-Caveat Lector-

On 29 Oct 01, at 0:33, Ric Carter wrote:

> Can any readers here refer me to some NON-RUMOR news about
> Balkan pipelines?

Go to
http://www.en.monde-diplomatique.fr/
and look at the maps they have available (for no charge).  There's at
least one that has a map of the area and existing, proposed (good)
and proposed (bad) pipelines.  The key to Yugoslavia is to stabilise
it and make it neutered.  Since before WW2, it was the only hold-out
to any strong alliances or associations with various international
groups.

There's an articl somewhere (I posted it about a year or so ago) that
claimed that there was a plan to pump oil directly from Iraq through
Syria and Turkey then through the Balkans (Croatia) into Europe,
thereby eliminating ships and such.

Until then, how's about this?

From
http://www.endgame.org/oilwars-balkans.html
}}}>Begin
Oil Wars: The Balkans
by George Draffan
www.endgame.org
for more on the military-industrial complex, click here
a case study for the report The Corporate Consensus Wars are often
blamed on political, ethnic, and religious animosities, but war is
more often the inflamation of these conflicts -- and war is usually
about resources: land, transport routes, and above all, resources.
What's the most valuable resource in the modern world? Oil.
The 1995 Dayton Accords led to a major NATO military operation to
"pacificy" Bosnia-Herzegovina. For the multinational corporations
working alongside NATO, one of the most important rewards will be the
construction of a trans-Balkan pipeline to bring oil from the Caspian
Sea region to Europe. William Ramsay, U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary
of State for Energy, Sanctions And Commodities, claiming that that
Caspian oil is "crucial to the world energy balance over the next 25
years," has revealed that "there already exists a kind of outline of
a new Silk Road running through the Caucasus and beyond the Caspian.
We think oil and gas pipelines, roads, railways and fiber optics can
make this 21st century Silk Road a superhighway linking Europe and
Central Asia."
The European Union, the U.S. government, and a gang of multinational
corporations (including BP, Amoco, Exxon, Unocal, Caterpillar,
Halliburton/Brown & Root, and Mitsubishi) are using all the military,
political, and economic tools at their disposal to destroy and
recreate the infrastructure and economy of southeastern Europe in
their own image. The conflicts of interest between government
officials and corporate executives are blatant and revealing.
Recent NATO military action in Yugoslavia is part of a long strategic
(economic) battle to control the Balkans. The current focus is to
secure oil and gas pipeline routes from the oilfields of the Caspian
Sea to the consu
mers of Europe. Multinational oil corporations from the U.S., Britain and other 
European countries, and Russia are signing multibillion-dollar contracts with 
Kazakhstan,
"The oil from this region played a major strategic role during this century's two 
world wars. Protecting the oilfields of the Caucasus was an Allied priority. During 
the second world war, oil from the Caucasus was an esse
ntial target of Hitler's expansionist policies. Following the 1939 German-Soviet pact, 
Soviet oil from the Caucasus accounted for a third of Germany's imports. In 1942, 
Germany repeatedly conducted military campaigns to g
ain control over the region's natural resources. Towards the end of the 19th century, 
cut-throat competition had already built up between the oil companies. Russia, fearing 
loss of control over its petroleum markets, sabo
taged an agreement in 1895 between American Standard Oil, the Rothschilds and Nobels. 
Competition in the region was increasingly fuelled by ethnic conflict, administrative 
corruption and underdeveloped legal and trade pra
ctices. Natural resources have [again] become a major issue in the Caucasus and 
central Asia in recent years. Specialists reckon that the area might contain the 
world's third largest oil and natural gas reserves after the
 Gulf region and Siberia. Oil resources are estimated at 200 billion barrels. The most 
extensive fields have been located in Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan. Other lesser reserves 
and oil exploitation sites are to be found in G
eorgia, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Armenia... The fall of the Soviet empire and its 
concomitant loss of influence in the region has turned the latter into a grey area 
where regional powers are pitted against one another
, each seeking to ensure that their interests prevail within the new successor 
republics to the former USSR. These countries are seeking a balance between the 
interests of the regional power brokers and their own national
 interests and are hoping that their natural resources will offer them the means of 
developing their economies, thus generating the stability that is needed within the 
region. One of the major problems of these landlocked
 states is oil transport, for which they are dependent on cooperation with their 
neighbours. This is leading to the formation at regional and international levels of a 
series of alliances and counter alliances, the aim of
 which is to allow the countries involved to gain access to or influence over some of 
the world's most important natural reserves."
"Two questions loom over the region's future: Who owns the bonanza? Who will transport 
it to market? The answers will help shape the global economy in the next century and 
the international order that governs it. The term
s are now being set in some of the most intense corporate negotiations the world has 
ever seen -- and on a ring of battlefields that encircles the Caspian basin."
In 1998, civil war in the Georgian province of Abkhazia was fueled by Russian weapons 
to both sides, perhaps to destabilize Georgia shortly before a decision was to be made 
whether to route the U.S.-backed Main Export Pip
eline through Rusia rather than through Georgia. "Moscow wants Georgia to be unstable. 
It's in their interest," charges Vakhtang Kolbaia, deputy chairman of the Georgian 
parliament. "Western countries understandably requi
re security for their investments."
As reported by Project Underground in its journal Drillbits and Tailings, "Less than a 
decade after the final diplomatic skirmishes of the Cold War, the men who led the 
battle on both sides have joined forces to exploit t
he oil reserves of the Caspian Sea. The Caspian, which is the world's largest inland 
sea, is estimated to contain as much as 200 billion barrels of oil alone plus another 
100 billion barrels' worth of gas under the neighb
oring Kara Kum Desert and other sites. At average price levels for the 1990s, that 
adds up to a treasure chest of roughly US$5 trillion. Today Amoco, British Petroleum, 
Chevron, Exxon, Mobil and Unocal are leading a multi
-billion dollar frenzy to extract these reserves from Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and 
Turkmenistan, the three countries that surround the Caspian together with Russia and 
Iran."
The U.S.-based oil multinational Chevron is leading a Caspian Pipeline Consortium 
which is developing Caspian-Kazakhstan oil deposits. "Kazakhstan has begun exporting 
its oil to Europe without using the old Russian networ
k. In late 1996, Tengizchevroil (a joint venture between Kazakhstan and the American 
company Chevron) exported oil to Europe by road, rail and ship. Existing pipelines 
today all run through Russia and Kazakhstan is thus d
ependent on Russia's goodwill. However, Kazakhstan signed an agreement with China on 
28 September 1997 providing, inter alia, for joint construction of two oil pipelines, 
to be operational by the year 2002. Under the Teng
izchevroil joint venture, Kazakhstan's Tengiz oilfield began operations in April 1993. 
Chevron's investment in this contract is probably one of the largest made by an 
American company on the territory of the former Soviet
 Union."
In 1992 and 1995, Kazakhstan signed agreements with British Gas and Agip to restore 
its Karachaganak field.
Atlantic Richfield (ARCO) has a contract with Turkey to develop oil and gas from the 
Black Sea.
In 1991, Azerbaijan began negotiating with Amoco, BP, McDermott, Pennzoil, Ramco, 
Unocal, TPAO, Statoil and other corporations on a deal to develop the Azeri, Chirag 
and Gunashli fields in the Azeri sector of the Caspian
Sea. Azerbaijan's State Oil Company (SOCAR) is to have a 20 percent share in the 
project and the Russian company Lukoil will take a 10 percent holding. The deal was 
signed in September 1994, and in December the consortium
 had formed as the Azerbaijan International Operating Company (AIOC), with Terry D. 
Adams as chairman. American corporations (Amoco, Pennzoil, Unocal, Exxon) have a 40 
percent interest in the $8 billion AIOC. British corp
orations (BP, Ramco Khazar) have a 19 percent interest. SOCAR (Azerbaijan), Lukoil 
(Russia), Den Norske Stats Olieselscap (Norway), Turkie Petrollari (Turkey), Itochu 
(Japan), and Delta Nimir Khazar (Saudi Arabia) are als
o involved.
The AIOC consortium's plan to build a pipeline from Baku to Ceylon, Turkey, has gotten 
lobbying assistance from former British Energy Minister Tim Eggar (now CEO of the 
British corporation Monument Oil), former British Fo
reign Minister Malcolm Rifkind (now a director of the British oil corporation Ramco), 
two former U.S. National Security Advisors, Zbigniew Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft 
(now a director of AIOC), as well as former U.S. Se
cretary of State James Baker (oil corporation attorney), former U.S. Secretary of the 
Treasury Lloyd Bentsen, former U.S. Defense Secretary Dick Cheney (then CEO of oil 
services corporation Halliburton, now candidate for
U.S. Vice President), and former Whie House chief of staff John Sununu. Iran-Contra 
figure and former U.S. Air Force major general Richard Secord has been helping to 
train the Azerbaijani army.
In November 1995, the Azeri government signed a contract with the CIPCO (Caspian 
International Petroleum Company) made up of Lukoil (Russia), Agip (Italy), and 
Pennzoil (U.S.) to develop the the Karabakh oil and gas field
 (no connection with the Nagorno-Karabakh region) 120 kilometers off the coast of 
Baku, with reserves estimated at between 450 million and 1.26 billion barrels of crude 
oil and natural gas.
By 1997, Exxon, Pennzoil, Amoco and Unocal had invested $5 billion in Azerbaijan.
In October 1997, Turkmenistan signed a $2 billion contract with an international 
consortium led by Unocal company to build a pipeline from Turkmenistan to Pakistan via 
a route that crosses 750 kilometers of Afghanistan. T
urkmenistan President Niyazov confirmed that he had the promise of support for the 
pipeline from the both the ruling Taliban and from anti-Taliban factions.
"Chevron, as a partner in the Caspian Pipeline Consortium with Kazakhstan, supports a 
$2 billion Russian route from Kazakhstan to Novorossiysk that is already under 
construction -- a step that puts the San Francisco firm
at odds with Washington. The United States government and a majority of American oil 
firms have thrown their weight behind the longest and most expensive proposed 
pipeline, a 1,030-mile, $3 billion conduit across Azerbaij
an, Georgia and Turkey, from Baku on the Caspian Sea to the Turkish port of Ceyhan on 
the Mediterranean. Azerbaijan is also publicly committed to the Ceyhan MEP system, 
which would tentatively be joined to a proposed $2 b
illion pipeline under the Caspian carrying oil from Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan. The 
Ceyhan MEP is expected to cost 50 percent more than the proposed new Russian system. 
But advocates point out that it would avoid the nar
row and crowded shipping lanes on the Bosporus strait between the Black Sea and the 
Mediterranean, where oil spills would bring disaster to the most heavily populated 
area of Turkey. In May [1998], Washington formally lau
nched its "Caspian Sea Initiative," authorizing the U.S. Export-Import Bank and two 
other federal agencies to support 65 energy projects in the region. All are tied to 
the Baku-Ceyhan route. [In 1999], the new Western Pip
eline from Baku to the Georgian Black Sea port of Supsa goes into operation. Like the 
proposed Ceyhan route, it bypasses Russia entirely, for reasons that that have as much 
to do with international gamesmanship as they do
 with money or technical feasibility.... The only existing pipeline courses through 
Russia, a country whose dependence on volatile energy revenues is as dangerously high 
as that of its tiny, resource-rich former satellite
s. A quarter of all Russian tax receipts now comes from oil industry levies and fees. 
Both the country's young prime minister, Sergei Kiriyenko, and his predecessor, Viktor 
Chernomyrdin, are former gas or oil company pres
idents. The Kiriyenko government hopes to revive a deeply ailing economy by drawing 
the bulk of Caspian basin oil to a much larger new pipeline to Novorossiysk. Rival 
pipelines through their own countries are also being p
ushed by Ukraine, Romania, Greece, Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, China 
and Armenia. But the primary contenders are the routes to Novorossiysk and Ceyhan -- 
each of which plunges into a battle zone. Support fo
r a Ceyhan pipeline will drag the American government and U.S. corporations ever 
deeper into the Turkish campaign against Kurdish insurgents, which is already being 
fought with American F-16s serviced by U.S. Air Force ma
intenance crews.
In April 1999, the government of Azerbaijan signed contracts with Exxon and Mobil to 
develop offshore oilfields in the Caspian Sea. The signing ceremony took place at the 
U.S. White House, and was presided over by U.S. Se
cretary of Commerce William M. Daley.
"If we're going to have a strong relationship that includes our ability to sell around 
the world, Europe has got to be a key....That's what this Kosovo thing is all about." 
-- U.S. President Clinton
Meanwhile, the Azerbaijan government is selling off ports, railroads, the national 
airline, airports and other state-run enterprises to foreign investors.
The U.S. Exim Bank, U.S. OPIC, and the World Bank are interested in financing and 
insuring a Balkans pipeline. In 1998, U.S. President Clinton created an Office of the 
Special Advisor to the President and the Secretary of
 State for Caspian Basin Energy Diplomacy.
In April 1998, U.S. President Clinton and Vice President Gore gave a $750,000 grant to 
Turkmenistan President Saparmurat Niyazov to pay for a study of a gas pipeline that 
would circumvent Iran by going through Turkey. It
was also an enticement for doing further business with Western oil corporations; while 
Turkmenistan had signed deals with Mobil and Monument Oil, the country refused to 
privatize its economy. Unocal has been planning a pi
peline to send Turkmen gas to Pakistan via Afghanistan, but fighting between the 
ruling Taliban government and opposition in the north had delayed that project. In May 
1998, U.S. Export-Import Bank president James Harmon
was sent to Turkmenistan to help finance the export of American goods.
"With Russia to the north, Iran to the south, and the multiethnic Caucasus Mountains 
strewn across its middle, Azerbaijan is in one of the world's most war-prone 
neighborhoods... Besides Russia and Iran, there are the reb
ellious Chechens, who control the main pipeline route from Azerbaijan to the west, and 
the Georgians and Turks, who are lobbying furiously to have the oil rerouted through 
their territories instead. And to the west is Arm
enia, which has occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan's territory since it seized the 
enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh in the early 1990s, and has vowed to block any oil 
pipeline in its vicinity. Yet, U.S. officials in Baku say th
ey hope that Azerbaijan's oil will salve the region's ethnic animosities, rather than 
aggravate them. Because pipelines will have to be built across several countries, the 
thinking goes, everyone stands to benefit. Presid
ent Clinton has personally telephoned the Azeri leader, Aliyev, to recommend that oil 
be pumped out through two pipelines, one traversing southern Russia and one through 
Georgia, and then perhaps continuing on to Turkey a
s the oil flows increase... President Aliyev, a canny former Politburo boss who rules 
Azerbaijan with only token political opposition, is well aware of his country's 
importance to the United States and the West, and he is
 trying to make the most of it. When he handed out exploration contracts, he made sure 
that oil giants from every major Western country were in on the deal, including Exxon, 
Pennzoil, Amoco, Unocal, British Petroleum, and
 even Russia's Lukoil. By crafting such an elaborate network of friendships, Aliyev 
hopes to balance all the forces who greedily eye his country's wealth. Azerbaijan is 
the only former Soviet republic outside the Baltic s
tates that has not been forced to accept Russian military bases. It is unabashedly 
pro-American, and has even petitioned to join NATO."
In June 1999 the U.S. Trade and Development Agency awarded a $588,000 grant to 
Bulgaria to explore building a pipeline across Bulgaria, Macedonia and Albania to pump 
Caspian Sea oil European consumers-just before NATO and
 Russia reached agreement on action in Kosovo.
"The U.S. government has given Bulgaria a half-million dollar grant to explore 
building a pipeline across the Balkans to pump Caspian Sea oil to the West, sending 
shock waves through Turkey, a key U.S. ally that wants the
 potentially lucrative pipeline for itself .... The decision has raised speculation 
among regional experts that it may be part of a larger economic development plan 
envisioned by the Clinton administration to stabilize th
e southern Balkans after the massive dislocations and infrastructure damage caused by 
the Serbian repression in Kosovo and the US -led NATO bombing of Serbia." -- UPI
"How absurd it is to refer to the oil in the Caspian Sea region as having anything to 
do with the NATO operation. The Caspian Sea is over a thousand miles from Yugoslavia." 
- commentator in The Guardian newspaper
"Stated U.S. policy goals regarding energy resources in this region include fostering 
the independence of the new states and their ties to the West, breaking Russia's 
monopoly over oil and gas transport routes, encouragin
g the construction of East/West pipelines that do not transit Iran and denying Iran 
dangerous leverage over the central Asian economies." -- chairman of U.S. House 
Committee on International Relations
 "The key tactical objective of the [NATO] air war seems to be the deindustrialization 
of Serbia and Vojvodina, by the destruction of key national refinery, communication 
and transportation assets in day and night bombard
ment. John Broder has recently quoted Clinton as saying that "Europeans would...pay 
most of the cost of rebuilding Yugoslavia" after the war. It is more likely that this 
help will come in the form of IMF arranged privatiz
ation of these economic sectors of Serbia by transnational corporations at fire sale 
prices. The control of oil fields in Vojvodina, approximately five billion in mineral 
deposits and the second largest European deposit o
f lignite coal (17 billion tons) in Kosmet, are just secondary prizes."
Reconstructing Yugoslavia after the war will cost $30 to $100 billion. In July 1999, a 
Balkan Assistance and Reconstruction Conference in Washington DC was organized Equity 
International to provide a venue for government
officials to meet with corporate executives from Caterpillar, Halliburton/Brown & Root 
((see profile of NATO), International Paper, Mitsubishi, and other corporations to 
plan the financial and political needs for the occu
pation and operation of the Balkans.
While Dick Cheney was U.S. Secretary of Defense, U.S. construction giant Brown & Root 
was awarded hundreds of millions of dollars worth of construction contracts in war 
zones from Bosnia to Somalia to Haiti. Soon after, C
heney quit the Pentagon and was hired as the CEO of Halliburton, the corporate parent 
of Brown & Root.
NATO provides the military strength, and under a June 1999 "Stability Pact" drawn up 
by the U.S., UK, Germany, France, Italy, Canada, Japan and Russia, Balkan 
reconstruction will be coordinated by the European Union in co
njunction with the World Bank and the United Nations. "A determined push is being made 
by Europe to dominate the Balkans in the aftermath of the war. Yesterday the Blair 
government organised a second meeting to encourage
and organise bids by British construction firms and consultants for the rebuilding of 
Kosovo, worth an estimated £3 billion. Contracts for the entire Balkan region are 
estimated to be worth £30 billion. The pattern is bei
ng repeated throughout Europe. To the same end in Germany, the Schröder government is 
setting up a task force involving ministries and private firms." As a condition for 
membership in the EU, there will be a permanent arm
ed presence and the EU would have overall control of "customs services and policing 
powers to control all port and frontier crossings, as a condition of New Associate 
Membership." Bosnian economic policy will be controlle
d by a Western central bank governor from New Zealand, designated by the IMF.
One of the gems of Yugoslavian privatization is the state-owned Trepca mining complex 
which has reserves of lead, zinc, cadmium, gold, silver, and billions of tons of coal, 
being processed by smelting plants, metal treatm
ent sites, freight yards, railroad lines, and a power plant.
"Major NATO efforts will also be required in Turkey to control a part of Kurdistan's 
65 Gbo of oil reserves and the oil pipeline from the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk to 
Turkey's Mediterranean port of Ceyhan. The planned
 major oil and gas pipelines between Azerbaijan to the port of Ceyhan will require 
additional security. There are also plans to extend this gas pipeline to Israel, which 
may explain recent joint Turkey and Israel military
 exercises. The need to protect this new pipeline will eventually be used to justify 
an aggressive new NATO pacification action against the Kurdish people. The new 30 
billion-five year agreement to modernization of Turkey
's military by US arms merchants seems to bear out this possibility. Turkey has 
already killed thousands of Kurds, destroyed some 3,000 villages, and created about 
two million refugees in the last 14 years! What will happ
en when Turkey really gets serious about pipeline security!" Sources:
Caspian Times http://www.caspiantimes.com
James Robbins, Wagons East: International Trade and the FRY-NATO War, Academy for 
Peace, http://www.zoran.net/afp/text/submitted/wagons_east.htm
Stuart Parrott, Pipeline Superhighway Replaces The Silk Road, London, Nov 19 1997.
Assembly of the Western European Union, Document 1586, The Situation in Central Asia 
and the Caucasus and European Security, November 19, 1997, 
http://assembly.weu.int/eng/reports/1586-2.html
Frank Viviano, Caspian Ring of Fire: Raging War Zones Surround Planned Network of Oil 
Export Pipelines, San Francisco Chronicle, August 11, 1998, p. A1.
Project Underground, Kings Of The Caspian, Drillbits and Tailings, October 7, 1999, 
http://www.moles.org
Paul Michael Wihbey, Looking at Balkans Route for Caspian Crude, United Press Intl, 
June 23, 1999.
Christopher Hitchens, When It Comes to the Great Game of Influence, Bill Clinton Knows 
How to Play by the Rules, Salon, Sept 29, 1997, 
http://www.salon.com/sept97/columnists/hitchens970929.html
David Ottaway and Dan Morgan, Former Top U.S. Aides Seek Caspian Gusher, Washington 
Post, July 6, 1997.
Inga Saffron, Black gold, Once Red, Fuels an Oil Rush, Knight-Ridder, July 20, 1997, 
http://www.texnews.com/biz97/azeroil072097.html
Frank Viviano, Caspian Ring of Fire: Raging War Zones Surround Planned Network of Oil 
Export Pipelines, San Francisco Chronicle, August 11, 1998, p. A1.
Frank Viviano, Black Gold, Iron Rule, San Francisco Chronicle, Aug 13, 1998.
Benjamin Schwarz and Christopher Layne, The Case Against Intervention in Kosovo, The 
Nation, April 19, 1999.
David E. Sanger, Oilfields in Mind, White House Woos Turkmenistan's Chief, New York 
Times, April 24, 1998, p. A6.
Sam Smith, The Caspian Connection, The Progressive Review, July 9, 1999.
Lenora Foerstel, U.S. and NATO Goals in the Balkans, International
Action Center, http://www.iacenter.org/warcrime/lfoerstl.htm
U.S. General Accounting Office, March 1996, Brown & Root cost
overruns in Bosnia
John Diamond, Associated Press, Construction Company Headed by Cheney
Gains Extra Millions in Bosnia, Seattle Times, Mar. 24, 1996, p. A1-
A2.
Chris Marsden, Europe's plan to control the Balkans, June 22, 1999,
World Socialist Web Site,
http://www.wsws.org/articles/1999/jun1999/euro-j22.shtml
Gail Mansouri, Economic Motivation for the U.S./NATO War Against
Yugoslavia, International Action Center,
http://www.iacenter.org/warcrime/15_econ.htm
Diane Johnstone et al, The U.S. and NATO Deliberately Started the War
with Yugoslavia, Village Voice. (Project Censored 1999 Top Story
#10).

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