----- Original Message -----
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, August 10, 2000 2:29 PM
Subject: [STOPNATO] Cheney's Black Gold: Oil Drives U.S. Foreign Policy


STOP NATO: �NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.COM

Chicago Tribune
 CHENEY'S `BLACK GOLD�
OIL INTERESTS MAY DRIVE U.S. FOREIGN POLICY
By Marjorie Cohn. Marjorie Cohn, a professor at Thomas Jefferson School
of Law in San Diego, is on the roster of...
August 10, 2000
What do the Persian Gulf, the Caspian Sea and the Balkans have in
common? U.S. domination in these areas serves the interests of corporate
multimillionaires such as Dick Cheney. As George Bush's secretary of
defense, Cheney was chief prosecutor of Operation Desert Storm in 1991.
Humanitarian rhetoric notwithstanding, the bombing of Iraq--which
continues to this day--was primarily aimed at keeping the Persian Gulf
safe for U.S. oil interests. Shortly after Desert Storm, the Associated
Press reported Cheney's desire to broaden the United States' military
role in the region to hedge future threats to gulf oil resources.
Cheney is CEO of Dallas-based Halliburton Co., the biggest oil-services
company in the world. Because of the instability in the Persian Gulf,
Cheney and his fellow oilmen have zeroed in on the world's other major
source of oil--the Caspian Sea. Its rich oil and gas resources are
estimated at $4 trillion by U.S. News and World Report. The
Washington-based American Petroleum Institute, voice of the major U.S.
oil companies, called the Caspian region, "the area of greatest resource
potential outside of the Middle East." Cheney told a gaggle of oil
industry executives in 1998, "I can't think of a time when we've had a
region emerge as suddenly to become as strategically significant as the
Caspian."
But Caspian oil presents formidable obstacles. Landlocked between
Russia, Iran and a group of former Soviet republics, the Caspian's
"black gold" raises a transportation dilemma. Russia wants Caspian oil
to run through its territory to the Black Sea. The United States,
however, favors pipelines through its ally, Turkey.
Although the cheapest route would traverse Iran to the Persian Gulf,
U.S. sanctions against Iran block this alternative. Cheney has lobbied
long and hard, as recently as June, for the lifting of those sanctions,
to lubricate the Iran-Caspian connection. This is consistent with his
position, described in a 1997 article in The Oil and Gas Journal, that
oil and gas companies must do business in countries with policies
unpalatable to the U.S.
Cheney also favors the repeal of section 907 of the 1992 Freedom Support
Act, which severely restricts U.S. aid to Azerbaijan because of its
ethnic cleansing of the Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh, a mountainous
enclave in Azerbaijan. Why would Cheney choose to ignore Azerbaijan's
human-rights violations? Because Azerbaijan, key to the richest Caspian
oil deposits, is, according to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists,
"in fact, the focal point of the next round in the Great Game of
Nations, a dangerous, hot-headed place with a Klondike of wealth beneath
it. It is Bosnia with oil."
Cheney's oily fingerprints are all over the Balkans as well. Last year,
Halliburton's Brown & Root Division was awarded a $180 million a year
contract to supply U.S. forces in the Balkans. Cheney also sits on the
board of directors of Lockheed Martin, the world's largest defense
contractor. Replacing munitions used in the Balkans could result in $1
billion in new contracts.
War is big business and Dick Cheney is right in the middle of it.
Meanwhile, our energy and gasoline prices continue to soar in many parts
of the United States. OPEC controls the oil production in the Persian
Gulf. Cheney, worried about a falloff in investment, spoke in favor of
OPEC cutting oil production so oil and gasoline prices could rise.
Cheney is ineluctably invested in keeping the world safe for his
investments.
Although he stepped down as CEO of Halliburton, he still owns shares of
stock in the conglomerate and his financial interests in the Persian
Gulf, the Caspian region and the Balkans will invariably continue.
Chosen by George W. Bush to bring foreign-policy expertise to the GOP
presidential ticket, we can expect a Republic administration to increase
U.S. intervention in regions when it suits Dick Cheney's oil and other
corporate concerns.


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