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"Son of one of the five great oil families of Houston, Texas, William 
Farish, the American ambassador to Britain and a close friend of 
President George W Bush, is fascinated by the "black gold" that lies in 
large quantities in the countries around the Caspian Sea. Farish  has 
said US policy advisers are planning to strengthen America's military 
presence in the Balkans to safeguard planned pipelines to the vast oil 
and gas reserves of central Asia."

 http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/news/pages/sti/2001/09/23/stifgneur02003.html


US to build buffer zone in Balkans 

Tom Walker, Diplomatic Correspondent 

THE Bush administration is planning to strengthen its military presence 
in the Balkans, which it now sees as a potential buffer against terror 
threats from the east. 

William Farish, the American ambassador to Britain and a close friend of 
President George W Bush, has said US policy advisers are evaluating how 
best to safeguard American and European interests in the region, 
including planned pipelines to the vast oil and gas reserves of central 
Asia. 

Before Bush became president it was widely thought he favoured a phased 
withdrawal of troops from Bosnia and Kosovo. During a recent visit to 
Bondsteel, the main American base in Kosovo, he said the burden of 
peacekeeping should be borne by European armies. But after the terrorist 
attacks on New York and Washington, Farish told The Sunday Times that 
foreign policy was being radically rethought. 

"I think all of that is under review now, particularly in light of 
recent developments," he said in an interview. "What the final 
deployment is, is something that is under discussion - as it falls into 
play with the whole terrorist plan."  

Unusually for a new ambassador to Britain, Farish hopes to visit the 
Balkans within the next three weeks, and to assess American policy in 
Macedonia, the region's current tinderbox, before reporting back to 
Bush. 

He identified the Northern Ireland peace process and enlisting support 
for Bush's national missile defence plan as his other foreign policy 
priorities. 

Although Nato's operation to collect weapons from rebel Albanians ends 
this week, Nato planners are hoping many of the troops involved can stay 
on until a follow-up mission is agreed with the Macedonian government. 
Hardline members of the government in Skopje want Nato out of the 
country. 

Farish outlined a very different possible scenario, in which Nato 
strengthened its presence in the region, turning the Balkans into a 
prominent theatre of operations and training. Perhaps reflecting US 
fears of a rise in Islamic fundamentalism in Turkey, a Nato ally, Farish 
sees the Balkans as a possible buffer zone in future against unstable 
regimes to the east. 

There are currently 3,350 American peacekeepers in Bosnia among a total 
Nato-led force of 18,000, and 6,200 in Kosovo, among a force of 37,500. 
Several hundred American troops are providing logistical support for the 
arms-gathering operation in Macedonia. 

Farish said the key thinkers behind Bush's strategy were his deputy, 
Dick Cheney; the defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld; the national 
security adviser, Condoleezza Rice; and the secretary of state, Colin 
Powell. Their policy would be geared towards long-term stability, rather 
than what Farish described as the haphazard troop deployments of the 
Clinton years. 

"We won't see American troops thrown into every crisis like it's a 
dartboard," he said. 

The new ambassador is hardly limiting his field of vision, however. A 
son of one of the five great oil families of Houston, Texas, Farish is 
fascinated by the "black gold" that lies in large quantities in the 
countries around the Caspian Sea. He sees America's relationship with 
Russia and its leader, Vladimir Putin, as vital to its future influence 
in the area. 

"I think we'll see a whole new era between the United States and 
Russia," he said. "Putin appears to be very direct, very straightforward 
- he and President Bush will get along very well."

Last week the former prime minister of Kazakhstan, Akezhan Kazhegeldin, 
said America should join forces with Russia and use former Soviet 
pipelines to move oil to northern and southern
Europe. 

Farish believes the stability of Macedonia, which lies on a projected 
pipeline route between the Black Sea and the Adriatic, is vital to the 
region's economic development. "The whole area is in a state of flux," 
he said. "It's going to be a fascinating study for the next few years." 

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