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From: Bob Olsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tue, 09 Oct 2001 21:50:01 -0400
To: (Recipient list suppressed)
Subject: Oil fuels the attack on Afghanistan



The oil behind Bush and Son's campaigns
By Ranjit Devraj 

http://atimes.com/global-econ/CJ06Dj01.html


NEW DELHI - Just as the Gulf War in 1991 was all about oil, the new
conflict in South and Central Asia is no less about access to the
region's abundant petroleum resources, according to Indian
analysts....

Where the "great game" in Afghanistan was once about czars and
commissars seeking access to the warm water ports of the Persian
Gulf, today it is about laying oil and gas pipelines to the untapped
petroleum reserves of Central Asia. According to testimony before the
US House of Representatives in March 1999 by the conservative think
tank Heritage Foundation, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and
Uzbekistan together have 15 billion barrels of proven oil reserves.
The same countries also have proven gas deposits totaling not less
than nine trillion cubic meters. Another study by the Institute for
Afghan Studies placed the total worth of oil and gas reserves in the
Central Asian republics at around US$3 trillion at last year's
prices. 

Not only can Afghanistan play a role in hosting pipelines connecting
Central Asia to international markets, but the country itself has
significant oil and gas deposits. During the Soviets' decade-long
occupation of Afghanistan, Moscow estimated Afghanistan's proven and
probable natural gas reserves at around five trillion cubic feet and
production reached 275 million cubic feet per day in the mid-1970s.
But sabotage by anti-Soviet mujahideen (freedom fighters) and by
rival groups in the civil war that followed Soviet withdrawal in 1989
virtually closed down gas production and ended deals for the supply
of gas to several European countries....

According to observers, one problem is the uncertainty over who the
beneficiaries in Afghanistan would be - the opposition Northern
Alliance, the Taliban, the Afghan people or indeed, whether any of
these would benefit at all. But the immediate reason for UNOCAL's
withdrawal was undoubtedly the US cruise missile attacks on Osama bin
Laden's terrorism training camps in Afghanistan in August 1998, done
in retaliation for the bombing of its embassies in Africa. UNOCAL
then stated that the project would have to wait until Afghanistan
achieved the "peace and stability necessary to obtain financing from
international agencies and a government that is recognized by the
United States and the United Nations".

The "coalition against terrorism" that US President George W Bush is
building now is the first opportunity that has any chance of making
UNOCAL's wish come true. If the coalition succeeds, Raghavan said, it
has the potential of "reconfiguring substantially the energy
scenarios for the 21st century".

http://atimes.com/global-econ/CJ06Dj01.html



  ............................................
  Bob Olsen   Toronto   <[EMAIL PROTECTED]

             Capitalism is war
  ............................................




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