[Corporations] corps. & the Caspian oil rush
Eubulides
paraconsistent at comcast.net
Sat Nov 1 19:55:13 EST 2003
To hell and Baku
The vast scale and bloody price of the rush for oil in the Caspian has
been little noticed. Now Lutz Klevermann's powerful new study, The New
Great Game, reveals all
Misha Glenny
Sunday November 2, 2003
The Observer
It has been an encouraging fortnight for America's strategic partners in
central Asia. Craig Murray, the UK's man in Tashkent, has been an
especially painful thorn in the side of Uzbekistan and its President,
Islam Karimov, whose regime regularly tortures political opponents. Murray
has been relentless in his criticism of these human rights abuses despite
the distress this has caused the Pentagon. Karimov has been George W
Bush's significant other in the region ever since he agreed to the setting
up of US military bases in his country. But Murray's credibility has now
been fatally undermined after it emerged that he had been the target of a
Foreign Office internal investigation. No more talking out of turn in the
ranks!
Ten days before the Murray story broke, Ilham Aliyev, the son of
Azerbaijan's ailing president, was elected to take his father's place. The
establishment of this dynasty will ensure stability for the development of
the country's oil industry and its Western investors even if there is some
regrettable collateral damage to the country's democracy, not to mention
an opposition movement that is literally and metaphorically battered.
Politics in central Asia increasingly takes its cue from the rich mineral
deposits that are spread all along the Azerbaijani coast, permeating every
brick and every beam of wood in the capital Baku with the slightly sweet,
slightly sickening smell of oil, or as it is known locally, 'the devil's
tears.'
The devil attracts some persuasive pilgrims to Baku these days. It is said
of David Woodward, the head of BPAmoco's operation in Azerbaijan that he
is as powerful as the Aliyev family. 'If we pull out of Baku,' a BP
spokesman pointed out to Lutz Kleveman in this compelling book, The New
Great Game, 'the country would collapse overnight.'
Frankly, it hasn't fared too well with the full backing of BPAmoco; it has
lost 15 per cent of its territory to the Armenians and most of its
citizens live in abject poverty. Indeed as most ordinary Azeris probably
know by now, the only thing worse than living in a weak dysfunctional
state is to live in a weak dysfunctional state that is home to a valuable
natural resource, in particular oil, diamonds, coca leaves or opium
poppies. Ask anyone from Angola, Congo, Colombia or Afghanistan.
This has proved an unhappy circumstance for a swath of territories in
central Asia and the Caucasus stretching from the Chinese border to
Turkey. In 1990 and 1991, they unexpectedly found themselves to be
independent nations and no longer members of the Soviet Union (with the
distressing exception of Chechnya). That in itself was not necessarily
bad, although these new countries were of course woefully unprepared for
the demands of statehood. Indeed, for several the champagne was still
flowing when they found themselves in the middle of vicious wars and
communal conflict.
Within a couple of years, geologists and oil engineers predicted that
several countries around the Caspian Sea might be sitting on much greater
oil and natural gas reserves than had been thought. And this happened just
when the US was embarking on a strategic review of its future energy
requirements, prompted by a worrying overdependence on the Gulf and, above
all, Saudi Arabia.
Soon, Amoco and Exxon started sniffing around Baku and the biggest
littoral state, Kazakhstan, where it was thought sensational discoveries
might lie. Moscow was, however, not just going to stand idly by and permit
the United States to usurp its two-century-old role as colonial master of
the Caucasus and Central Asia.
And if this was not sufficient for all manner of chaos, China and its
state oil company, which employs more than 1.5 million people, immediately
perceived the Caspian to be the answer to the energy needs of its
hyperactive economic growth rates.
The great powers were right - in July 2000, the Kashagan field in
Kazakhstan was discovered, one of the biggest oil bubbles in decades. But
the Caspian oil rush is more complicated than any other because the black
gold is locked within the globe's largest lake. Technology is now able to
extract the stuff, notwithstanding frequently adverse conditions, but you
still have to get it to the open seas. And many of the wars in the
surrounding areas are not about who owns the oil, but who controls the
territory for the proposed pipelines.
The big three form coalitions of avarice with their local allies. In
Chechnya, President Putin has raised the standard of the war on terror to
justify the obliteration of the territory, insisting that the Chechens are
fully fledged al-Qaeda operatives. But in neighbouring Georgia, Orthodox
Russia throttles its co-confessional Georgians by backing the Muslim
Abkhaz separatists.
America pours money and legitimacy into the regime of Karimov, self-styled
successor to Tamburlaine. His is the key strategic state in the area and
the first former Soviet country where Americans have established military
bases. Some unforgivable conspiracy theorists have even suggested that
America's main aim in the war against the Taliban in Afghanistan was to
establish a military presence in the Caspian region in accordance with its
Middle Eastern strategy.
Whatever the truth, this mesmerisingly complex geopolitical mix has proved
a rich sources for the two fluids, blood and oil, which stain every page
of this debut by Klevemann, a young German journalist who has written
widely for the British and American press.
I have been amazed over the past decade that nobody has produced a
synthetic book about the rush for the Caspian treasures. Indeed, even
though it has triggered several wars, killed hundreds of thousands of
people and displaced millions more, ravaged the local ecology (not to
mention the sturgeon population), and includes the most powerful and
ruthless actors from around the globe, this story barely makes it into the
media. We have probably learnt more about it from the Bond movie The World
Is Not Enough, much of which is set in the oilfields of Baku, than we have
from the broadsheets.
Now, in the very best tradition of foreign reporting, Klevemann has
uncovered the staggering dimensions of the resources being channelled into
the struggle for control of the Caspian oilfields. Through a carefully
structured book which concentrates on his eye-popping experience, he has
created a solid framework that captures all the brutal weirdness of the
conflicts, deals and characters from generals and oil Ministers to
refugees and admirably quixotic ecologists.
Above all, he has recorded how human life and our environment are tossed
aside with abandon as the vanguard of corporate globalisers seek to
satiate our addiction to the black gold that enables us to drop the kids
off at school before tootling off to Sainsbury's.
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