Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on August 19, 2008

Bookmark and Share

Russia’s Return Bites the Neocons’ Grand Energy Scheme in the Ass

By James Howard Kunstler


You have to ask what were they smoking over at the Pentagon and the CIA when they thought they could control Russia’s close neighbor.


The feeble American response to Russia’s assertion of power in the Caucasus of Central Asia was appropriate, since our claims of influence in that part of the world are laughable. The US had taken advantage of temporary confusion in Russia, during the ten-year-long post-Soviet-collapse interval, and set up a client government in Georgia, complete with military advisors, sales of weapons, and even the promise of club membership in the western alliance known as NATO. These blandishments were all in the service of the Baku-to-Ceyhan oil pipeline, which was designed specifically to drain the oil region around the Caspian Basin with an outlet on the Mediterranean, avoiding unfriendly nations all along the way.


At the time this gambit was first set up, in the early 1990s, there was some notion (or wish, really) among the so-called western powers that the Caspian would provide an end-run around OPEC and the Arabs, as well as the Persians, and deliver all the oil that the US and Europe would ever need — a foolish wish and a dumb gambit, as things have turned out.


For one thing, the latterly explorations of this very old oil region — first opened to drilling in the 19th century — proved somewhat disappointing. US officials had been touting it as like unto “another Saudi Arabia” but the oil actually produced from the new drilling areas of Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and the other Stans turned out to be preponderantly heavy-and-sour crudes, in smaller quantities than previously dreamed-of, and harder to transport across the extremely challenging terrain to even get to the pipeline head in Baku.


AlterNet



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *