By Mike Whitney
Most people won’t pay any attention to this week’s energy summit in Lahti, Finland, but they should. It is particularly instructive for anyone who is interested in the latest developments in the global resource war.
The purpose of the meeting was to work out the nettlesome issues of energy policy, but the hidden agenda was to pressure Russian President Putin into signing away the control of his country’s critical assets to the big-players in the world energy cartel. The proposed “Energy Charter Treaty” is designed to tie up Russia’s resources through legal obligations which serve the overall interests of the energy giants. The treaty is no different than the EU Constitution which was voted down last year when the “informed” European public realized that it was just another boondoggle set up by big business to override national sovereignty, environmental safety, and civil liberties. The Energy Charter Treaty and the EU Constitution focus on the very same objectives, that is, establishing the legal framework for placing the world and its dwindling resources in the hands of a small cadre of obscenely-wealthy western plutocrats.
Western elites have been waging an intensive public relations
campaign against Putin since he nationalized Yukos Oil and put it under
control of Gazprom. Gazprom is quickly growing into the world’s largest
oil corporation and will probably achieve that goal within the decade.
Putin’s
move to nationalize the industry has been popular at home (his personal
approval rating is consistently over 70%) and has had a profound effect
on stabilizing the ruble and raising the standard of living. Most
Russians still remember the country’s bleak experiment with “free
market” capitalism during the 1990s when the ruble fell through the
floor and Russia’s national assets were raffled off by the
chronically-inebriated Yeltsin (under the supervision of western
advisors). “The Oligarchs”, as they were known, contributed
significantly to Russia’s economic decline as well as its loss of
prestige in the world. Putin has restored national pride, fueled the
new prosperity, and is quickly rebuilding Russia into a world power. If
energy prices continue to soar, as they undoubtedly will, Russia will
be a force to reckon with throughout the 21st century.
American
politicians and corporatists are concerned about Russia’s meteoric rise
and are developing strategies to undermine its progress. The ultimate
goal is to integrate Russia’s prodigious natural resources into the
global system, which is another way of saying that a plan is being
devised to assert direct-control over Russian oil and natural gas.
Since greed is inexhaustible, it is not likely that this battle will end anytime soon.
Putin’s
name already features prominently in the register of American enemies,
which now includes, Ahmadinejad, Chavez, Morales, Castro, Kim Jung-Il,
al Assad, Haniyeh, and Muqtada al Sadr. Anyone who defends their
national interests over the prevailing system of global feudalism can
expect to find themselves in Washington’s crosshairs and to be duly
demonized in the American media.
The Energy Charter Treaty
According
to the BBC, the proposed Energy Charter Treaty would create a “trade
partnership” which would make it easier for companies to invest in the
Russian energy sector, and use Russian pipelines to export the oil and
gas they produce. The pact would also be designed to ensure that Russia
treated all European countries equally, and lay the basis for a
long-term trade partnership.”
Why?
Why should Putin allow
foreign companies to share in Russia’s wealth? Putin is not running a
“charity”. He is expected to use his nation’s resources to improve
things for the Russian people, which is exactly what he is doing. The
insistence that he do otherwise by entering into a “trade partnership”
violates the central tenet of capitalism; the right to private
property. These are Russian resources. They do not belong to the
extended family of predatory corporatists.
The meeting in
Finland has nothing to do with any principled appreciation of
capitalism or “fair play” or anything else for that matter. It’s just
more-of-the-same extortion and coercion masquerading as “multilateral
negotiations.” It’s all baloney.
Putin has been criticized for
using oil and natural gas to send a message to rivals in Georgia and
Ukraine. Vice President Cheney has called this “blackmail”. In reality,
it is an effective and peaceful way to send a message to provocateurs
that there are limits to one’s patience. It is unwise to tweak the nose
of the man who is heating your house and powering your vehicle.
Besides,
Cheney is the last one who should be talking about “energy blackmail”.
Can anyone forget the extortion-racket that Enron conducted against the
American people; bilking them of tens of billions of dollars while the
Federal Energy Commission (FEC) breezily looked the other way? Or the
skyrocketing gas prices (which created unprecedented profits for the
oil giants) which have mysteriously plummeted at the pump just weeks
before the mid-term elections?
Putin is no tyrant and the media’s spurious attacks on him are ludicrous at best.
Is
it mere coincidence that America’s stooge in Georgia, Mikail
Saakashvili, arrested 4 Russian officials inciting a furious response
from Moscow, just weeks after American elites decided to take a
“tougher approach” with Putin? Or is it beyond the realm of imagination
to think that the Bush administration would engineer a crisis just to
provoke Russia?
And, what about the murder of journalist Anna Politkovskaya?
The
western press seems to have found Putin guilty already without any
evidence whatsoever. Thumbing through the 1,400 articles written about
the incident, one would believe that they found Putin’s bloody
fingerprints all over the corpse, but, of course, that is not true.
Consider
this absurd piece in the New York Times10-22-06 edition by Thom
Shanker: “Ms. Politkovskaya, shot to death this month in what appeared
to be a professional killing, had made a name for herself with tough
reporting on the war in Chechnya, and was a fierce critic of the
administration of President Vladimir Putin.”
Therefore Putin killed her?!?
If
Putin was involved in Politkovskaya’s death then he is guilty of a
heinous crime for which there is no defense. But was he? The
journalist’s death may seem familiar to readers who followed the
assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. The
American-backed investigation produced no solid evidence of Syrian
involvement, but the damage from the slanted coverage in the media
forced Syria to withdraw its troops from Lebanon. This, in turn, paved
the way for an attack by Israel just months later.
Another coincidence?
It
is unfortunate that the media hasn’t taken a similar interest in the
130 journalists who’ve been killed in Iraq as they have in
Politkovskaya’s death. In the most recent case, that of Terry Lloyd,
the coroner ruled that he was “unlawfully killed” when he came under
fire by American troops. Andrew Walker, the assistant deputy coroner of
Oxfordshire said, “Having carefully taken into account all the evidence
I am satisfied so that I am sure that had this killing taken place
under English Law it would have constituted unlawful homicide.”
“Homicide?”
How
did that escape the attention of the EU? Or is their indignation as
selective as that of the American media, which chooses its heroes and
villains according to a script that is written in Washington?
As
for the EU and the western media’s sudden interest in Putin’s “rollback
of democracy in Russia”; we’ve heard no similar complaints about the
flurry of repressive legislation passed by George Bush in the USA;
including the Patriot Act and the Military Commissions Act of 2006
which repeals the 800 year old right to habeas corpus. Nor has the EU
shown any particular interest in the proliferation of American gulags,
like Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib, which are now spread across the globe
like grains of sand tossed in the wind. The bogus claims of
“anti-democratic behavior” are naturally limited to the adversaries of
the Bush team.
Putin is a fierce nationalist. He’s doing his
best to raise Russia’s standard of living while making the necessary
compromises with the global energy giants. According to the Russian
News Agency Novosti, Putin said:
“Draft laws are being
considered by the Duma aimed at securing foreign and other investments
into Russia’s economy, guaranteeing owner’s rights, and minimizing the
number of spheres where foreign investment cannot be used.”
“These
spheres,” Putin added, “will mainly be restricted by security issues,
and will also include the largest and most unique deposits to be found
in the world and Russia. These can be counted on one hand. All the rest
will be accessible.”
Putin is opening Russia’s markets and
looking for ways to satisfy the major oil corporations while growing
the Russian economy at the same time. He believes that “mutual
dependence strengthens the energy security of the European continent
and creates good prerequisites for further rapprochement in other
fields.”
He’s right, but he’s also tragically naïve. Has he taken a look at Iraq lately?
Entire civilizations are being pummeled into rubble to satisfy the world’s lust for oil. Why would Russia be spared?
We should expect more violence in Chechnya and Georgia as well as a steady stream of abuse in the western press.
Putin is moving up on Washington’s target-list. He is the new Hitler; we just didn’t realize it before.
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Tuesday, 24 October 2006


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