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Former President Suleyman Demirel: 'The BTC is an engineering master

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  • Former President Suleyman Demirel: 'The BTC is an engineering master

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    Aug 4, 2006

    Former President Suleyman Demirel: 'The BTC is an engineering
    masterpiece and a political success'

    Gokhan Kazbek - EkoTurk News Agency / Ankara

    The idea of transferring Azeri oil to Turkey through a pipeline dates
    back to 1991 when the USSR collapsed. For 15 years there was heated
    debate surrounding the project. In 1992 when the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    (BTC) project for Azerbaijan oil was officially proposed, it included
    Iran on the transit route and was announced to the world as the
    Azerbaijan-Iran, Nakhchivan-Turkey pipeline. But the route wasn't
    approved of by the U.S., which was explicit about its attitude
    towards the regime in Iran and maintained an economic and commercial
    embargo on the country.

    Afterwards, the alternative route to Turkey through Georgia was
    offered. In response, other lines were suggested supported by Russia,
    ones stretching to the Black Sea, ignoring Turkey's concern over the
    Straits, and yet others which bypassed the Straits and had little
    economic value. A midway was devised in the 1999 Organization of
    Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) summit in Istanbul with the
    contribution of the United States and the leaders of the countries
    involved.

    In the presence of U.S. President Bill Clinton, Turkish President
    Suleyman Demirel, Azeri President Haydar Aliyev, and Georgian
    President Eduard Shevardnadze - Aliyev has since passed away, and the
    others are no longer in office - signed the package deals that
    involved Azeri oil being brought to Ceyhan. Clinton also signed the
    agreement as the observer. In accordance with the terms of 1999
    agreement, basic engineering groundwork was initiated at the end of
    2000. The construction actually began in 2003. The first drops of oil
    reached Ceyhan in late May, and the first tankers were loaded in
    early June.

    Turkey's former President Suleyman Demirel told EkoTurk News Agency
    about the process of the BTC oil pipeline.

    EKOTURK: Mister President, there have been many media stories about
    the BTC. You were one of the main actors of this project. Could you
    tell us a little about its foundations?

    DEMÝREL: A new period began in 1989 across the world with the
    collapse of the Berlin Wall. After the fall of the wall, the Mikhail
    Gorbachev administration emerged in Russia with two important
    concepts of Glasnost and Perestroika (i.e. transparency and
    efficiency), the principles that they wished to introduce to the
    management of the state. Actually both were signs of the collapse of
    the Soviet system. They proved to be complementary. The Soviet system
    collapsed in 1989-1991 and new independent republics emerged in
    Central Asia and the Caucasus. Countries in the Balkans, in Central
    and Eastern Europe that were under the influence of the Soviet rule
    shed this system. That brought along a new and very significant
    change in political geography of the world. A point to stress here is
    that the change wasn't anticipated at all. History had not hitherto
    witnessed an empire that collapsed without any bloodshed or strife.

    The Soviet Empire was truly an empire, a giant country s! preading
    over 22 million square kilometers on which 250 million people lived
    and spoke 104 languages. It was an industrial country with immense
    military might. It also possessed vast economic power. However, while
    half of Europe, Western Europe, attained a per capita income level of
    some $20,000 , the Soviet system could not go over $3,000. Hence it
    was evident that the Marxist and Communist rule that rested beneath
    the Soviet system didn't suffice to take a country forward despite
    having achieved certain things. And people began to talk about new
    things: "a new world order" was to be built. It became clear later on
    that this new world order would be built on democracy, human rights,
    and the market economy. That was the system that made Europe rich.

    Both the new republics and the republics that came out of Soviet
    influence embraced democracy and the market economy to astonishing
    degrees and turned their faces to the West with their old guard even
    before the! y built their new institutions. As these developments
    were un! derway, Turkey embraced the Eurasian region for its part.

    Most of Eurasia were countries that rested on 11 million square
    kilometers of territory, with a population of 200 million, most of
    which spoke Turkic languages and were Muslim. Turkey had seen these
    countries and peoples as captivated countries and captivated peoples.

    Ataturk had an almost prophetic vision: "We cannot do anything for
    these places at the moment. But the time will come when the Soviet
    system will collapse just like the Ottoman Empire did. We should be
    taking care of them on that day." In early 1991, the day came. All,
    or at least most of these kin countries that spoke Turkish, countries
    whose destinies we could not figure out for many years and which we
    didn't know very well even during the Czarist period that was
    undermined by 80 years of Communist rule, were now rid of the
    oppression.

    At the elections of fall 1991, the True Path Party (DYP) that I was
    heading won the elections and I was told for the seventh time to form
    a Cabinet. So I established a coalition government together with the
    Social Democratic Populist Party and started my post. At about the
    time the republics that we term Eurasian countries were just
    declaring independence. As soon as they declared independence, Turkey
    took a close interest in these countries. I received the post to
    establish the government on Nov. 7, 1991 and as our government had
    not been given the vote of confidence on Nov. 9, 1991, the Cabinet
    preceding ours recognized Azerbaijan. Our government began its post
    as the 49th Cabinet on Nov. 20, 1991 and recognized all of the
    republics that emerged out of the Soviet system. These included
    Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. On
    the other side Yugoslavia also collapsed and Turkey recognized the
    countries that were born out of that as well. The gover! nment that
    we established in 1991 recognized all the countries out of the
    collapsed Soviet empire and the countries in the Caucasus, including
    Georgia and Armenia, with the world context in mind. New countries
    and a new commonwealth emerged, and we had moral and ethical duties
    to these countries, that's what we felt. Actually, these countries
    didn't know us very well and vice versa. But we were in a position to
    get to know them. We formed strong relationships with Azerbaijan on
    Jan. 14, 1992. I visited Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and
    Azerbaijan as the premier on April 27-May 2, 1992.

    'Newly independent countries didn't want a new big brother'
    These were very young republics at the time and had nothing at hand.

    They had founded a state but the state had no institutions. These
    states would be founded on democratic principles but they had no
    knowledge of democracy. The state would acknowledge the market
    economy but they had neither the institutions nor the entrepreneurs
    to get the market economy going. Most important of all, they had no
    legislation either. In terms of development, 50 percent of the Soviet
    economy actually rested on military industries but military industry
    had lost its appeal too. They didn't know what to do. We advised
    these countries what to do for democratic rule and a market economy
    and we delivered files to each of the country leaders with
    information on what to do about things. All of these countries were
    gravely in need of certain things as their markets and their current
    systems had come to a total halt. They needed everything, from food
    to medicine. Besides, there was no party that co! uld make
    investments, and other countries were unwilling to invest under hazy
    circumstances as well. I committed during my visit to lend these
    young republics $1 billion in the name of the Republic of Turkey. The
    credits were opened and later used. With the exception of Kyrgyzstan,
    all were repaid. I also opted to invite students from these countries
    during the visit. The first group would number around 3,000 people
    and the figure would later climb to 15,000 people. Hence we would be
    building bridges with these countries, incoming students would study
    at Turkish universities, would learn the Anatolian dialect of
    Turkish, would see Turkey and be able to compare Turkey's development
    with the development attained by communism in their countries. They
    would see that there was development outside communism and the
    comfort and the liberty in Turkey. This was a very successful
    program. These countries only knew of Moscow as the window to the
    outside world. Their connection to! Moscow needed to be severed, or
    rather, diversified. New act! ors needed to be involved alongside
    Moscow. We connected their television and telephone administrations
    to Turkey at a time when all their affairs were dependent on Moscow.

    Turkey was a window to the world for these countries.

    These countries had extraordinary natural resources. Hence I advised
    themý: "Unless you can process these natural resources and bring them
    to light, the prosperity of your people will not be a possibility."

    The nations needed prosperity. We told them that they needed to
    develop the industries that would meet the needs of their people and
    we would help them out for that and consequently we did so. In the
    following 10 years Turks undertook 80 percent of the public work and
    construction projects in the region. Among the natural resources
    energy and mining were forerunners. And among these the most
    significant resources were oil and gas resources. Gas was the
    resource of Turkmenistan and oil was that of Kazakhstan and
    Azerbaijan as well. At the time, the amount of global oil reserves
    was known to be 1 billion barrels. Some 66 percent of that was in the
    Persian Gulf. Iran was part of that. Twenty percent was in the
    Caspian basin, and 20 percent was in other countries ! of the world.

    Turkey was situated at such a location that, while it didn't hold oil
    and gas, it was neighboring it. Turkey could just as well cooperate
    with its neighbors to process this oil and gas and help these
    countries prosper while it would become an energy corridor or energy
    terminal itself. Turkey built the Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline for that
    matter and before that had brought its own oil from Batman to
    Ýskenderun and built a pipeline from Ceyhan to Kýrýkkale. Therefore,
    it had some experience with pipelines. It could undertake these as
    well. Turkey, at the end of the day, had built the pipeline that
    received gas from Russia (the Blue Stream project was nonexistent at
    the time). Nevertheless, it wasn't clear how much oil Azerbaijan
    possessed. The amount of oil processed in Azerbaijan was a mere 8-10
    million tons. Azerbaijan has had oil for a very long time but the
    amount of it had fallen to very low levels. Russia bought and
    processed all of the gas in Turkme! nistan. Kazakhstan began to
    search for oil particularly in th! e Tengiz region. Kazakh President
    Nursultan Nazarbayev took a quite bold step and opened his country to
    the world. Oil depends on global capital and global experience
    anyway. The world's oil industrialists came and found vast resources
    in Tengiz and new resources elsewhere later on. The relations between
    Turkey and Azerbaijan started out very positive as these
    Turkic-speaking countries are actually people of the same nation in
    terms of language, traditions and customs but among all of them
    Azerbaijan is the closest to Anatolian Turkishness. In terms of both
    language and traditions, Azerbaijan was seen as the second state of
    the same nation. The intimate relations served the cooperation
    between Azerbaijan and Turkey to a great extent. We signed an
    agreement with Azerbaijan administrators in Ankara on March 9, 1993.

    I put my signature underneath as prime minister and Hikmet Cetin
    signed as the foreign minister and Sabit Bagirov as the oil minister
    of Azerbaijan. This is ! how the Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline started
    officially. The rest is just chatter, before this point is just
    chatter, whoever might talk about it, including myself, it is just
    chatter. We say we should do it, and I have outlined all of these to
    indicate why we should do it. Unless you know these, the rest is
    dross. Turkey had some concerns. First of all we started out with
    great enthusiasm and as a Eurasian state in the heart of Eurasia, but
    how do we cooperate with the Turkic world in Eurasia in terms of
    trade, culture and education without provoking concerns over
    Pan-Turkism and Pan-Islamism? These newly independent countries
    didn't want a new big brother. We were to engage in cooperation in
    equal terms but become more interdependent. One of the ways of
    boosting interdependence is to step up individual relationships. I
    think that holds more water than the trade part. This is about
    bringing the Turkic world closer together. In every step taken here
    we need to seek to brin! g the Turkic world closer outside of the
    conditions of Pan-Tu! rkism and Pan-Islamism.

    Turkey had another concern: Since the time of the Soviet Union, oil
    transfers were blocking the Bosphorus and Dardanelles Straits in
    Turkey and causing accidents. The city of Istanbul was facing fire
    hazards. The more we could transfer the oil that we got from Russia,
    the Caucasus and Central Asia from the Black Sea to the Mediterranean
    without using the Straits, the greater Turkey would benefit.

    Therefore at the preliminary agreement we signed on March 9, 1993 we
    committed in principle to bring down Baku oil as part of Caspian oil
    to the Mediterranean. I had discussed the same issue with Mr.

    Elchibey prior to that date, and so had (late President) Turgut Ozal.

    And yes, we should bring Caspian oil down to the Mediterranean and
    save the Straits and in the meantime improve our relations with these
    countries, we should bring the gas in Turkmenistan to Turkey, each of
    these were part of our considerations and we needed to materialize
    those considerations but first of all that re! quired some presence
    of oil in Azerbaijan. But there was no oil in Azerbaijan. I would
    like to mention at this point an occasion that turned out to be a
    landmark.

    Aliyev opened oil areas in the Caspian Basin to the world
    Haydar Aliyev received the post of president of the Republic in
    Azerbaijan in 1993. Aliyev was a knowledgeable and great statesman
    who knew the world very well. Aliyev opened to the world the oil
    areas reserved for them in the Caspian Basin. He opened them to
    global companies with an agreement called the Production and Sharing
    of Azerbaijan Oil. That is a major event. He called that the
    "contract of the century" himself. A corporation was founded between
    Azerbaijan state company SOCAR and foreign firms, and Turkish TPAO
    was a shareholder with 1.75 percent. By the way, I'd like to stress
    this one point: I went to Davos in 1992. Russia was melting down and
    new countries were emerging. I had just been around Central Asia, and
    I said in Davos: "A new political geography is appearing after the
    Cold War. This is not a conflict zone or a new area of penetration;
    to the contrary, it should be a safe haven for peace and prosperity
    whereby conflicts will be rep! laced by a spirit of cooperation and
    coexistence." I declared these points to all nations in Davos.

    After this international corporation was founded in 1994 there were
    new efforts. Another 5 percent was added to the share given to Turkey
    in 1995. In the meantime, there were ongoing negotiations, debate as
    to where the pipeline should pass. There was conflict between
    Azerbaijan and Armenia on Karabakh. There was considerable debate on
    whether it should pass through Iran or Georgia and eventually
    resolved that technically speaking, the right thing to do was to pass
    it through Georgia. But that was disputed: Some said that as there is
    the Baku-Supsa line, it could very well be expanded and used to
    transfer the oil in Azerbaijan and so there was no need for a
    Baku-Ceyhan line. Russia was an opponent at the end of the day. Mr.

    Aliyev and I responded to those and insisted that the Baku-Ceyhan
    line be built and the right thing to do was to pass it through
    Georgia. But what would Georgia do about this? I find the role of
    Shevardnadze here to be very significant. Shevardnadze thoug! ht this
    line would be very important not only in economic terms but also to
    connect the Caucasus and Caspian countries to Turkey and supported
    the idea to the very end. The route of the line was now clear, but
    there were many other issues concerning nationalization. None of
    these countries had any experience with that. Such a widespread
    movement was never seen in this region. But both Aliyev and
    Shevardnadze handled the nationalization issues very well. Aliyev
    went to Tbilisi to give Shevardnadze a boost and increased their
    share. So the template was now on the table.

    Then the 75th Anniversary of the Turkish Republic was celebrated. The
    presidents of Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Georgia as well
    as U.S. energy secretary attended the celebrations and we signed an
    agreement with them on Oct. 29, 1998. Here we issued a declaration
    and hence the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline project took another
    leap forward. Now the real issue was actually this: On Nov. 18, 1999
    the Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) meeting
    was held in Istanbul and intergovernmental agreements were made on
    that occasion. Aliyev signed the agreement for Azerbaijan,
    Shevardnadze for Georgia and myself for Turkey. U.S. President Bill
    Clinton was the witness. Host country agreement, turnkey contracting
    agreement and the governmental guarantees agreement were signed on
    that date. The matter was well on track, the issue now was to find
    the money, run the tenders and manage the construction. The
    construction project and other tasks were completed! by Sept. 18,
    2002 and then the foundation was laid with a ceremony by the
    presidents of Turkey, Azerbaijan and Georgia. Oil was transferred for
    the first time on May 25, 2005 and the pipeline was opened with a
    ceremony on July 13, 2006.

    The annual revenues of the project for Turkey are $300 million. The
    project should not be assessed based solely on this but other
    benefits of the project concerning the Straits and connecting Eurasia
    should be taken into consideration as well. However, Turkey will in
    any case be making significant amount of money from this project
    within a time frame of 40 years. Many people contributed to the
    materialization of this project. The late President Turgut Ozal
    supported the project in the beginning, and in the aftermath these
    figures should be cited: Aliyev, Clinton, Bush - father and son both
    - Nazarbayev, Shevardnadze, and myself as the president of the
    Republic of Turkey. Of course, all the relevant institutions of
    Turkey, and Botas first of all, contributed to the project to a major
    extent. And hence this giant project, "the project of the century,"
    came to life.

    This is how I put it across in the OSCE meeting in 1999: "Today we
    are not only connecting the Caspian and the Mediterranean, but also
    bonding our destinies together. Today we are making our common dreams
    come true. The agreements that we have just signed will serve peace
    and prosperity. We are not only declaring our resoluteness to
    transfer the oil and natural gas resources of the Caspian basin to
    world markets in an economic and environmentally friendly way, but
    also responding to the call of history."

    EKOTURK: How would you define the BTC project?

    DEMÝREL: In my opinion this project is an engineering masterpiece and
    a political success, a diplomatic triumph at the same time. It is a
    diplomatic triumph to surpass Russia and to bring this project thus
    far is a diplomatic. It is a great political achievement to bring the
    ex-Soviet republics together and to add Turkey and the U.S. on and to
    bring such a project to fruition.

    The point is that the project is undertaken and completed. The
    questions of who opened it and the like are just details. In fact,
    the remembrance and the consideration of those that have served in
    the materialization of this project is just for the sake of those who
    will serve after this point. What matters for those who have served
    is that the work is complete. To thank those who served will
    encourage those who will serve, that is the reason why they should be
    remembered.

    EKOTURK: Looking at the implementation and the achieved results, can
    we say that the project reached its goal?

    DEMÝREL: Yes, we can. The pending task is to provide oil to the
    world. The project sources will be enriched in that new oil resources
    will be discovered and that will help those countries to a great
    extent. If the Kirkuk pipeline continues to operate there will be
    150-200 million tons of oil. That is a significant figure for Turkey,
    so much so that Turkey is almost becoming an oil country, even though
    the oil does not belong to itself and the oil in the country belong
    to others.

    EKOTURK: What is the benefit of this pipeline for the United States?

    DEMÝREL: Some of the companies are American companies and part of the
    capital is American capital, but the main point is that the United
    States as a superpower would always wish to enhance its prowess in
    this region. Of course, the construction of such a pipeline would
    increase the influence of the U.S. and the U.S. would wish to
    maintain the power it acquires in the coming term rather than
    preserving the power it has accumulated thus far. Therefore it would
    aim to stay on good terms with the countries in the region. The U.S.

    has given a lot of support to the project. If they had not supported
    the project, we would have faced significant difficulty in finding
    money and overcoming the political obstacles.

    EKOTURK: How did you feel at the opening ceremony on July 13?

    DEMÝREL: I was very pleased, very gratified. My country has gained a
    new facility. A major part of the things that I envisioned has come
    true. Many things that seem to be a dream for others have become
    reality for me, and this is one of them. My country has boosted its
    power.

    EKOTURK: Thank you for talking with us.

    DEMÝREL: Thank you.

    --Boundary_(ID_PzGDEr23hhwBv0KFC8UErQ)--
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