Page added on June 10, 2006
The quest for energy control has informed Washington’s support for high-risk “color revolutions” in Georgia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Belarus and Kyrgyzstan in recent months. It lies behind US activity in West Africa, as well as in Sudan, source of 7% of
China’s oil imports. It lies behind US policy vis-a-vis President Hugo Chavez’ Venezuela and President Evo Morales’ Bolivia.
In recent months, however, this strategy of global energy dominance has shown signs of producing just the opposite: a kind of “coalition of the unwilling”, states that increasingly see no other prospect, despite traditional animosities, but to cooperate to oppose what they see as a US push to control the future security of their energy.
If the trend of recent events continues, it won’t be US-style democracy that is spreading, but rather Russian and Chinese influence over major oil and gas supplies.
Some in Washington are beginning to realize that important figures might have been too clumsy in recent public statements about both China and Russia, two nations whose cooperation in some form is essential to the success of the global US energy project.
Contrary to advice from older China hands, including former secretary of state Henry Kissinger, architect of president Richard Nixon’s 1972 opening to China, the White House denied visiting Chinese President Hu Jintao the honor of a full state dinner when he visited in April, serving instead a short “state lunch”. Hu was publicly humiliated by a well-known Falungong heckler at the White House press conference.
A few weeks later, Vice President Dick Cheney slapped Russian President Vladimir Putin with the most open attack on Russia’s internal human-rights policy as well as its energy policy in a speech in the Baltic state of Lithuania. There, Cheney declared of Russia, “The government has unfairly and improperly restricted the rights of her people.” He accused Russia of energy “intimidation and blackmail”. Some days later, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice reiterated that Russia should be “pressed” on democratic reforms. Rice also slapped China in the face in March during a trip to Southeast Asia, calling China a “negative force” in Asia.
Curiously, Washington has repeatedly accused China of “not playing by the rules”, in terms of its oil politics, declaring that China is guilty of “seeking to control energy at the source”, as though that had not been US energy policy for the past century.
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