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From: Miroslav Antic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: Central Asian oil and gas: the real reason for the US's war

HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
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Central Asian oil and gas: the real reason for the US's war on
Afghanistan 


   

by Zafar Bangash 

While America has couched its 'war' on Afghanistan in the language of
morality, more sinister motives are at work: desire to control the
Caspian Sea's oil and gas, as well as the destruction or removal
('neutralisation') of Pakistan's nuclear weapons. The Caspian Sea region
possesses proven reserves of more than 200 billion barrels of oil
(second only to Saudi Arabia) and trillions of cubic metres of gas;
Pakistan's nuclear capability is viewed with alarm in the West as well
as by Israel and India. American journalist Seymour Hersh, writing in
the New Yorker (November 5), revealed that US and Israeli commandos have
been conducting joint exercises aimed at "taking out" Pakistan's nuclear
warheads if general Pervez Musharraf is overthrown. Even before the
strikes on Afghanistan, observers in Pakistan had said that the US
really had its sights on Pakistan's nuclear armoury.

Amid growing anti-Musharraf feeling because of his acquiescence in the
US's anti-Taliban policy, Washington's policy-makers are now openly
discussing post-Musharraf possibilities. Despite assurances from
Islamabad, the Americans have said that Pakistan's nuclear weapons might
fall into the hands of "fundamentalists"; hence the frantic efforts to
take them out. According to the US, any Muslim who challenges or
criticises America's hegemony and arrogance is a "fundamentalist."

There have also been arrests of several Pakistani nuclear scientists. Dr
Sultan Basheeruddin Mahmood, Dr Abdul-Majid and Dr Mirza Yusuf Baig have
been arrested and interrogated extensively by the ISI. The first two
resigned from the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission in 1998 in protest
against then prime minister Nawaz Sharif's plans to sign the
Comprehensive Test-Ban Treaty. Dr Mahmood then established a welfare
organisation, Ta'meer-e Millat, whose purpose is to help the Afghans
build roads, construct dams for irrigation and electricity generation,
and set up and run factories. Details of his organisation's activities
have been published in the Lahore Urdu monthly Baidar (October 2001).
Yet so paranoid are the Americans, and so willing is Musharraf to oblige
them, that these scientists were arrested and interrogated at length. It
does not need much understanding to realise that scientific knowledge
alone cannot produce nuclear weapons. It is impossible to assemble even
a motor car, much less a nuclear bomb, in the mountains of Afghanistan
because of lack of parts, machinery and power, but American paranoia
ignores this.

The cigar-chewing oilmen from Texas are salivating at the prospect of
getting their hands on the Caspian Sea riches. Before becoming vice
president, Dick Cheney was chief executive of Halliburton, a major
oil-services company. No wonder he exclaimed in 1998: "I cannot think of
a time when we have had a region emerge as suddenly to become as
strategically significant as the Caspian." And George Bush Sr is a
consultant to the Carlyle Group, headed by Nick Carlucci, whose brother
Frank was defence secretary during the Reagan era. The Carlyle Group, a
private Washington equity firm that according to the New York Times has
become America's eleventh largest defence contractor, has close
connections with the Bin Ladin family. To the uninitiated this may seem
a minor detail, but such connections have a strong bearing on the manner
in which US policy is conducted.

The race to reach and control Caspian oil and gas was also behind the
emergence of the Taliban, with the US's knowledge and cooperation, in
1996. Until December 1998, the Americans feted the Taliban. Between 1996
and 1998 an American oil company, Unocal, actively lobbied the US
government and congress for accommodation with the Taliban so that a
pipeline could be built across Afghanistan to transport Caspian/Central
Asian oil and gas. In October 1998, when the Taliban announced that
Bridas, an Argentinian company, would build the pipeline, the Americans'
mood changed: the Taliban had to be removed; hence Usama bin Ladin
became their latest bogeyman.

The Americans refuse to allow oil to go through Islamic Iran, the most
natural and economical route. They are also averse to pipelines going
through Russia or Azerbaijan, because that would give Moscow access to a
vital energy source and enable the former colonial power to re-emerge as
the dominant player in Central Asia. The only route the Americans favour
is through Afghanistan, but the Taliban and Usama are in the way. That
is one of the real reasons for the military assault to dislodge them.
There is also the China route, but in addition to being prohibitively
expensive America's desire to control oil and gas is partly to deny free
access to Beijing, the emerging superpower.

China has tripled its gross domestic product (GDP) in the last 20 years,
a feat unmatched in history. If it continues to achieve this growth
rate, its economy will outstrip the US's in another 20 years. China's
economic growth, however, is predicated on access to cheap and reliable
energy sources, with Central Asia and the Caspian being the most natural
choice. So American attempts to control these energy sources assume
added significance. Similarly, gas is economical when used closer to its
source; unlike oil, gas transportation is expensive. It can be moved via
pipelines or in liquefied form: pipelines make it available for use only
in land-linked areas; turning it into liquid is again expensive and
therefore uneconomical.

As the military campaign in Afghanistan becomes a stalemate, other plans
come into play. For instance, the US's latest deal with Russia means
allowing Moscow a free hand in Chechnya while American troops can be
stationed in Central Asia, mainly Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. Much more
sinister is the plan that, should the Taliban lose control of Herat in
the northwest and Mazar-i Shareef in the north, both America and Russia
will establish permanent bases there. An American base in Herat will
then threaten Iran as well. It is this prospect that raises legitimate
concerns in Tehran.

US foreign policy is governed by the doctrine of "full-spectrum
dominance": the US must control military, economic and political
developments everywhere. China has responded by seeking to expand its
interests in Central Asia. The defence white paper that Beijing
published last year argued that "China's fundamental interests lie in...
the establishment and maintenance of a new regional security order." In
June China and Russia pulled four Central Asian republics into the
Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. Its purpose, according to Chinese
president Jiang Zemin, is to "foster world multi-polarisation", ie.
challenge the US's role as the "sole superpower".

The outcome of the struggle in Afghanistan will determine whether or not
the US succeeds in its designs. If the 'war' drags on, it is likely that
China will begin to supply weapons to the Taliban. Should that happen,
the Russians may jump in too, in retaliation for their own defeat in
Afghanistan. We may yet see a replay of Vietnam in Afghanistan, but the
Americans can only blame themselves if that humiliation repeats itself.

Source:
  

by courtesy & C 2001 Crescent International
<http://www.muslimedia.com/> & Zafar Bangash


by the same author:

Israel increasing brutalities
<http://www.mediamonitors.net/bangash1.html> against Palestinians in bid
to end intifada 
                      <javascript:void(0)> More in 'Perspective' or
<javascript:void(0)> 'Archive'

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