(Oiligopoly stooge and British Halliburtonstan leader Blair's finance chief - Ed.) Gordon Brown knows precisely what he should do about BP. The company's Ł10bn
(2001) profits are crying out for a windfall tax. Royalties and petroleum revenue tax,
both lifted when the oil price was low, are in urgent need of reinstatement.
These measures would be popular and fair. But, as all political leaders are
aware, you don't mess with Big Oil (if you don't want to join others like Milosevic who
didn't support the setup of Halliburtonstans as pipeline protectorates Ed.).
During the 1999 Balkans war, some of the critics of Nato's intervention
alleged that the western powers were seeking to secure a passage for oil from
the Caspian sea. This claim was widely mocked. The foreign secretary Robin Cook
observed that there is no oil in Kosovo
. This was, of course, true but
irrelevant. An eminent commentator for this paper clinched his argument by
recording that the Caspian sea is half a continent away, lodged between Iran
and Turkmenistan
.
For the past few weeks, a freelance researcher called Keith Fisher has been
doggedly documenting a project which has, as far as I can discover, has been
little-reported in any British, European or American newspaper. It is called the
Trans-Balkan pipeline, and it's due for approval at the end of next month. Its
purpose is to secure a passage for oil from the Caspian sea.
The line will run from the Black sea port of Burgas to the Adriatic at Vlore,
passing through Bulgaria, Macedonia and Albania. It is likely to become the main
route to the west for the oil and gas now being extracted in central Asia. It
will carry 750,000 barrels a day: a throughput, at current prices, of some $600m
a month.
The project is necessary, according to a paper published by the US Trade and
Development Agency last May, because the oil coming from the Caspian sea will
quickly surpass the safe capacity of the Bosphorus as a shipping lane
. The
scheme, the agency notes, will provide a consistent source of crude oil to
American refineries
, provide American companies with a key role in
developing the vital east-west corridor
, advance the privatisation
aspirations of the US government in the region
and facilitate rapid
integration
of the Balkans with western Europe
.
In November 1998, Bill Richardson, then US energy secretary, spelt out his
policy on the extraction and transport of Caspian oil. This is about
America's energy security,
he explained. It's also about preventing
strategic inroads by those who don't share our values. We're trying to move
these newly independent countries toward the west.
We would like to see them reliant on western commercial and political
interests rather than going another way. We've made a substantial political
investment in the Caspian, and it's very important to us that both the pipeline
map and the politics come out right.
The project has been discussed for years. The US trade agency notes that the
Trans-Balkan pipeline will become a part of the region's critical east-west
Corridor 8 infrastructure ... This transportation corridor was approved by the
transport ministers of the European Union in April 1994
. The pipeline
itself, the agency says, has also been formally supported since 1994
. The
first feasibility study, backed by the US, was conducted in 1996.
The pipeline does not pass through the former Yugoslavia, but there's no
question that it featured prominently in Balkan war politics. On December 9
1998, the Albanian president attended a meeting about the scheme in Sofia, and
linked it inextricably to Kosovo. It is my personal opinion,
he noted,
that no solution confined within Serbian borders will bring lasting peace.
The message could scarcely have been blunter: if you want Albanian consent for
the Trans-Balkan pipeline, you had better wrest Kosovo out of the hands of the
Serbs.
In July 1993, a few months before the corridor project was first formally
approved, the US sent peacekeeping troops to the Balkans. They were stationed
not in the conflict zones in which civilians were being rounded up and killed,
but on the northern borders of Macedonia. There were several good reasons for
seeking to contain Serb expansionism, but we would be foolish to imagine that a
putative $600m-a-month commercial operation did not number among them. The
pipeline would have been impossible to finance while the Balkans were in
turmoil.
I can't tell you that the war in the former Yugoslavia was fought solely in
order to secure access to oil from new and biddable states in central Asia. But
in the light of these findings, can anyone now claim that it was not?
By George Monbiot, published in Guardian newspaper (London),
15-02-2001