Putin's Ruthless Gambit
The Bush Administration Falters in a Geopolitical Chess Match
Many Western analysts have chosen to interpret the recent fighting in the Caucasus as the onset of a new Cold War, with a small pro-Western democracy bravely resisting a brutal reincarnation of Stalin's jack-booted Soviet Union. Others have viewed it a throwback to the age-old ethnic politics of southeastern Europe, with assorted minorities using contemporary border disputes to settle ancient scores.
Neither of these explanations is accurate. To fully grasp the recent upheavals in the Caucasus, it is necessary to view the conflict as but a minor skirmish in a far more significant geopolitical struggle between Moscow and Washington over the energy riches of the Caspian Sea basin -- with former Russian President (now Prime Minister) Vladimir Putin emerging as the reigning Grand Master of geostrategic chess and the Bush team turning out to be middling amateurs, at best.
During the Soviet era, the oil and gas output of these nations was, of course, controlled by officials in Moscow and largely allocated to Russia and other Soviet republics. After the breakup of the USSR in 1991, however, Western oil companies began to participate in the hydrocarbon equivalent of a gold rush to exploit Caspian energy reservoirs, while plans were being made to channel the region's oil and gas to markets across the world.
Rush to the Caspian
In the 1990s, the Caspian Sea basin was viewed as the world's most promising new source of oil and gas, and so the major Western energy firms -- Chevron, BP, Shell, and Exxon Mobil, among others -- rushed into the region to take advantage of what seemed a golden opportunity. For these firms, persuading the governments of the newly independent Caspian states to sign deals proved to be no great hassle. They were eager to attract Western investment -- and the bribes that often came with it -- and to free themselves from Moscow's economic domination.But there turned out to be a major catch: It was neither obvious nor easy to figure out how to move all the new oil and gas to markets in the West. After all, the Caspian is landlocked, so tankers cannot get near it, while all existing pipelines passed through Russia and were hooked into Soviet-era supply systems. While many in Washington were eager to assist U.S. firms in their drive to gain access to Caspian energy, they did not want to see the resulting oil and gas flow through Russia -- until recently, the country's leading adversary -- before reaching Western markets.
What, then, to do? Looking at the Caspian chessboard in the mid-1990s, President Bill Clinton conceived the striking notion of converting the newly independent, energy-poor Republic of Georgia into an "energy corridor" for the export of Caspian basin oil and gas to the West, thereby bypassing Russia altogether. An initial, "early-oil" pipeline was built to carry petroleum from newly-developed fields in Azerbaijan's sector of the Caspian Sea to Supsa on Georgia's Black Sea coast, where it was loaded onto tankers for delivery to international markets. This would be followed by a far more audacious scheme: the construction of the 1,000-mile BTC pipeline from Baku in Azerbaijan to Tbilisi in Georgia and then on to Ceyhan on Turkey's Mediterranean coast. Again, the idea was to exclude Russia -- which had, in the intervening years, been transformed into a struggling, increasingly impoverished former superpower -- from the Caspian Sea energy rush.
Clinton presided over every stage of the BTC line's initial development, from its early conception to the formal arrangements imposed by Washington on the three nations involved in its corporate structuring. (Final work on the pipeline was not completed until 2006, two years into George W. Bush's second term.) For Clinton and his advisors, this was geopolitics, pure and simple -- a calculated effort to enhance Western energy security while diminishing Moscow's control over the global flow of oil and gas. The administration's efforts to promote the construction of new pipelines through Azerbaijan and Georgia were intended "to break Russia's monopoly of control over the transportation of oil from the region," Sheila Heslin of the National Security Council bluntly told a Senate investigating committee in 1997.
Clinton understood that this strategy entailed significant risks, particularly because Washington's favored "energy corridor" passed through or near several major conflict zones -- including the Russian-backed breakaway enclaves of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. With this in mind, Clinton made a secondary decision -- to convert the new Georgian army into a military proxy of the United States, quipped and trained by the Department of Defense. From 1998 to 2000 alone, Georgia was awarded $302 million in U.S. military and economic aid -- more than any other Caspian country -- and top U.S. military officials started making regular trips to its capital, Tbilisi, to demonstrate support for then-president Eduard Shevardnadze.In those years, Clinton was the top chess player in the Caspian region, while his Russian presidential counterpart, Boris Yeltsin, was far too preoccupied with domestic troubles and a bitter, costly, ongoing guerrilla war in Chechnya to match his moves. It was clear, however, that senior Russian officials were deeply concerned by the growing U.S. presence in their southern backyard -- what they called their "near abroad" -- and had already had begun planning for an eventual comeback. "It hasn't been left unnoticed in Russia that certain outside interests are trying to weaken our position in the Caspian basin," Andrei Y. Urnov of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs declared in May 2000. "No one should be perplexed that Russia is determined to resist the attempts to encroach on her interests."
Russia Resurgent
At this critical moment, a far more capable player took over on Russia's side of the geopolitical chessboard. On December 31, 1999, Vladimir V. Putin was appointed president by Yeltsin and then, on March 26, 2000, elected to a full four-year term in office. Politics in the Caucasus and the Caspian region have never been the same.
Even before assuming the presidency, Putin indicated that he believed state control over energy resources should be the basis for Russia's return to great-power status. In his doctoral dissertation, a summary of which was published in 1999, he had written that "[t]he state has the right to regulate the process of the acquisition and the use of natural resources, and particularly mineral resources [including oil and natural gas], independent of on whose property they are located." On this basis, Putin presided over the re-nationalization of many of the energy companies that had been privatized by Yeltsin and the virtual confiscation of Yukos -- once Russia's richest private energy firm -- by Russian state authorities. He also brought Gazprom, the world's largest natural gas supplier, back under state control and placed a protégé, Dmitri Medvedev -- now president of Russia -- at its helm.
Once he had restored state control over the lion's share of Russia's oil and gas resources, Putin turned his attention to the next obvious place -- the Caspian Sea basin. Here, his intent was not so much to gain ownership of its energy resources -- although Russian firms have in recent years acquired an equity share in some Caspian oil and gas fields -- but rather to dominate the export conduits used to transport its energy to Europe and Asia.Russia already enjoyed a considerable advantage since much of Kazakhstan's oil already flowed to the West via the Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC), which passes through Russia before terminating on the Black Sea; moreover, much of Central Asia's natural gas continued to flow to Russia through pipelines built during the Soviet era. But Putin's gambit in the Caspian region evidently was meant to capture a far more ambitious prize. He wanted to ensure that most oil and gas from newly developed fields in the Caspian basin would travel west via Russia.
The first part of this drive entailed frenzied diplomacy by Putin and Medvedev (still in his role as board chairman of Gazprom) to persuade the presidents of Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan to ship their future output of gas through Russia. Success was achieved when, in December 2007, Putin signed an agreement with the leaders of these countries to supply 20 billion cubic meters of gas per year through a new conduit along the Caspian's eastern shore to southern Russia -- for ultimate delivery to Europe via Gazprom's existing pipeline network.
Meanwhile, Putin moved to undermine international confidence in Georgia as a reliable future corridor for energy delivery. This became a strategic priority for Moscow because the European Union announced plans to build a $10 billion natural-gas pipeline from the Caspian, dubbed Nabucco" after the opera by Verdi. It would run from Turkey to Austria, while linking up to an expanded South Caucasus gas pipeline that now extends from Azerbaijan through Georgia to Erzurum in Turkey. The Nabucco pipeline was intended as a dramatic move to reduce Europe's reliance on Russian natural gas -- and so has enjoyed strong support from the Bush administration.
It is against this backdrop that the recent events in Georgia unfolded.Checkmate in Georgia
Obviously, the more oil and gas passing through Georgia on its way to the West, the greater that country's geostrategic significance in the U.S.-Russian struggle over the distribution of Caspian energy. Certainly, the Bush administration recognized this and responded by providing hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid to the Georgian military and helping to train specialized forces for protection of the new pipelines. But the administration's partner in Tbilisi, President Mikheil Saakashvili, was not content to play the relatively modest role of pipeline protector. Instead, he sought to pursue a megalomaniacal fantasy of recapturing the breakaway regions of Abhkazia and South Ossetia with American help. As it happened, the Bush team -- blindsided by their own neoconservative fantasies -- saw in Saakashvili a useful pawn in their pursuit of a long smoldering anti-Russian agenda. Together, they walked into a trap cleverly set by Putin.It is hard not to conclude that Russian prime minister goaded the rash Saakashvili into invading South Ossetia by encouraging Abkhazian and South Ossetian irregulars to attack Georgian outposts and villages on the peripheries of the two enclaves. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice reportedly told Saakashvili not to respond to such provocations when she met with him in July. Apparently her advice fell on deaf ears. Far more enticing, it seems, was her promise of strong U.S. backing for Georgia's rapid entry into NATO. Other American leaders, including Senator John McCain, assured Saakashvili of unwavering U.S. support. Whatever was said in these private conversations, the Georgian president seems to have interpreted them as a green light for his adventuristic impulses. On August 7th, by all accounts, his forces invaded South Ossetia and attacked its capital city of Tskhinvali, giving Putin what he long craved -- a seemingly legitimate excuse to invade Georgia and demonstrate the complete vulnerability of Clinton's (and now Bush's) vaunted energy corridor.
Today, the Georgian army is in shambles, the BTC and South Caucasus gas pipelines are within range of Russian firepower, and Abkhazia and South Ossetia have declared their independence, quickly receiving Russian recognition. In response to these developments, the Bush administration has, along with some friendly leaders in Europe, mounted a media and diplomatic counterattack, accusing Moscow of barbaric behavior and assorted violations of international law. Threats have also been made to exclude Russia from various international forums and institutions, such as the G-8 club of governments and the World Trade Organization. It is possible, then, that Moscow will suffer some isolation and inconvenience as a result of its incursion into Georgia.
None of this, so far as can be determined, will alter the picture in the Caucasus: Putin has moved his most powerful pieces onto this corner of the chessboard, America's pawn has been decisively defeated, and there's not much of a practical nature that Washington (or London or Paris or Berlin) can do to alter the outcome.
There will, of course, be more rounds to come, and it is impossible to predict how they will play out. Putin prevailed this time around because he focused on geopolitical objectives, while his opponents were blindly driven by fantasy and ideology; so long as this pattern persists, he or his successors are likely to come out on top. Only if American leaders assume a more realistic approach to Russia's resurgent power or, alternatively, choose to collaborate with Moscow in the exploitation of Caspian energy, will the risk of further strategic setbacks in the region disappear.
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26 Comments so far
Show Allbiwee:
the story was posted on different web sites on the same day as CD posted it. Informationclearinghouse.info is a good site and has other stories CD doesn't post.
An excellent summary which I wish would receive wide circulation. Putin is playing chess, and evil Bush and his evil NeoCons can only play marbles. Now that their stupid gambit has failed, and Putin has humiliated them, the evil NeoCons can only whine, lie and squirm. The Khazars lost.
Alan MacDonald
Yes, biwee, while Putin authored a "doctoral dissertation" on the need for a nation-state's control of its public oil policy, our floundering Harvard MBA President has been used as a puppet by the corporatist Empire, which controls our country behind the facade of this two-party, 'Vichy' American government, to install a private corporatist oil policy of global control backed up by public financed military power and expendable 'working class' soldiers.
Remember that the heart of the PNAC agenda enshrined within Bush's (really Cheney's neocon) 2002 Defense Strategy was precisely: "to control access to global oil supplies such that no other power, or even combination of powers, could ever rival US unipolar military super-power hegemony". If that isn't the agenda of the global corporatist Empire ruling the US, then I don't know what is!
However, all is not going well for the neocons' global corporatist Empire hiding behind the facade of 'Vichy America', since their smash and grab style military aggression for oil in a unipolar world is now being resisted by a military force stronger and more astute at 'chess playing' than the hopelessly weak Iraq and Afghanistan.
Will the neoconned corporatist Empire attempt to win this chess game by recklessly advancing its American queen into a danderous board position?
This from WSWS:
"US machinations in the Black Sea have nothing to do with democracy. Instead, two closely related aims animated Rice’s proposal for massive financial assistance to Georgia and Cheney’s nearly simultaneous visit. First, Washington is preparing for war against Russia. Second, it is seeking to secure oil and natural gas pipelines outside of Russia’s orbit.
Cheney’s visit to Georgia came a day before a planned visit to Ukraine, another state hostile to Russia, and only two weeks after Poland agreed to put in place a US missile system designed to shoot down nuclear missiles, clearly directed against Russia.
The same day Cheney arrived in Georgia the US sent yet another warship, the flagship of the Mediterranean fleet, the USS Whitney, into the Black Sea to Georgia, ostensibly on a humanitarian mission.
This is classic gunboat diplomacy. But Washington is also making advanced preparations for war against Russia. This would include a nuclear first strike, which the US political and military elite believe the missile shield will allow them to carry out."
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/sep2008/chen-s05.shtml
War maniac Cheney looks to have the corporatist Empire's free hand to engage the US military power in ever more dangerous offensive adventurism for their empire at our cost.
"It is hard not to conclude that Russian prime minister goaded the rash Saakashvili into invading South Ossetia by encouraging Abkhazian and South Ossetian irregulars to attack Georgian outposts and villages on the peripheries of the two enclaves."
First I heard of that. Nice spin to cover Georgias act of aggression.
FWIW, the first Jewish state was Khazaria between 700-1100 AD when the King made it the official religion and many converted, and this area just happened to include parts of todays Georgia, Ukraine and Chechneya. My main point being this area might have some other significance besides oil and gas.
There seems to be a significant link between Georgia and Israel.
"Georgian minister Temur Yakobashvili -- whom the Israeli daily Haaretz stressed was Jewish -- told Israeli army radio that "Israel should be proud of its military which trained Georgian soldiers." Yakobashvili claimed rather implausibly, according to Haaretz, that "a small group of Georgian soldiers were able to wipe out an entire Russian military division, thanks to the Israeli training" ("Georgian minister tells Israel Radio: Thanks to Israeli training, we're fending off Russian military," Haaretz, 11 August 2008).
Since 2000, Israel has sold hundreds of millions of dollars in arms and combat training to Georgia. Weapons included guns, ammunition, shells, tactical missile systems, antiaircraft systems, automatic turrets for armored vehicles, electronic equipment and remotely piloted aircraft. These sales were authorized by the Israeli defense ministry (Arie Egozi, "War in Georgia: The Israeli connection," Ynet, 10 August 2008)."
I mean, why do we need to provide so much aid to Israel to defend themsleves when they can aid countries like Georgia.
Israel has 80,000 people in Israel who immigrated from Georgia. Thats only 1.6% of their population, so this should not be significant.
Wrong meathead. The neocons want to restart the cold war. This unfolded exactly as they wanted. There is now 1 trillion dollars per year flowing from the middle class of America to the Masters of War. The oil is irrelevant. As a nation we could save 10 percent on energy overnight just by outlawing electrical devices in the home that are on when they are off. Such as TVs and radios etc.. There is plenty of energy if we planned with any thought at all. The Israelis who always seem to be partners with the neocons were heavily represented in the Georgia govt. Many had dual citizenships and you can guess to which country they are loyal. Perpetual war is what the neocons and zionists want. And they want the war far away and out of site so their property is not in danger. This unfolded exactly the way Rove wanted, with Rice playing the "oh we want peace role". Just BS. Cheney's guy was their in the days before the invasion. Gas-oil is nothing compared to a trillion dollars a year in defense contracts. This made McCain look good, caught Obama off guard, and increased military spending in all the countries near Russia (Poland, Ukraine). These countries are being played for fools by the neocons who want all there money. This operation was a total success, Saakashvili is just a willing pawn in their game. He used cluster bombs, designed only to terrorze and kill civilians, just like Israel did in Lebanon. How much profit per cluster bomb for the neocon war machine? Oil is a side show compared to that.
"Perpetual war is what the neocons and zionists want."
This is literally true. It is part of the Leo Straussian philosophy to which the neocons owe their allegiance.
-- ekaton --
Great Article,
Sanctuary is correct, the good old Neoconservative Right Wing Faux-Religious Lunatic Fringe Republican party doesn't take a crap without asking permission from Israel.
Isn't it ironic that the illegal occupation of Georgia by the Russian military might be the straw that breaks the back of the fear mongering war machine mentality that has hijacked our country with the help of our elected cowards in Washington.
What? We invaded Iraq and Afghanistan to kill terrorists and get rid of WMDs, no spread democracy, no bring stability to the middle east, no get as a close as possible to Iran for they might launch a Nuclear strike against Israel.
The more excuses we make the more we need to go to war, the less safe we become.
Neoconservative Fear mongering and greed hard at work.
Ooooops, the Russians can't do the same thing, we got America believing all our crap.
We are spending 12 billion a month on wars, close to a trillion in total.
We have bought a lot of new friends.So much money to our corporate brothers.
We have weekend the Constitution. Our lawyers can't get any more muti-million dollars suits. Warrant less surveillance is the law of the land.
The spy corporations have hired thousands people to conduct all the spying, electronic and foot patrols.They are the only company's hiring in our high unemployment crushed economy.That's worked out well, what a talent pool.
Americans are frightened, and letting us spend 60 billion a year on private contractors for the purpose of building the largest spy network in the world.
Oh no, now we are going to be blamed for the new cold war.
And Russia now seems to be in control of more oil and natural gas then us.
They have more money then us.
So , we can't use rope a dope Reaganomics again , you know , will out spend them.
That good old trickle down economics will save us.
So 36 years of Republican rule, I am including the Clinton's.(NAFTA,GAT,Georgia)
Nixon,Ford,Carter?, Regan , Bush, Clinton's ,Bush
Now we have the Stasi police, all first responders are DHS spy's, willing fools in the military are involved ,follow the money.
Elephants, Donkeys, and awakening Bears , oh my.
Thank you Russia, we need a wake up call in America, the world is not our play ground.We are not Gods.
Lets take care of America first.Re-instate the Constitution, shit-can the Patriot Act ASAP.And a new investigation of 9/11 is now a must. Its time to Find the truth.
They arrested 300 people yesterday at the RNC for protests. Official press reporters had there passes taken from them by secret service.Read Amy Goodman at Democracy Now.
BornFreeMen
Great Article,
Sanctuary is correct, the good old Neoconservative Right Wing Faux-Religious Lunatic Fringe Republican party doesn't take a crap without asking permission from Israel.
Isn't it ironic that the illegal occupation of Georgia by the Russian military might be the straw that breaks the back of the fear mongering war machine mentality that has hijacked our country with the help of our elected cowards in Washington.
What? We invaded Iraq and Afghanistan to kill terrorists and get rid of WMDs, no spread democracy, no bring stability to the middle east, no get as a close as possible to Iran for they might launch a Nuclear strike against Israel.
The more excuses we make the more we need to go to war, the less safe we become.
Neoconservative Fear mongering and greed hard at work.
Ooooops, the Russian can't do the same thing, we got America believing all our crap.
We are spending 12 billion a month on wars, close to a trillion in total.
We have bought a lot of new friends.So much money to our corporate brothers.
We have weekend the Constitution. Our lawyers can't get any more muti-million dollars suits. Warrant less surveillance is the law of the land.
The spy corporations have hired thousands people to conduct all the spying, electronic and foot patrols.They are the only company's hiring in our high unemployment crushed economy.That's worked out well, what a talent pool.
Americans are frightened, and letting us spend 60 billion a year on private contractors for the purpose of building the largest spy network in the world.
Oh no, now we are going to be blamed for the new cold war.
And Russia now seems to be in control of more oil and natural gas then us.
They have more money then us.
So , we can't use rope a dope Reaganomics again , you know , will out spend them.
That good old trickle down economics will save us.
So 36 years of Republican rule, I am including the Clinton's.(NAFTA,GAT,Georgia)
Nixon,Ford,Carter?, Regan , Bush, Clinton's ,Bush
Now we have the Stasi police, all first responders are DHS spy's, willing fools in the military are involved ,follow the money.
Elephants, Donkeys, and Patriots, oh my.
Thank you Russia, we need a wake up call in America, the world is not our play ground.We are not Gods.
Lets take care of America first.Re-instate the Constitution, shit-can the Patriot Act ASAP.
They arrested 300 people yesterday at the RNC for protests. Official press reporters had there passes taken from them by secret service.Read Amy Goodman at Democracy Now.
BornFreeMen
The closing paragraph of this analysis contains its most essential -to us, though perhaps not to the Author- point.
Cooperation is a reasonable alternative to conflict, now more than ever.
What could Humanity accomplish if we as individuals and as nations dropped the idea of contesting with others in order to take more than our fair share?
Or even if we just gave up war between nations and violence to achieve personal dominance, and allowed for the provision of the basic human needs (Water, Food, Shelter, Health Care, Social Interaction, Creative Expression, and Free Movement) to fall outside of the Capitalist and Competitive paradigm?
I'd bet five bucks we could do some amazing things together.
And I don't even gamble.
Have Fun,
-matti.
An interesting article but mostly for what it leaves out of the story. There is no mention of the Israeli involvement and if Israel is involved then any discussion that neglects to mention them is deeply flawed. Israel apparently has interests in the oil pipeline, not only for their own use but also to sell on the open market. Depending on who you read, anywhere from 100 to 1000 Israeli military advisers were present at one time or another and, if some articles from Israel are to be believed, were involved in the rocket and artillery assault on S.Ossetia. Certainly the UAV drone shot down earlier by Russia was an Israeli one and there are rumoured to be 8 more.
I dislike the binary treatment of what is a nuanced area of historical tension. Divisive "who started it first" sophistry may work for the mass media supplied uninformed but is not going to work for those who are more sceptical and those with either more analytical minds or deeper historical or geopolitical understanding.
The factors include but are not limited to: the USA's policy of surrounding and neutering Russia, US control of NATO and unilateral world power, US election campaigns benefiting from more bogeymen, Caspian energy, a resurgent Russia, a dwindling Russian population, Russian citizens in former Soviet countries, a Russia that distrusts most of the world, bitter formerly Soviet dominated countries, Israeli interests and military support, separatism in vogue, Chechnya, Kosovo, arms and oil industries and local and world history.
One question that disturbs me - why depend on a loose cannon like Saakashvili on your chessboard? He doesn't even present a credible image, sounding more like a tabloid headline than the president of a country. Perhaps "birds of a feather flock together" can explain it?
Beyond the oil there's the matter of Georgia seeking NATO membership and, if this were to be attained, the possibility of U.S. so-called defense missiles being stationed right under the belly of Russia. Given the fact that Poland has just agreed to allow the U.S. to place so-called anti-missile defense shield near the Russian border, Russia has reason to be concerned about Georgia joining NATO, as does the rest of the world, given that these anti-missile shields could precipitate a nuclear war and there go all of us right into the abyss. So if Georgia's August 7 sneak (Pearl Harbor-like) attack upon South Ossetia results in a set-back for Empire-USA, that's good news for all life on earth. Yes, for us to be truly safe, Empire-USA has to be dismantled. How? We elect someone president who'll not only dismantle Empire but turn things around here at home, and then it'll be up to us, the what sort of world.
Personally I have LOVED watching the USA get hoisted on its own petard...and having its own actions in the last 8 years shoved back in its face...
"Whaa...Russia invaded a soveriegn nation without UN approval"
"Whaaa...Russia is just after the oil"
"Whaaa...Whaaa...Whaaa."
LOL
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts." - John Keats
It's good to see that I'm not the only one who feels this way.
Mr. Klare and TomDispatch apparently don't get the fact that there is absolutely no legitimacy in geopolitical ambition. By definition, geopolitical ambition, to control resources for zero-sum gain, is illegitimate and 100% unacceptable to the people.
Mr. Klare might focus on the fundamental ethical failure of the "great game" but instead he chronicles it for his geopolitical students, apparently for their eventual seating at the table to negotiate crumbs for the people.
Whatever his agenda, how the game goes is perfectly irrelevant. The task at hand is to break up the game. The people do not need commodities under concentrated control. This is one of the pillars of the Green party platform, and progressive platforms generally.
Progressives see this prize as within reach. Perhaps as a side effect the Repuk/Demok parties in the USA will be forced to consolidate after battering themselves into such weak positions.
Klare forgets the Iran dimension to this discussion, which is very important and makes his ommission glaring. Look at a map of the region and it becomes quite clear that the shortest route to VLCC capable ports is through Iran. It was for this reason, bypassing Iran, which was centrally as important as bypassing Russia. The UnoCal pipeline proposal for Afghanistan was made to bypass Iran. Also not mentioned are the several pipelines now under construction that will send Central Asian oil and gas to China, then India and eventually Japan. The Peace Pipeline connecting Iran, Pakistan, and India is also a reality nearing completion of its first leg into Pakistan, who is in great need of the resource to ease the massive amounts of electrical load-shedding and its resulting economic and political instability.
There is an interesting essay and discussion about the geopolitics of oil market disruptions here, http://www.theoildrum.com/node/4373 Of the resources Klare enumerates, how much will actually be exported as the producing countries will want to keep an ever increasing amount for their own development and will likely not be as foolish as the Brits, who squandered their North Sea resources too rapidly and are now very dependent importers as Brown's actions have proved.
'Only if American leaders assume a more realistic approach to Russia's resurgent power or, alternatively, choose to collaborate with Moscow in the exploitation of Caspian energy, will the risk of further strategic setbacks in the region disappear.'
I don't know what 'risk of further strategic setbacks' this author is talking about, since many of us Americans do not side with the multinational oil companies at all, nor do we side with their government located in Washington DC?
Oil!
This vile black substance is at the heart of virtually all violence, power-lust, and human suffering in the world today. Oceans of blood have been and will yet be spilled over it.
Even if one denis th climate change dangers, this alone is reason enough that every person should be morally bound to deeply cut or eliminate their use of the stuff.
Ultimately ALL the remaining oil resources will be used by military forces fighting over the remaining oil resources and millions of people will be killed for no good reason at all. This warfare will eventually go nuclear. If anyone survives they will be forced to develop alternative sources of energy. So it goes.
-- ekaton --
Or -perhaps counter-intuitively- use up as much as we can as fast as we can.
It is a finite resource after all.
Were in quite a pickle with oil, either way.
I sometimes wish I could go back in time and knock Edwin (Edward?) Drake on the head.
My neighbor Michael Klare presents a persuasively familiar story line here, but it requires closer scrutiny. He ignores the nominal cause of this conflict, the independence of Ossetia and Abkhazia and the refusal for 14 years of the Georgian state to accept the verdict of history, and he treats the interests and actions of those directly involved as irrelevant, as though they were mere puppets of faraway giants. (Try telling that to an Ossetian or an Abkhazian!) He fails to consider how Putin's perceptions and moves might be shaped by the context of Russia being aggressively confronted and militarily surrounded by the much more powerful Anglo-British Empire; and he fails to consider the substantial evidence that the US Administration fomented this confrontation, including evidence pointing to the possible involvement of John McCain.
The result is a story that supports the Bush Administration's world view and helps justify or obscure their brinkmanship and demonization of Russia.
TomDispatch is often interesting, thought-provoking and useful; but if Tom wants to publish as a progressive and a friend of peace, he should examine more carefully what part the articles he publishes might play in this drama.
Chris Horton
One of Russia's trump cards - The space shuttle - http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/08/27/mccain_calls_for_shuttle_extension/
Yes. I normally like Dr. Klare's articles. But this one clearly shows his weakness. There are other motivations besides energy involved. Energy's role in this is as an excuse rather than a cause.
What is important to the U.S. military-industrial complex is that they get their share of our tax dollars. It is to their advantage that we are dependent on foreign oil because it gives them an excuse to meddle in other countries' affairs to maintain our supply (and their funding).
If the military-industrial complex hadn't deliberately cultivated an antigonistic relationship with Russia since the fall Of the Soviet Union, there would be no reason to be concerned about pipelines that run through Russia. Russia was more than cooperative with the US after the fall of the Soviet Union - even to the point of allowing U.S. military personnel onto their military installations to assist in dismantling much of their nuclear arsenal. Georgia, Ukraine, Khazakhstan, etc. weren't conquered by the Soviet Union, they had been part of Russia for 100 years before the communists took power. Russia just let them secede. Any antagonism is America's fault not Russia's. We, apparently, just couldn't get by without an enemy.
Caspian Sea oil should go to China and India. Russia doesn't need it. Europe already uses too much and has commited itself to reducing its consumption. Natural gas might be different but the Europeans are capable of dealing with Russia on their own and don't need U.S. involvement. America's only contribution has been to unnecessarily militarize the sitution in order to enrich its weapons' industry.
The U.S. has absolutely no valid reason to be militarily involved in this part of the world. The fact that we are should tell us a lot about our need to put our political and economic house in order. Our excessive oil consumption politically empowers the worst elements in our society.
"Georgia, Ukraine, Khazakhstan, etc. weren't conquered by the Soviet Union, they had been part of Russia for 100 years before the communists took power."
Few comments to inform those who know better from the other side of the Moon, err, Earth.
1. Georgia was bequeathed to Russian Emperor by Georgian last king in 1802.
2. East of Dnieper river Ukraine was part of Muscovy after Mongol invasion. Before that Muscovy was part of Kiev Rus;
3. West of Dnieper river Ukraine was part of Muscovy from 1648.
4. Good portion of Kazakhstan was part of Muscovy from the middle of 16th century, together with Siberia. Within to-day borders was part of Russia from the middle of 18th century. Kazakhstan’s former capital Alma-Aty was founded by Russian Seven-Rivers Kozak Host, and current capital of Kazakhstan was built and populated by Russians as RR station along Trans-Siberian railway. Khan Kazak, who gave name to the current title nation, migrated to this territory around 350 years ago, as is attested by tomb stones with 12 – 14 names on them, starting from the first name, followed by father’s name and so on and ending with the name Kazak.
5. Etc. was conquered by Imperial Army in 1880, with more justification then conquest of India: Turkmens were raiding Russian villages and taking Russians for sale in slave markets for centuries, up to the eve of Russian advance to Central Asia, which put decisive end to Turkmen marauders.
5. Ossetians were in the service of Russian Czars for at least two centuries prior to Russian Emperor became the King of Georgia.
Compare these dates with the conquest of Northern American continent and you better understand how laughable American indignation with regard to "Putin's Ruthless Gambit" is.
I have an issue with nihilistic approach of Chris Norton. Classic politico-economical analisys of Michael Klare must not to be devalued by missing some important emotional details like feeling of those unfortunate pawns in new Great Game, Ossetians and Abkhasians. As frequient visitor to both areas I can testify that intraethnical fighting was minimal, at least in comparison with animosity between Ossetian and Chechens. How Mr. Norton came to the conclusion that "a story that supports the Bush Administration's world view and helps justify or obscure their brinkmanship and demonization of Russia" is beyond me.
In this case negativism only helps to obscure and demonize such people like Michael Klare and Howard Zinn who try to carry over ideology based on facts and not on "feelings". I hope readers of this note will understand by semi-Aezop's language. For who will not is not emancipated from the nightmare of postideological ideology, postcultural culture and many more other posts.
Vale
Vale: The name is Horton, with an "H", and I hardly see how you can see me as a nihilist, or how you can put Klare and Zinn in the same category! Klare has nothing to say about the struggles of the peoples of the world for peace, social justice and democracy, or about our struggle against the drive by the Masters of the Empire to plunge the world into a nightmare of global war and repression.
btw I found your own comments interesting and thought-provoking. Peace.
Chris Horton
This is one of the best articles I've read on the Georgian conflict, and I've read quite a few. I hope we continue to hear from Michael Klare.