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Monbiot: America's Pipe Dream By George Monbiot 26/10/2001 4:15 am Thu |
http://www.monbiot.com/dsp_article.cfm?article_id=464
(Published in the Guardian 23rd October 2001)
The war against terrorism is also a struggle for oil and regional control
By George Monbiot. "Is there any man, is there any woman, let me say any child here",
Woodrow Wilson asked a year after the First World War ended, "that
does not know that the seed of war in the modern world is industrial
and commercial rivalry?". In 1919, as US citizens watched a
shredded Europe scraping up its own remains, the answer may well
have been no. But the lessons of war never last for long.
The invasion of Afghanistan is certainly a campaign against terrorism,
but it may also be a late colonial adventure. British ministers have
warned MPs that opposing the war is the moral equivalent of
appeasing Hitler, but in some respects our moral choices are closer
to those of 1956 than those of 1938. Afghanistan is as indispensable
to regional control and the transport of oil in central Asia as Egypt
was in the Middle East. Afghanistan has some oil and gas of its own, but not enough to
qualify as a major strategic concern. Its northern neighbours, by
contrast, contain reserves which could be critical to future global
supply. In 1998, Dick Cheney, now US vice-president but then chief
executive of a major oil services company, remarked, "I cannot think
of a time when we have had a region emerge as suddenly to become
as strategically significant as the Caspian." But the oil and gas there
is worthless until it is moved. The only route which makes both
political and economic sense is through Afghanistan.
Transporting all the Caspian basin's fossil fuel through Russia or
Azerbaijan would greatly enhance Russia's political and economic
control over the Central Asian Republics, which is precisely what the
West has spent ten years trying to prevent. Piping it through Iran
would enrich a regime which the US has been seeking to isolate.
Sending it the long way round through China, quite aside from the
strategic considerations, would be prohibitively expensive. But
pipelines through Afghanistan would allow the US both to pursue its
aim of "diversifying energy supply" and to penetrate the world's most
lucrative markets. Growth in European oil consumption is slow and
competition is intense. In South Asia, by contrast, demand is booming
and competitors are scarce. Pumping oil south and selling it in
Pakistan and India, in other words, is far more profitable than pumping
it west and selling it in Europe. As the author Ahmed Rashid has documented, the US oil company
Unocal has been seeking since 1995 to build oil and gas pipelines
from Turkmenistan, through Afghanistan and into Pakistani ports on
the Arabian Sea. The company's scheme required a single
administration in Afghanistan, which would guarantee safe passage
for its goods. Soon after the Taliban took Kabul in September 1996,
the Telegraph reported that "oil industry insiders say the dream of
securing a pipeline across Afghanistan is the main reason why
Pakistan, a close political ally of America's, has been so supportive
of the Taliban, and why America has quietly acquiesced in its
conquest of Afghanistan." Unocal invited some of the leaders of the
Taliban to Houston, where they were royally entertained. The
company suggested paying these barbarians 15 cents for every
thousand cubic feet of gas it pumped through the land they had
conquered. For the first year of Taliban rule, US policy towards the regime
appears to have been determined principally by Unocal's interests. In
1997 a US diplomat told Rashid "the Taliban will probably develop
like the Saudis did. There will be Aramco [a US oil consortium which
worked in Saudi Arabia], pipelines, an emir, no parliament and lots of
Sharia law. We can live with that." US policy began to change only
when feminists and greens started campaigning against both Unocal's
plans and the government's covert backing for Kabul.
Even so, as a transcript of a congress hearing now circulating among
war resisters shows, Unocal failed to get the message. In February
1998, John Maresca, its head of international relations, told
representatives that the growth in demand for energy in Asia and
sanctions against Iran determined that Afghanistan remained "the only
other possible route" for Caspian oil. The company, once the Afghan
government was recognised by foreign diplomats and banks, still
hoped to build a 1000-mile pipeline, which would carry a million
barrels a day. Only in December 1998, four months after the embassy
bombings in East Africa, did Unocal drop its plans.
But Afghanistan's strategic importance has not changed. In
September, a few days before the attack on New York, the US
Energy Information Administration reported that "Afghanistan's
significance from an energy standpoint stems from its geographical
position as a potential transit route for oil and natural gas exports from
Central Asia to the Arabian Sea. This potential includes the possible
construction of oil and natural gas export pipelines through
Afghanistan." Given that the US government is dominated by former
oil industry executives, we would be foolish to suppose that a
reinvigoration of these plans no longer figures in its strategic thinking.
As the researcher Keith Fisher has pointed out, the possible
economic outcomes of the war in Afghanistan mirror the possible
economic outcomes of the war in the Balkans, where the
development of "Corridor 8", an economic zone built around a
pipeline carrying oil and gas from the Caspian to Europe, is a critical
allied concern. This is not the only long-term US interest in Afghanistan. American
foreign policy is governed by the doctrine of "full-spectrum
dominance", which means that the United States should control
military, economic and political development all over the world. China
has responded by seeking to expand its interests in central Asia. The
defence white paper Beijing published last year argued that "China's
fundamental interests lie in ... the establishment and maintenance of a
new regional security order". In June, China and Russia pulled four
Central Asian Republics into a "Shanghai Co-operation
Organisation". Its purpose, according to Jiang Zemin, is to "foster
world multi-polarisation", by which he means contesting US
full-spectrum dominance. If the United States succeeds in overthrowing the Taliban and
replacing it with a stable and grateful pro-western government and if
it then binds the economies of central Asia to that of its ally Pakistan,
it will have crushed not only terrorism, but also the growing ambitions
of both Russia and China. Afghanistan, as ever, is the key to the
western domination of Asia. We have argued on these pages about whether terrorism is likely to
be deterred or encouraged by the invasion of Afghanistan, or
whether the plight of the starving there will be relieved or
exacerbated by attempts to destroy the Taliban. But neither of these
considerations describes the full scope and purpose of this war. As
John Flynn wrote in 1944, "The enemy aggressor is always pursuing
a course of larceny, murder, rapine and barbarism. We are always
moving forward with high mission, a destiny imposed by the Deity to
regenerate our victims while incidentally capturing their markets, to
civilize savage and senile and paranoidal peoples while blundering
accidentally into their oil wells." I believe that the United States
government is genuine in its attempt to stamp out terrorism by military
force in Afghanistan, however misguided that may be. But we would
be naïve to believe that this is all it is doing.
23rd October 2001
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