theamericanconservative.com 
<https://www.theamericanconservative.com/europes-energy-disaster/>  


Europe’s Energy Disaster - The American Conservative


David C. Hendrickson

9-11 minutes

  _____  

Foreign Affairs

If the Europeans were willing to buy, would the Russians be willing to sell?

Pipe systems and shut-off devices at the gas receiving station of the Nord 
Stream 1 Baltic Sea pipeline and the transfer station of the OPAL long-distance 
gas pipeline. (Photo by Stefan Sauer/picture alliance via Getty Images) 

The European energy disaster gets worse by the day. Energy bills ten times 
higher than the year before threaten the closure of major industries and small 
businesses in Britain, Germany, and the rest of the E.U. The base case now 
seems to be that Europe will be almost entirely deprived of Russian gas during 
the forthcoming winter.

Over the last several months, a series of retaliations—some European states 
refusing to pay for gas in rubles, various closures by Poland and Ukraine of 
the pipeline network—have been paired with Russian reductions (from 40 percent 
to 20 percent to 0 percent) of the Nord Stream I pipeline. In the summer, the 
drama entailed a dispute over gas turbines for the pipeline, stuck in Canada 
because of the sanctions, then sent to Siemens Germany, then rejected by the 
Russians because E.U. sanctions made the transaction illegal.

Because each side said the other was lying, it was difficult to ferret out the 
truth. Were the Europeans refusing to buy? Or were the Russians refusing to 
sell? If the former, the Europeans were weaponizing the energy trade. If the 
latter, the Russians were doing so.  

It has been difficult to tell which was which, but one thing is clear. Both 
sides are far more intent on assigning blame for the impending catastrophe than 
seeking an accommodation that would avoid it.

With the pipeline network facing obstacles, the obvious test for this great 
question—who is refusing to do what?—is the status of the Nord Stream II 
pipeline. Built side by side with Nord Stream I on the floor of the Baltic Sea, 
it apparently remains ready for service. Germany canceled its opening in 
February in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. For now, buying 
Russian gas through Nord Stream II seems off the table in Germany. According 
<https://europeanconservative.com/articles/news/support-for-ukraine-no-matter-what-my-german-voters-think/>
  to German Foreign Minister Annalene Baerbock, German voters must sacrifice 
for Ukraine. This and other statements suggest that Europe is refusing to buy.

If the Europeans were willing to buy, would the Russians be willing to sell? At 
the beginning of the crisis, when the West was proclaiming it would refuse to 
buy, the Western assumption was that the Russians had to sell and would sell, 
as their “gas-station” of an economy depended on it. Then in late spring the 
answer from Russia became “yes, but you have to pay in rubles.” Some European 
states did; some didn’t; only the latter had their gas shut off. Russian 
president Vladimir Putin insisted in the summer that Gazprom would honor all 
its contracts and blamed the Europeans for the impasse. Now the Russian answer 
teeters on “no, never.” Putin on September 6 said that Russia remains willing 
to sell and portrayed the stoppages as a wound the West has inflicted on 
itself, but two days previously Dmitry Medvedev, former Russian president and 
resident Kremlin hawk, wrote that Germany had declared itself an enemy to 
Russia. No gas? Too bad.

Germany, now looking at imminent immiseration, has long been the paymaster of 
the E.U. One wonders how the E.U. can function when Germany’s vast 
manufacturing, chemical, and industrial complex, dependent on cheap Russian 
gas, is forced into closure or sharp curtailment. German largesse, funneled 
through the E.U., has facilitated many an internal E.U. agreement over the 
years. What happens to the E.U. when Germany becomes the beggar?  

Luuk Middelaar, the grand theorist of the European Union, has noted 
<https://www.amazon.com/Passage-Europe-Continent-Became-Union/dp/0300181124/ref=sr_1_3?crid=2W277I9KJQ0YC&keywords=Luuk+Middelaar&qid=1662523022&sprefix=luuk+middelaar%2Caps%2C82&sr=8-3>
  that peace, prosperity, and power have been the three main goals of the 
European project. The European Union, to be sure, was never a “power project” 
in the military sense. The armed forces of its member states have been entirely 
subordinated to NATO. But the economic sanctions imposed on Russia vastly 
enlarges the EU’s claim to be a power project. The sanctions are on course to 
gravely imperil the E.U.’s status as a prosperity project. Its status as a 
peace project may not be far behind. These sanctions effectively represent a 
new purpose, unlike anything the E.U. has sought in the past. They introduce 
strong centrifugal forces into the Union.

To get the gas flowing would require a reversal in signal respects of the 
West’s sanctions campaign. Though desirable, there is no evidence that such a 
volte-face is in contemplation by any of the major states. On the contrary, the 
United States has succeeded in lining up the support of the G-7 for its plan to 
get Russian oil onto the market and simultaneously cap the price Russia gets 
for it. This plan 
<https://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-allies-prepare-to-outline-plan-to-limit-price-of-russian-oil-11661977820>
 , the apparent brainchild of Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen, is a 
contradiction masquerading as a policy, a hare-brained scheme that cannot 
possibly work. It requires the cooperation not only of Russia but of a host of 
other states, led by China, India, and Turkey. These buyers have all made it 
clear that their energy policy is not going to be dictated by the West or by 
the threat of Western sanctions. The Russians have dismissed the plan as 
ridiculous 
<https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Is-The-Oil-Market-Really-Broken.html>
 : “We will simply stop supplying crude and fuels to countries that introduce a 
price cap.”

If the West goes ahead with the Yellen Plan, and Russia refuses to play along, 
what then? The logical outcome, absent a grave turndown in the global economy, 
is severe upward pressure on energy prices. Coming in December is the promised 
implementation of the Yellen Plan, similar attempts by the E.U. to either 
embargo or cap energy prices paid to Russia, and the cessation of the 
million-barrel-a-day release from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve. The 
Biden administration’s main plan for avoiding a price spiral is to force the 
Russians to eat crow. It delusively believes it holds the cards in this 
showdown. It doesn’t.

In the law of war, civilian immunity has long been held as a desirable 
principle. Indeed, the U.S. armed forces take it as a point of pride that, by 
law, they must observe the targeting rules that seek to secure that outcome. In 
economic warfare, however, these barriers to civilian harm have been breached 
on numerous occasions. With hardly any domestic recriminations, the United 
States follows policies in Afghanistan, Syria, and Venezuela which starve the 
population; the same indifference to civilian suffering attends the total 
economic and financial war against Russia. Usually, the objection to such 
measures is the harm inflicted on innocents in foreign countries; in the 
instant case, harm to the West’s own citizens has also emerged as a clear and 
present danger.


Subscribe Today


Get weekly emails in your inbox


Proposals to limit the impact of war on civilians was part of the first breath 
of American diplomacy. In 1783, Benjamin Franklin sought 
<https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Franklin/01-38-02-0441>  to improve 
the law of nations by securing agreements to prohibit “the plundering of 
unarmed and usefully employed people.” In 1785, Franklin, together with John 
Adams and Thomas Jefferson, representing the United States abroad, signed a 
treaty with Frederick the Great of Prussia intending to introduce as customary 
practice far-reaching restrictions on military targeting of civilians in war.

Adams was 
<https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Correspondent%3A%22Thulemeier%2C%20Friedrich%20Wilhelm%2C%20Baron%20von%22%20Correspondent%3A%22Adams%2C%20John%22&s=1111311111&r=13>
  “charmed to find the King do us the honor to agree to the platonic philosophy 
of some of our articles, which are at least a good lesson to mankind, and will 
derive more influence from a treaty ratified by the King of Prussia, than from 
the writings of Plato or Sir Thomas More.” These diplomats were appalled that 
farmers and fishermen, traders and mechanics, scholars and housewives, should 
invariably be caught up in war’s destructiveness. The United States was once 
closely associated with this principle. Today’s policymakers, however, have no 
pangs of conscience in sweeping innumerable innocents into the web of its 
sanctions. It’s how things are done in our progressive new century.

Even if it is conceded that the sanctions war is just, it does not follow that 
it is prudent. On the contrary, the consequences of the West’s course are 
manifestly inconsistent with the public good and entail the high risk of losing 
more than is gained. The sanctions only make sense on the idea that they are a 
necessary and effective means of forcing the Russians out of Ukraine, when 
their real ability to do so is nil. This would be so even if the sanctions were 
biting Russia to the point of destitution, which they are not. But Western 
policymakers think otherwise, or say they do. That suggests the light at the 
end of the tunnel is an incoming train.

 

-- 
http:www.antic.org
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/0f0c01d8c751%240167ae00%2404370a00%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to