Interesting item; and all the time I thought in  a communist state the
people owned everything - looks like Natiionalism mixed with new Yankee
Doodle Dandy know how?

So maybe this is what it is all about?   Rockefellers long ago wanted to
buy Russian Oi......goodbye mid East War and turmoil - take that oil and
shove it.

Think this might have caught the attention of someone?  Rather deal with
Arabs or Russianns.....after all the walls did come a tumbling down did
they not?

Saba


9:30am  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Fwd: Russia - Oil


[EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject:    Russia - Oil
Stratfor.com's Global Intelligence Update - 29 August 2000
_________________________________________
It's not news, it's intelligence.
*Coming Soon*

Oil, Power and Politics.
Crude oil prices are higher than anytime in the last 10 years, tripling
in just the last two years.

And yet, the world's largest consumer of oil - the United States - rolls
along, largely unaffected. The global economy is changing. Over the long
term, power relationships between the world's oil producers and oil
consumers will shift, as will economic relationships between competing
oil consumers.
_________________________________________
Russia: Putin's Coming Concession to the Oligarchs
Summary

On Sept. 19, the Russian government will put up for auction majority
control of the ONAKO oil company, one of the country's most profitable
energy companies. Because foreigners are barred from holding more than a
fraction of any Russian oil company, the government will likely be
forced to hand over control to the powerful businessmen once known as
oligarchs, the men that Putin has publicly campaigned against.

Analysis

After months of trying to rein in Russia's oligarchs, Russian President
Vladimir Putin will soon have to hand over to them a piece of the
country's most profitable industry: oil production. The government plans
to privatize the ONAKO oil company, the 11th largest oil company in the
country, selling off 85 percent of its shares.

The only true contenders for buying up control of the company - to be
auctioned off Sept. 19 with bids starting at $425 million - are members
of the wealthy, but allegedly corrupt, oligarchy.

The president has staked much of his presidency on diminishing the power
of these men, holdovers from the Yeltsin era. The Putin government will
soon be forced to pick one group of oligarchs over another, to control
ONAKO. The ONAKO auction may also set a precedent: It is the first of
four energy companies to be privatized.
______________________________________________
Would you like to see full text?
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______________________________________________
Russian law limits the amount of equity that foreign investors can
control in the country's oil companies, capping ownership at no more
than 15 percent, according to a June edition of the St. Petersburg
Times. The shares in ONAKO will be auctioned off to the highest bidder.

More than 20 groups have submitted an offer, but only two are true
contenders: LUKoil, the largest oil producer in Russia, and an alliance
of three smaller companies, Yukos, Sibneft and Surgutneftgaz. Two
oligarchs direct LUKoil, Rem Vyakhirev and Vagit Alekperov, although
these two men are largely under Kremlin control.

In contrast, the three oligarchs behind the alliance behind the other
companies - Yukos, Sibneft and Surgutneftgaz - are Mikhail Khodorkovsky,
Boris Berezovsky and Roman Abramovich. Putin has publicly sought their
power since taking office. They largely bought their way into power
under former President Boris Yeltsin, amassing fortunes and increasing
their political influence. Abramovich, widely considered Berezovsky's
protege, is a Duma member, as Berezovsky himself was until recently.
______________________________________________
For more on Russia, see:
http://www.stratfor.com/CIS/countries/Russia/default.htm
______________________________________________
Though not Russia's largest companies, ONAKO is one of the most
profitable. The average Russian oil company makes less than 30 percent
of its profits from exports; ONAKO exports 40 percent of its product,
enabling it to reap the benefits of the higher oil prices outside
Russia. Last year ONAKO earned as much money as some other companies by
pumping less oil, according to Russica Information on Aug. 16.

Allowing Berezovsky or Khodorkovsky to control the company would be a
dangerous risk for the Kremlin, considering the pasts of the two. Both
oligarchs were linked to the 1998 IMF money laundering scandal; both
have been targets of tax police raids or investigations in the past
three months according to articles in The Moscow Times in late August.
Berezovsky was notably absent from the late-July summit between Putin
and the oligarchs, while Khodorkovsky has links to businessmen recently
expelled from Bulgaria on corruption and money laundering allegations.

For ONAKO to remain profitable so that the government can take its share
of revenues and taxes, the government needs LUKoil to win the bid for
ONAKO. Putin has already won a battle with Gazprom's Rem Vyakirev.
Second, the government owns 15 percent of LUKoil's stock and plays a
controlling role behind the scenes of the company.

But the fact is that former oligarchs remain the only ones financially
stable enough to contend in the bidding. Unless Putin can get laws
passed that favor foreign investment in strategically important
industries, he will be stuck doing business with the oligarchs.
______________________________________________
For more on Russia and the CIS, see:
http://www.stratfor.com/CIS/default.htm
______________________________________________
(c) 2000 Stratfor, Inc.
______________________________________________
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A. Saba
Dare To Call It Conspiracy

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