About The Book

The first and definitive account account of how the 1973 oil embargo rewired the world forever—and the lessons to be learned for today’s oil crisis.

The king of Saudi Arabia had warned the Americans repeatedly: If you do not treat us with respect, we will cut off your oil. For years, nobody believed him. On October 5, 1973, he made good on his threat.

The consequences were immediate. In America, fuel rationing and a fifty-five-mile-per-hour emergency speed limit couldn’t stop the lights of Times Square flickering out by Christmas. Across Europe, governments scrambled for secret supplies of oil: Britain’s chancellor flew to St. Moritz to interrupt the Shah of Iran’s skiing holiday and beg for the fuel needed to keep the country running. As panic spread through Western capitals, the world’s most powerful economies discovered that their prosperity rested on decisions being made in Riyadh.

Embargo is the gripping inside story of the 1973 oil crisis and the small group of leaders who shaped it. It is the story of Faisal, the Saudi King who was born a nomad and became the richest man in the world. Of Ahmed Zaki Yamani, his unflappable Harvard-educated oil minister who drove American oil executives to tears with his steely calm. And of Henry Kissinger, the US statesman who failed to grasp how much leverage the Middle East had acquired over the West until it was too late.

Filled with frantic diplomacy and secret negotiations, Embargo follows the race to avert economic catastrophe and restore the flow of oil. In the process, it uncovers a turning point in modern history: The moment the industrialized world discovered how vulnerable its prosperity was to turmoil in the Middle East. More than fifty years later, we are still grappling with the consequences.

About The Author

Philip Delves Broughton is the author of Ahead of the Curve: Two Years at Harvard Business School and The Art of the Sale. Most recently, he collaborated with Stephen Schwarzman, the chief executive officer of Blackstone on his memoir What it Takes: Lessons in the Pursuit of Excellence. He was educated at the University of Oxford and received his MBA at Harvard Business School. He began his career as a reporter and foreign correspondent for The Daily Telegraph (London) in New York and Paris. He was a regular columnist for the Financial Times for ten years, has been a managing director at Santander, the largest bank in Europe, and currently works at the Brunswick Group, a leading global communications firm. He lives in New York.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster (October 27, 2026)
  • Length: 352 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781668062333

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