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Georgia: Wake Up Europe

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  • Georgia: Wake Up Europe

    GEORGIA: WAKE UP EUROPE
    by Diane Francis

    National Post
    August 12, 2008, 7:19 PM
    Canada

    Energy, Russia, U.S. Politics, Middle East

    The BTU pipeline route is in the way of Russian energy ambitions.

    Oil prices did not jump after Russia attacked Georgia even though
    this is all about oil and pipeline locations and will result in
    higher prices in the long run. The strategy here is to discipline
    uppity nation-states, like Georgia, in the "near abroad" that used
    to be part of the former Soviet Union.

    This is why crude continued its downward price trend, thanks to
    a push-back by consumers worldwide against high prices, but the
    Russian stock market and Ruble tanked. Investors don't like bullies
    who threaten their competitors as well as customers which is what
    this exercise was all about.

    The bullying Bear The Russians have been exerting their economic
    muscle throughout the region, shutting down pipelines temporarily,
    hiking prices unilaterally and generally making mischief. But they
    have been playing hardball with Georgia because it is small with
    only 4.4 million people and has a minimal diaspora to make a fuss
    worldwide. Moscow has financed separatist leaders and guerrillas in
    that country and there are now two breakaway provinces.

    Last Friday, Saakashvili sent in his troops, with Israeli military
    advisors, to one of these provinces despite the existence of Russian
    peace keepers. This drew a devastating and rapid counter-attack,
    underway as Putin sat in the bleachers at the Beijing Opening Games
    Ceremony.

    Georgia claims there were plenty of provocations, but facts are that
    they sent troops in first, it appears, and then Russia reacted with
    might quickly.

    All that's a sideshow The real game here is about the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTU) pipeline which just opened last year and
    pumps one million barrels a day from offshore Azerbaijan to Turkey
    via Georgia. The line cost $3 billion, is 1,100 miles long and was
    built by a consortium of oil giants which includes the Azerbaijani
    government. Key here is that this line could pump 10 million barrels
    a day, or Saudi levels of production, by hooking up with other Central
    Asian oil producing countries so they can bypass Russian pipelines.

    But that's not all that involved here. Moscow's over-reaction was
    clumsy and unnecessary if only Georgia were involved. That's not
    the case. Giving Georgia a good hiding sends a message to all of the
    former Soviet "near abroad" states - from Tajikistan to Kazakhstan,
    Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    Don't build big pipelines, say the Russians, that bypass our pipelines
    and oil.

    Specifically, Russia is opposing another proposed lines from Tajikistan
    or other oil-producing "stans" directly to markets in Europe, Asia
    or internationally through ports, as the newly-minted BTU does.

    Russia's long-term strategy is to become as much of a monopoly supplier
    to the wealthy and oil impoverished European Union or Ukraine and
    others as possible.

    All that should be worrisome for Europe and world oil markets
    which translated into a drop in confidence in the Russian market
    and currency. Strong-arm, bully-boy tactics may have won Russia the
    battle to deal with the uppity Georgian President, but it will lose
    the long-term economic war as companies, entrepreneurs and nations
    shrink from involvement or investment there.

    The young president Russia is threatening to take Georgia's President
    Saakashvili to the World Court for war crimes after his troops invaded
    South Ossetia, the breakaway province. This is predictable.

    I met Saakashvili and his wife in Davos shortly after his Rose
    Revolution. He was charming, witty and disarmingly American. He grew
    up in the U.S. and became a New York attorney when he was plucked by
    New York financier George Soros, as well as the CIA, to help bring
    about Georgia's independence after the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991.

    Despite his country's vulnerability, he has been fiercely and
    tauntingly pro-American and pro-Israel.

    Here's where it gets very interesting.

    Reports that the BTU line was targeted by the Russians are out there
    but mostly unconfirmed. And a group of Kurdish terrorists exploded
    the BTU inside Turkey which will shut it down for a couple of weeks.

    So here you have a provocation by a pro-American Saakashvili, helped
    by Israel, and a terrorist attack in Turkey by Kurds who are also
    very pro-American.

    It's all very byzantine which makes it all the better for the spooks
    and others in the shadows of this mini-war.

    As things now stand, the Russians have called off the invasion of
    Georgia and think they have accomplished exactly what they wanted to
    which was to frighten its oil-producing or oil-consuming neighbors.

    At the same time, the CIA and Israelis (and French) may believe they
    have also accomplished their mission. Their proxy, in Georgia, sucked
    Russia into a dramatic and frightening invasion, thus underscoring
    the fragility of the BTU line and Europe's current energy procurement
    policies.

    Maybe the Germans and other Euros will now realize they had better
    block Moscow's energy strategy, thanks to Saakashvili's boldness,
    coupled with sabotage by CIA-supported Kurds.

    And maybe that was somebody's plan to do so. Or maybe not.
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