From: bill wayland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: Pentagon's Central Asian game plan

HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

This article was printed several weeks ago in Workers World newspaper in the
United States. It has some significant information, especially toward the
end. It is worth noting that the Web site the article refers to seems to
have disappeared.


CASPIAN SEA

                            Washington's strategic target in Central Asia

                            By Cecil Williams

                            "America's new war!" That's what CNN calls
President George W. Bush's plans to bomb and invade
                            Central Asia and the Middle East.

                            There's not much new about it, though.

                            U.S. bombs and missiles have killed hundreds of
thousands of civilians in Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine,
                            Sudan, Somalia and Afghanistan in the past two
decades alone. No doubt many people in those
                            countries have acquired a deep dislike for the
United States.

                            When investigators look into a murder, however,
their first question is not, "Who disliked the
                            victim?" They want to know who will benefit from
the crime. The Sept. 11 deaths of over 6,000
                            people, many Muslims among them, benefit no one
in the Islamic world. But for some rich and
                            powerful people in the United States, the
tragedy will pay off quite handsomely.

                            "Since Sept. 11 opposition to increased military
spending has evaporated," the New York Times
                            reported Sept. 22. That should make the Pentagon
brass quite happy. Just a few months ago they
                            were publicly whining they hadn't gotten the
giant budget increase they were expecting after Bush's
                            selection as president.

                            Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was
complaining he couldn't get funds to build a "21st-century
                            military." Now Congress has not only voted the
Pentagon an emergency increase. Democrats say
                            they'll no longer object to Bush's antiballistic
missile pork barrel.

                            When generals, admirals and defense secretaries
retire from the military, they usually get jobs with
                            giant defense firms like General Electric and
Lockheed Martin. These firms are "among the
                            benefactors of the Sept. 11 tragedy," the New
York Times wrote.

                            Then there's the trenchcoat gang at the National
Security Agency, the CIA, the FBI and Secret
                            Service. Not to mention the new Office of
Homeland Security to be headed by Bush's fellow
                            executioner, Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge. They
have been promised funding and powers they
                            recently only dreamed of.

                            The CIA actually created Osama bin Laden's
organization back in the 1980s to attack Soviet troops
                            and the progressive government in Afghanistan.
As vice president, George Bush Sr. oversaw the
                            operation. In the Agency's employ, bin Laden's
troops murdered teachers, doctors and nurses,
                            disfigured women who took off the veil, and shot
down civilian airliners with U.S.-supplied Stinger
                            missiles. The Afghan people called bin Laden's
forces the "brotherhood of Satan."

                            The Afghanistan war was the biggest covert
operation in the CIA's history. It was paid for in part by
                            the heroin trade. Many who took part in the
operation were recruited by Egyptian, Pakistani and
                            Saudi intelligence services and didn't know they
were working for the CIA.

                            In 1990 and 1991 the CIA used bin Laden's's
group for operations against Iraq. More recently this
                            group carried out anti-Russian operations in
Chechnya and Daghestan and participated in
                            U.S.-backed operations against Yugoslavia.

                            No one has more to gain, however, than the
corporate big shots at Exxon, Mobil, Chevron and the
                            other big oil monopolies. For 10 years now they
have been scheming to get their hands on the vast
                            oil and gas wealth of former Soviet Central
Asia, just north of Afghanistan.

                            How to achieve that goal has been a U.S. foreign
policy priority since the fall of the Soviet Union.

                            In a Feb. 12, 1998, report to the House
Committee on International Relations, Unocal Corp. Vice
                            President for International Relations John J.
Maresca testified on the importance of this region. He
                            said: "The Caspian region contains tremendous
untapped hydrocarbon reserves. ...

                            "Proven natural gas reserves within Azerbaijan,
Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan equal
                            more than 236 trillion cubic feet. The region's
oil reserves may reach more than 60 billion barrels of
                            oil-enough to service Europe's oil needs for 11
years. Some estimates are as high as 200 billion
                            barrels."

                            Oil, of course, is a commodity in which Bush and
Vice President Dick Cheney have a deep personal
                            interest.

                            Now George W. has named his dad's old employees
in Afghanistan as the culprits in the Sept. 11
                            attack. And the Pentagon has demanded the right
to occupy the former Soviet republics named
                            above plus Kyrgizia. In other words, right where
the oil is.

                            According to the Sept. 25 New York Times, the
Putin regime in Moscow is offering the United States
                            broad support in this move.

                            The oil reserves are 10 percent of the world's
known supply, under or around the Caspian Sea.
                            That's worth about $5 trillion at today's
prices.

                            Maresca testified that since "the Asia/Pacific
region has a rapidly increasing demand for oil," it would
                            be useful to have an oil pipeline from the
Caspian region to the Indian Ocean--that is, through
                            Afghanistan. An unrecognized Taliban government
in Afghanistan is an obstacle to this, he wrote.

                            In May 1998, Time magazine reported that the CIA
had "set up a secret task force to monitor the
                            region's politics and gauge its wealth. Covert
CIA officers, some well-trained petroleum engineers,
                            had traveled through southern Russia and the
Caspian region to sniff out potential oil reserves.
                            When the policymakers heard the agency's report,
[Secretary of State Madeline] Albright concluded
                            that 'working to mold the area's future was one
of the most exciting things we can do.' "

                            That's just what Washington and Wall Street set
out to do. The Pentagon tried to entice the regions'
                            governments into a military alliance linked to
NATO's "Partnership for Peace." Oil companies hired
                            Washington insiders like Zbigniew Brzezinski,
Lloyd Bentsen, John Sununu and a certain Dick Cheney
                            to lobby for them in the region.

                            As the 20th century ended, it seemed their
efforts would be crowned with success. The U.S.
                            bombing of Yugoslavia seemed to block the
possibility of Caspian oil and gas reaching Western
                            Europe through Russian-owned pipelines.

                            Meanwhile President Bill Clinton's 1998 bombing
of Iraq pushed oil prices high enough to make
                            construction of a U.S.-owned pipeline seem
possible. "U.S. is Gaining in Great Game in Central Asia,"
                            a Time magazine headline crowed.

                            Then Boris Yeltsin resigned, and Vladimir Putin
took office in the Kremlin. The Putin administration
                            offered German banks stakes in Lukoil and
Gazprom, Russia's main energy companies. Russia began
                            to actively reassert its influence east of the
Caspian, and Central Asian governments began to stall
                            or renege on their deals with U.S. oil
companies. Former FBI Director Louis Freeh and CIA Director
                            George Tenet made emergency trips to the region.

                            The potential alliance of German capital and
Russian, Caucasus and Central Asian energy resources
                            raised the prospect that Western Europe would no
longer have to buy its oil and gas from U.S. firms.

                            Adding to the U.S.-based corporations' problems,
China began negotiating to build oil and gas
                            pipelines from Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. And
Russia brokered a treaty with Iran to divide up
                            the Caspian Sea without U.S. participation.

                            Oil industry journals blasted the Clinton
administration for "appeasing Russia" and moaned about
                            losing Central Asia.

                            Caucasuswatch.com bills itself as an
intelligence service for the oil industry. In January it wrote:
                            "With the coming of a Sino-Russian pact of
mutual assistance and an Iranian acceptance of the
                            Russian proposal to carve up the Caspian Sea,
any chance the U.S. had of cementing alliances in the
                            region seemed doomed. The incoming American
administration, heavy in oil and related interests,
                            will likely try to reverse this trend. How
effective they will be is open to question."

                            A more recent entry on the Web site tied U.S.
Big Oil's prospects in the region to "the success of the
                            Central Asian counterstrike." That article was
posted on April 29 of this year.


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