-Caveat Lector-

..............................................................

>From the New Paradigms Project [Not Necessarily Endorsed]
Note:  We store 100's of related "New Paradigms Posts" at:
http://www.msen.com/~lloyd/oldprojects/recentmail.html

This article appears in the <A 
HREF="http://www.larouchepub.com/eirtoc/2002/eirtoc_2922.html";>June 7, 2002 issue</A> 
of Executive Intelligence
Review.

Subject:  What Did 'Energy Dialogue' At Bush-Putin Summit Mean?

by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach


The summit meeting between U.S. President George W. Bush and Russian
President Vladimir Putin on May 23-24, was hailed as "historic" for the
strategic arms reduction agreement signed. But that agreement has little
substance, militarily or otherwise. Both sides maintain a devastating nuclear
capability, and some warheads "reduced" on the American side will be merely
stockpiled, not destroyed.

The significance of the summit lies in the far-reaching "energy dialogue,"
encapsulated in a joint statement issued following the talks on May 24. Even
prior to the agreement, speculation had been rife in Russian and other
international media, about supposed U.S. plans to build up Russia's oil and
gas production, to replace those from the Persian Gulf, in case of a crisis.

The statement begins, "Successful development of the global economy depends
on timely and reliable energy delivery. In this context, we welcome the fact
that the Russian Federation has confirmed its role as a major world energy
provider. In order to strengthen our overall relationship and enhance global
energy security and international strategic stability, we have agreed to
launch a bilateral energy dialogue." The aims are to:

* "Develop bilateral cooperation in the energy sphere on a mutually
beneficial basis in accordance with our respective national energy policies.

* "Reduce volatility and enhance predictability of global energy markets and
reliability of global energy supply.

* "Facilitate commercial cooperation in the energy sector, enhancing
interaction between our companies in exploration, production, refining,
transportation and marketing of energy, as well as in implementation of joint
projects including those in third countries.

* "Encourage investment aimed at the further development and modernization of
the fuel and energy sector of Russia, including expansion of oil and gas
production in Eastern Siberia, the Far East, and offshore areas.

* "Promote access to world markets for Russian energy, including through the
commercial development and modernization of Russia's port and transportation
infrastructures, the electric power and gas sectors, and oil refining
capabilities.

* "Foster science, technological, and business cooperation in the use of
unconventional energy sources, and energy-efficient and environmentally clean
technologies.

* "Cooperate in elaboration and development of new ecologically safer nuclear
power technologies."

The statement also cites the Caspian Sea and implicitly Central Asia: It says
of the Caspian region, "We also welcome our commercial cooperation with the
United States and in other countries where our companies, and their
international partners' experience, technology, and capital can be joined to
provide the commercially reliable energy supplies which are essential to
fostering prosperity and global stability."

Who's Fooling Whom?

So much for the text. What the agreement actually means, is still an open
question. All any intelligent viewer could say, is: "Who in Hell-or, from Hell -is 
fooling whom?" Is Russia playing a deception game, waiting for America's
economic-financial and military-strategic problems to escalate further? Or,
is the "liberal" faction in Russia willing to make Russia "the West's energy
and raw materials supplier," with some nuclear weapons added as a "sweetener"
for having lost great power status?

Newsweek, in its May 27 issue, addressed this as a matter of how to make the
Great Game "look nice." Saying the "real news" of the summit was that "Moscow
and Washington aim to carve out a whole new relationship, particularly in
Central Asia," the magazine predicted the summit would yield a deal, whereby
Russia would make up for shortfalls in oil supplies from the Gulf-Middle East
region, in exchange for Western investments, and for integrating Central Asia
into world markets. Articles on this theme also appeared in Business Week,
the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Forbes magazine, Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty, and the German daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung,
among others.

During the summit, the Russian online publication Strana.ru published a piece
by its "Russian Observer," which outlined a nightmare scenario-at least for
the oil producers of the Persian Gulf. It said the intent was to make Russia
"an ally of the West in a vital Western economic security interest," and the
West an ally of Russia in the same terms. Author Ira Strauss, known for his
anti-Arab views, called the energy dialogue the first step toward an eventual
"Russia-West Oil and Gas Community"-which would spell "the end of OPEC," the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. Strauss cited Mikhail
Khodorkovsky of the Russian oil firm Yukos, saying there are "limitless"
opportunities for U.S.-Russia energy cooperation.

The scenario outlined in Strana.ru foresees a stage two, in which Russia
would join the International Energy Agency (IEA), "a fair price is agreed
upon for Russian oil, the West agrees to compensate Russia for financial
losses when oil prices fall below this level, and Russia agrees to compete
ruthlessly against OPEC to cut world oil prices as low as possible." Among
the "benefits" listed, we find also the notion that "desert sheikdoms stop
accumulating huge financial power.... And it lances the financial boil of
Middle Eastern societies, which have become unhealthier, cartel-and-extortion
societies through their oil wealth."

The third stage "Oil-Gas Community" is envisioned by the "Russian Observer"
as "like the Coal and Steel Community that laid the foundations of the
European Common Market, [and] could lay the foundations for a
Euro-Atlantic-Eurasian common market." The IEA, representing all the
countries of the global "North," is greatly strengthened against OPEC.

"IEA can set norms for energy policy, energy taxation, stabilization funds
and reserves, investment and production among its members. And the UN can set
global norms ... and dictate to OPEC. UN regulations can undermine what is
left of OPEC, outlawing its role as a cartel-an illegitimate form of
inter-governmental organization." The UN Security Council proclaims oil and
gas to be a commodity of global economic and security interest and to be
subject to global anti-trust regulation, as well as regulation motivated by
environmental and other concerns. In low-population high-oil states such as
the Gulf states ... it undoes their nationalization of oil, placing the oil
and gas fields under global ownership and authority."

The Russian 'Liberals'

The scenario outlined here would mean the triumph of "free trade," explicitly
wiping out the existing structure of oil production where nations still hold
sway over their resources, and eventually establishing a one-worldist
imperial control over raw materials, through a centralized agency. The key
personality mentioned on the Russian side, is Mikhail Khodorkovsky. The
chairman and CEO of Yukos, Khodorkovsky was featured in the Wall Street
Journal on April 29, in an article entitled, "Yukos Chief Sees Russian Oil
Firms Being Acquired Within a Few Years; Few To Be Independent After Spree by
Western Giants."

Khodorkovsky has, in fact, been a "frequent, welcome guest in London and
Washington" in the recent period. He this year opened the first overseas
office of Yukos, in London, and recruited Lord David Owen to become a member
of the board. At the London Russian Investment Forum on April 17-19,
Khodorkovsky delivered a keynote, in which he celebrated Russia's oil
potential, which, he said, exceeded that of the Gulf. He argued against PSAs
(production-sharing agreements) and in favor of Russia's developing its oil
on its own. Anders @aNslund, at a pre-briefing for the Bush-Putin summit held
at the New York Council on Foreign Relations, described Khodorkovsky as
someone who travels to Washington every other month, to promote Yukos'
interests, including Russia's reliability as an oil exporter. Khodorkovsky
was a presence in hosting a delegation of U.S. "investors" (mostly Wall
Street fund-manager types), who went to Moscow to meet with government and
business figures in mid-May, in advance of the summit.

If the profile of Khodorkovsky points in the direction of a raw materials
sell-out policy for Russia, it does not necessarily indicate that the Russian
political elite, beginning with Putin, is on this course. Many questions
remain open.

Could Russia ever replace the Persian Gulf as major oil and gas supplier for
the West? Figures cited by the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung on May 22, show
that 60% of the world's known oil reserves are in the Persian Gulf, as
against 12% in Russia. The United States currently gets 15% of its oil from
the Gulf, and less than 1% from Russia. Russian oil is more expensive due to
lack of transportation infrastruture: pipelines, port facilities, and so
forth.

The propaganda machines for "Russia, the new oil giant" report that in
February, it surpassed Saudi Arabia in oil production; however, it exports
only half. The surge was due to Russia's forging ahead in exports while OPEC
tried to support the oil price. Russia's restriction of oil exports this
Winter, was lifted in May after Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov's meeting
with the oil magnates. While export duties on oil are being raised, the
ceiling per company on exports has been removed. In addition, the increase in
Russian oil production reflects the coming on line of some investment
programs, undertaken by the Russian oil companies with their Western partners
in the post-1998-crash period, when investment became a bit more affordable.
According to one source, Russia is now using, in the older Siberian fields,
some productivity-boosting technologies applied in the North Sea a decade
ago, which can dramatically increase production in such fields for two or
three years.

Apart from the propaganda, two specific deals may be mentioned. In mid-April,
BP announced that it was paying $380 million to buy out the stakes of
Access-Renova and Alfa Group in the Russian oil company Sidanco, increasing
its ownership of Sidanco from 10% to 25%. At the end of the same month,
TotalFinaElf announced it was negotiating with Anglo Siberian Oil for rights
to develop the 900 million-barrel Yankor field in eastern Siberia. Exxon and
Royal Dutch Shell signed on for big new investments in the Sakhalin projects,
last year.

The Great Caspian Game

Perhaps the biggest question has to do with the thorny issue of Caspian Sea
oil and other resources. The Caspian, whose oil reserves have been estimated
at somewhere between 7.8 billion and a whopping 200 billion barrels, is on
the drawing board of numerous Anglo-American think-tanks, which identify it
as not only a raw materials-rich region, but a central pawn on the chessboard
of the Great Game for geopolitical control over Central Asia and the
Caucasus.

The legal regime which reigned over Caspian resources, until 1991, was
defined by the 1920 and 1941 agreements between the Soviet Union and Iran,
which were the only littoral states. After 1991, the two became five, as
Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, and Kazakstan came into being. For 12 years,
attempts to map out a new regime have failed, largely due to the influence of
the United States on Azerbaijan, against Iran (see "U.S., Iran Strategies
Compete in Central Asia," EIR, May 24, 2002).

The Caspian Sea summit meeting in Ashgabat in April marked, at the same time,
the high point and the low point of this negotiating process: although it was
an achievement in itself to hold such a summit, no agreement was reached.
Among many examples of American hostility to such an agreement including Iran
as an equal sovereign, in March Steven Mann, a State Department adviser,
spoke of "the possibility of exploiting the resources and reserves of the
Caspian Sea before setting up the legal regime," according to Izvestia
(emphasis added).

The position of Russia in this regard, was not self-evident like that of
America. In what has been dubbed by some Iranian press as a "schizophrenic
Russian-Iranian nexus," the relations between Moscow and Tehran are indeed
paradoxical. Russia has established excellent and improving economic, trade,
and military-strategic relations, crowned by a summit between Presidents
Mohammed Seyyed Khatami and Putin last year; and has maintained its
commitment to cooperation with Iran to complete the Bushehr nuclear power
plant, despite repeated U.S. pressure, most recently during Bush's visit.
Yet, Russia has appeared to be playing both sides aganst the middle regarding
the Caspian, and, more broadly, the raw materials factor in the Caucasus and
Central Asia.

Following the Caspian Sea summit, it was announced that Russia and Kazakstan
had signed a bilateral deal defining, between them, the borders of the sea.
Iran cried foul play, and then embarked on a diplomatic initiative to try to
regain some leverage over Azerbaijan. Further "bilateral" agreements may be
reached to the disadvantage of Tehran.

And it is not just the Caspian Sea resources, but the pipelines which have
become a bone of contention. U.S. policy has been to sabotage any and every
pipeline project running through Russia or Iran. Now, the emphasis appears to
have shifted more toward Iran, and again, the position of Moscow is not
clear.

Before the Caspian summit, Izvestia reported on March 14, that "America is
trying to use Georgia as the main route for the transit of energy from the
Caspian Sea to the Black Sea." Immediately following the summit, the Georgian
Embassy in Azerbaijan announced, "It has been decided that another oil
pipeline, called the 'Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan,' will be constructed by the year
2004 ... to transfer some 50 million tons of oil per year." The Iranian news
agency IRNA said on April 27 that the idea was to bypass Iran. David Woodward
of BP Azerbaijan was quoted, "The good news is that the pipeline is not going
through Russia or Iran."

A Russian Double Game Is Dangerous

On May 28, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, and Pakistan announced a meeting to
discuss launching a pipeline across their countries (the old UNOCAL "Taliban"
project), again an alternative to the route through Iran. And the pipeline
project to transfer gas from Turkmenistan through Iran across Turkey into
Europe, has been consistently sabotaged by Washington.

The United States' power to dictate energy policy matters seems to express
its growing military presence in the region. Azerbaijan has agreed to landing
rights for U.S. planes on its territory, and reportedly to U.S. support to
defend its maritime borders from Iran. Georgia is also hosting U.S. military;
America has established bases in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan, and is inching
its way in, via air-basing rights for "humanitarian" purposes, in Kazakstan
and Turkmenistan. These are all resource rich regions, once the sphere of
influence of the Soviet Union.

What emerges is a picture of a wild-eyed Anglo-American imperial predator,
bent on establishing its control over the raw materials-rich areas of the
globe, and preventing any independent state-Iran, or the Arab oil-producing
giants-from maintaining sovereign control over resources. Russia's stance is
the question mark in this picture. Rereading the text of the "energy
dialogue" statement only reinforces suspicions that it may be playing a
subtle, but very dangerous double game.




--
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Forwarded for info and discussion from the New Paradigms Discussion List,
not necessarily endorsed by:
***********************************

Lloyd Miller, Research Director for A-albionic Research a ruling
class/conspiracy research resource for the entire political-ideological
spectrum. **FREE RARE BOOK SEARCH: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> **
   Explore Our Archive:  <http://a-albionic.com/a-albionic.html>

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to