(Fascinating article on the tangled relationship between the Bulgarian 
ultraright, the EU and Putin's failed attempt to build a natural gas 
pipeline.)

NY Times, Dec. 31 2014
How Putin Forged a Pipeline Deal That Derailed
By JIM YARDLEY and JO BECKER

SOFIA, Bulgaria — Barely two weeks after President Vladimir V. Putin 
annexed Crimea on one side of the Black Sea, he won a different prize on 
the other side. In Bulgaria’s Parliament, lawmakers gave initial passage 
to a bill clearing the way for a mammoth gas pipeline from Russia.

The pipeline, known as South Stream, was Mr. Putin’s most important 
European project, a tool of economic and geopolitical power critical to 
twin goals: keeping Europe hooked on Russian gas, and further 
entrenching Russian influence in fragile former Soviet satellite states 
as part of a broader effort to undermine European unity.

The bill that Parliament took up on April 4 was arcane. But it swept 
aside a host of European regulations — rules that Mr. Putin did not want 
to abide by — for a pipeline that would deliver gas throughout southern 
Europe.

It was a dream bill for Mr. Putin, and with reason. While Bulgaria’s 
Energy Ministry ostensibly wrote the legislation, documents reveal the 
hidden hand of the Kremlin: Not only did much of the language come from 
a subsidiary of Russia’s state-owned energy giant, Gazprom, but Mr. 
Putin’s energy minister was directly involved.

For years, Mr. Putin bullied and cajoled Bulgaria, one of the European 
Union’s weakest nations, into doing Russia’s bidding on South Stream. 
And he seemed poised to succeed, but for one fundamental miscalculation: 
He underestimated the West’s response to his aggression in Ukraine. 
Faced with punishing sanctions, a petro-economy pushed to the brink by 
plunging oil prices and the wildly gyrating value of the ruble, Mr. 
Putin this month halted the project.

But if the story of South Stream shows how larger geopolitical concerns 
can, at least temporarily, limit Mr. Putin’s ability to use his energy 
riches as a foreign-policy tool, it is also a case study of how he has 
operated in Europe, and will probably continue to do so.

He has won influence abroad by wielding the tools of crony capitalism 
that have made him so powerful at home. After a secret meeting between 
Bulgaria’s prime minister and the head of Gazprom, pipeline contracts 
were given to a company controlled by a member of Mr. Putin’s inner 
circle and politically connected Bulgarian companies.

In Russia, Mr. Putin has at times used Russia’s state-owned banks for 
his own ends; they helped underwrite the Sochi Olympics, for instance. 
In Bulgaria, a subsidiary of one of those banks, VTB, showered the 
country with politically strategic investments as Mr. Putin pushed the 
government to move forward on South Stream.

As elsewhere in Europe, Mr. Putin courted Bulgaria’s pro-Russian far 
right party, which promoted Russian interests by helping to beat back 
plans to explore for Bulgarian shale gas. Seeking to nail down support 
for South Stream, a member of the Russian Parliament, whose card 
identified him as a special emissary of Mr. Putin, even offered what one 
former Energy Ministry official understood to be a tacit bribe.

“It’s not just South Stream, and it’s not just Bulgaria,” said the 
Bulgarian official, Bojan Stoyanov, who was deputy energy minister in 
2013. “The Russians are promoting behavior where people are willing to 
dig the hole of a volcano in the middle of their country and not worry 
where the lava goes as long as they get paid.”

Putin’s Favorite Musicians

Vladimir Putin had a problem.

By 2011, his plan to build South Stream, estimated to cost more than $40 
billion and four years in the making, had hit a stumbling block in 
Bulgaria, where the pipeline would make landfall after traversing the 
bed of the Black Sea. Geological surveys suggested that Bulgaria could 
be sitting atop an underground ocean of natural gas, enough to be 
self-sufficient for years, enough to eclipse the advantages of South Stream.

Bulgaria, once a staunch Soviet ally, and Russia share similarities in 
language, religion and culture, and Bulgaria still celebrates as a 
national holiday its 1878 liberation from the Ottoman Empire by the 
troops of the czar. Bulgarian leaders supported South Stream, declaring 
that the pipeline would provide not just transit fees but energy 
security: The country receives 90 percent of its gas from Russia, along 
a route through Ukraine that has left it vulnerable to periodic pricing 
disputes between Moscow and Kiev. In the winter of 2009, Bulgarians were 
left shivering for two weeks when Russia shut off the gas to teach 
Ukraine a lesson.

But in the middle of 2011, Bulgaria’s prime minister, Boiko Borisov, 
also granted Chevron a permit to explore for shale gas. Almost 
immediately, a well-organized campaign emerged to kill shale exploration 
before it began, fueled in part by loyalists for Ataka, one of several 
far-right parties that Mr. Putin has cultivated in Europe. Parties like 
Jobbik in Hungary and the Northern League in Italy view Mr. Putin as a 
bulwark against a tide of Western liberalism. But the appeal is more 
than ideological. In France, the leader of the far-right National Front, 
Marine Le Pen, recently acknowledged that her party had received a loan 
for 9 million euros, or about $11 million, from a Kremlin bank.

In Bulgaria, Volen Siderov, the chairman of Ataka, said his party 
received no direct funds from Moscow.

“I’ll ask her how she managed to do it,” he joked of Ms. Le Pen.

Still, Mr. Siderov has undeniably close ties to the Kremlin. He kicked 
off his most recent political campaign in Moscow, where he was receiving 
the Fatherland Star medal for promoting closer relations between Russia 
and Bulgaria. When he needed entertainment for a rally this fall, he 
landed singers described in Ataka promotional literature as “Putin’s 
favorite musicians”: Oleg Gazmanov, an aging Russian pop singer, and 
Iosif Kobzon, a lawmaker and singer who recently performed in Donetsk, a 
Russian separatist-held stronghold in eastern Ukraine, accompanied by 
the orchestra of Mr. Putin’s Interior Ministry.

The anti-fracking movement became so broad that in January 2012, 
Parliament banned not only the extraction of shale gas, but even 
exploration that would quantify the country’s reserves. 
Environmentalists praised the vote, but many Western officials were 
suspicious.

In Brussels, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, secretary general of NATO, later 
accused the Russian government of using “sophisticated information and 
disinformation operations” to help derail shale gas exploration in 
Bulgaria and other countries.

With the death of shale gas, South Stream’s rationale was stronger than 
ever, especially as the Borisov government weakened. Mr. Borisov had 
signed preliminary pipeline agreements, even once presenting a puppy to 
Mr. Putin as a gift, but he was still considered pro-Western. Barely a 
year after the fracking demonstrations, Ataka members again took to the 
streets, joining protests over high electricity prices. In March 2013, 
Mr. Borisov resigned.

A caretaker government was appointed, pending new elections, and Mr. 
Putin’s representatives quickly sought out the crucial figures involved 
in South Stream.

The Putin Steamroller

The meeting occurred after midnight at La Casa del Habano, a cigar bar 
in Sofia. Mr. Stoyanov, a New York-based corporate turnaround specialist 
who had returned to Bulgaria to serve as deputy energy minister in the 
interim government, had received several calls from an old acquaintance, 
insisting they meet for a drink.

But Mr. Stoyanov was surprised to find that his friend was not alone at 
the bar. With him was Aleksandr M. Babakov, a member of the Duma, the 
lower house of the Russian Parliament, whom Mr. Putin had appointed as a 
special envoy. (Mr. Babakov has been identified by the French news media 
as the middleman who arranged the Russian bank loan to the National 
Front in France.)

The purpose of the meeting soon became clear. “He wanted to take my 
temperature on the South Stream,” Mr. Stoyanov recalled in an interview.

Mr. Stoyanov said the project would not reduce Bulgaria’s dependence on 
Russian gas and would bring marginal economic benefit, but Mr. Babakov 
had not come to debate the merits.

“In not so many words, he said he would make me very comfortable if I 
would participate and help,” Mr. Stoyanov said, adding that he reported 
the encounter to Bulgarian intelligence. “I was not pleased by his 
presumption that I would just set aside and forget Bulgaria’s national 
interests.”

Mr. Babakov did not respond to requests for comment.

Mr. Stoyanov’s skepticism about South Stream mirrored that of officials 
in Brussels and Washington. European Union rules forbid the same company 
that produces gas to monopolize the pipeline that delivers it. Europe 
insisted that South Stream allow access to other gas producers in order 
to safeguard against overreliance on Russia.

At one European summit meeting several years ago, Mr. Putin and the 
European Commission president, José Manuel Barroso, argued over those 
rules, according to C. Boyden Gray, an American diplomat who in 2008 
served as special envoy for Eurasian energy. Two officials in the room 
told Mr. Gray that the Russian leader exploded.

“If I hear one more word about competition, I’m going to freeze your 
you-know-whats off,” Mr. Putin reportedly shouted.

Mr. Barroso, whose term expired in October, said he did not recall the 
specifics of the exchange but confirmed that he and Mr. Putin had clashed.

“His point was always: ‘This is against us! This is against Gazprom! 
This is against Russia!’ ” Mr. Barroso recalled.

By the time Bulgaria held elections in May 2013, Mr. Putin was in a 
stronger position. He had proposed South Stream as an alternative to a 
Western-backed proposal for a pipeline, called Nabucco, from Azerbaijan 
to southern Europe. Nabucco would have reduced Europe’s dependence on 
Russian gas, as well as Mr. Putin’s influence. But the project had died 
by 2013 because of political and economic obstacles as well as 
interference from Mr. Putin. Now only South Stream was left standing.

Moreover, the Russians had already invested heavily in Bulgaria. VTB 
Capital, the investment wing of Russia’s second-largest state-owned 
bank, had opened a Sofia office, placing Bulgaria’s former finance 
minister, his deputy and the minister’s brother in major positions. VTB 
Capital, which declined to comment for this article, then partnered to 
buy stakes in a host of companies with Corporate Commercial, known as 
the favored bank of Bulgaria’s energy oligarchs. VTB even took a 9.9 
percent stake in the bank itself.

The Bulgarian elections also seemed to work to Mr. Putin’s advantage. 
They produced an awkward coalition government between two pro-Russia 
parties — the Socialists and the Turkish minority party. And since 
together they could not achieve a parliamentary majority, they relied on 
Ataka to achieve a quorum. Mr. Siderov, Ataka’s leader, was nicknamed 
the Golden Finger because he tipped the balance.

The new prime minister was a technocrat, Plamen Oresharski, who found 
himself caught between this Moscow-leaning coalition and growing 
pressure from the European Union. Aleksei B. Miller, the man Mr. Putin 
had chosen to lead Gazprom, was sent in July to bring the Bulgarians 
into line. He promised to finance the €3.1 billion construction of the 
Bulgarian leg of the pipeline and agreed to sponsor CSKA Sofia, the 
capital’s top professional soccer team.

But Europe was pushing Mr. Oresharski, too. The European Commission had 
begun an investigation into Bulgarian Energy Holdings, the state 
corporation that was to be Gazprom’s partner in South Stream.

Three months later, Mr. Miller returned to Sofia, this time in secret, 
for another session with Mr. Oresharski. It was supposed to last only 40 
minutes, one official said. Months later, prodded about the lack of 
transparency, Mr. Oresharski angrily responded that the “only 
nontransparent thing with South Stream is my five-hour conversation with 
the boss of Gazprom, the contents of which will never be revealed.”

Mr. Oresharski did not respond to requests for an interview. But Russian 
interests clearly won out. The next day, Mr. Oresharski and Mr. Miller 
watched by video link as workers welded the first two joints of the 
pipeline’s Bulgarian leg.

A few months later, over the Christmas holidays and without public 
notice, the construction contracts were awarded: Bulgarian news outlets 
subsequently reported that the winners included companies with ties to a 
Bulgarian media mogul and member of Parliament, Delyan Peevski. In a 
statement, Mr. Peevski denied any ties to the project, calling the 
reports rumors “spread by the yellow press in Bulgaria.” The 
acknowledged Russian construction partner was Gennady N. Timchenko, one 
of Mr. Putin’s most powerful allies.

All seemed ready. The only obstacle was the European pipeline rules — 
unless they could be circumvented.

Pipeline That’s Not a Pipeline

On April 4, 2014, soon after Mr. Putin annexed Crimea, Bulgaria’s 
Parliament gave initial passage to a bill that effectively exempted 
South Stream from a number of European Union regulations, most 
important, the one that would have forced Gazprom to allow non-Russian 
gas to flow through the pipeline. Both parties in Mr. Oresharski’s 
coalition supported the legislation, as did Ataka and its leader, Mr. 
Siderov.

The bill accomplished this with a linguistic sleight of hand: The 
initial Bulgarian section of South Stream was not actually a pipeline, 
but rather a “gas-sea” interconnector. The European Union challenged the 
proposed change, while opposition ministers filed a freedom of 
information request for documents linked to the bill. A month later, 
they announced that the documents — which have been obtained by The New 
York Times — proved that Gazprom and the Kremlin were directly involved.

“This was a unique breach of national security,” Grozdan Karadzhov, a 
Reformist lawmaker, said in an interview. “It was also a unique amount 
of arrogance in how Russians see Bulgaria.”

The documents included passages of draft legislation suggested by a 
Gazprom subsidiary and forwarded to Bulgarian energy officials.

In an interview, the energy minister at the time, Dragomir Stoynev, 
called Gazprom’s suggestions a form of lobbying, insisting that “nobody 
dictated the terms; these were all our suggested changes.”

But in a letter dated June 6, 2014, Mr. Stoynev acknowledged a direct 
Russian hand. In it, he updated his Russian counterpart, Mr. Putin’s 
energy minister, on where things stood. The “law amendments proposed by 
the Russia side” were discussed in detail, he wrote, and a number of 
them were approved by Parliament.

It was audacious, but it would not be enough. The bill would never be 
brought up for a second, final vote, largely because of the escalating 
conflict between Russia and Ukraine. In early June, the European 
Commission told Bulgaria to stop work on South Stream, saying it was 
investigating whether the pipeline construction contracts violated 
European competitive-bidding rules. When the Bulgarian government 
refused, the European Union cut off tens of millions of euros in 
regional development funds.

By this point, Ukrainian government forces were battling pro-Russian 
separatists in the east, and in the West there was talk of a new Cold 
War. On June 6, the American ambassador, Marcie B. Ries, warned 
Bulgarian companies against doing business with companies linked to Mr. 
Timchenko, who is on American sanctions lists. On June 8, a 
congressional delegation led by Senator John McCain, Republican of 
Arizona, met privately with Mr. Oresharski.

In desperate need of the European funds, the prime minister announced 
the next day that South Stream would be halted until it had full 
European Union approval.

At almost exactly the same moment, an unexpected panic swept through 
bank depositors in Sofia; a mysterious bank run had started at Corporate 
Commercial, the bank that had partnered with the Russian investment firm 
VTB Capital, and the financial institution of the state holding company 
overseeing Bulgarian involvement in South Stream.

Some speculated that VTB Capital, with its nearly 10 percent stake, 
would join other shareholders in riding to the bank’s rescue. But after 
Mr. Oresharski’s decision to halt the Bulgarian leg of South Stream, the 
Russian bank declined to participate in a bailout. Corporate Commercial 
collapsed, and in the ensuing crisis so did Mr. Oresharski’s government.

The final, unexpected development came on Dec. 1 when Mr. Putin, on a 
state visit to Turkey, announced that South Stream was dead. He blamed 
Europe and, according to press reports in Turkey, said he was “fed up 
with Bulgarians.”

Since then, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, Europe’s most powerful 
leader, has suggested that South Stream might yet be built. After 
meeting with her, the new Bulgarian prime minister said he was confident 
European Union objections could be overcome.

Even if they are not, some diplomats contend that Mr. Putin achieved 
many of his goals.

While “he overreached, and he underestimated the response” to his 
intervention in Ukraine, said Mr. Gray, the former American diplomat, 
the Russian leader has been “quite effective” in countries like Bulgaria.

“He won a great deal by getting Nabucco stopped,” Mr. Gray said. 
“Ultimately, his goal is to keep as much control over the former parts 
of the Soviet empire as possible.”

Jim Yardley reported from Sofia, and Jo Becker from Budapest and New 
York. Georgi Kantchev contributed reporting from Sofia, and Masha 
Goncharova from New York.

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