the
housing market and the default in credit card debts that are sure to come,
but US companies will continue to be profitable because many of them make
more profits abroad than in the US and the rest of the world is doing pretty
well. This will keep performance good; US interest rates down and the US
dollar will still be relatively weak and this will keep exports up and
add to the good performance of US companies for shareholders. The real
estate market will drop further and it may be several more years before
the full extent of the drop in values is reached or that such drop will
be felt in markets such as Manhattan. The big story in the US is all these
foreign governments via investment funds that are buying up American companies
in strategic areas, such as Citibank, Merrill Lynch and Dow Chemical. The
Arabs are being smarter than they were 30 years ago when they bought pink
elephants or the Japanese when they bought real estate. The Americans will
wake up someday and notice they sold a good number of assets out to have
the Arabs and Chinese bail us out of our current recession for their own
good reasons (ie: the Arabs want to keep us as customers which is a hard
thing to do if the world goes into recession). For that reason, the US
Dollar remains the world’s currency of choice; the Euro is a good currency
to ride in today’s markets but the Dollar is still the reserve currency
on which the world runs.
US Presidential Race – If it were between
Hillary Clinton and John McCain, I’d vote for McCain because at least with
McCain you know what he believes and what you’re getting and you have to
give him credit for sticking with the Iraq surge policy when everyone thought
it was a loser and being proven generally correct; that really is the essence
of leadership (and I have to say at this point that history is likely to
be kinder to George Bush than expected because overall over the past 8
years the war against Al-Qaida is being slowly won and he shifted gears
on foreign policy and he is scoring successes). You’ll never know with
Hillary what you’re getting till she’s in office and switches positions
several times afterward as the polls come out each quarter. McCain is a
mercurial guy who is subject to self-destruction; Hillary is much more
disciplined. Bloomberg is in the final stages of deciding if he should
run; he commissioned very sophisticated polling right down to every zip
code in the country and he has been collecting this data for half a year.
I would prefer Bloomberg to all of them. Obama would be a great secretary
of state for America but I don’t see him as a viable president without
more experience. In New Hampshire as people saw him compared in debates
to other candidates he lost support, as well among the college students
who were originally attracted to him and the younger voters are generally
the least reliable to actually be registered and to vote. I don’t see him
winning in the long term. I expect Giuliani to fade over the next month
with poorer than expected results, partially because he has no momentum
from the early primaries and people won’t take him seriously as a result.
Pleasures of Life – Travel has become more
expensive as 9/11 recedes. Air traffic in the US is improving as everyone
got so fed up last summer and as airlines lower capacity in part due to
the high cost of oil. Heathrow just got rid of its one-bag carryon rule
in an indication that the water is warm. Might as well after being rated
the #1 worst airport in the world by business travelers. |