|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
Cheneys speech will deepen divisions in Europe over
energy
By Chris Talbot
10 May 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Europe has moved to the top of Washingtons diplomatic
agenda as the Bush administration prepares to take military action
against Iran. While George W. Bush was soft-soaping Chancellor
Angela Merkel in Washington, Vice President Cheney was on a six-day
democracy tour in eastern Europe.
On her second visit to the US in four months, Merkel assured
Bush that the disagreements with her predecessor, Gerhard Schröder,
over the Iraq war are a thing of the past. Bush sought and got
Merkels backing over Iran, and the US president is to visit
Germany in the near future.
While these talks were in progress, however, Cheney was delivering
a provocative speech attacking Russia over restrictions on democratic
rights and its use of oil and gas as tools of intimidation
and blackmail. Cheney was referring to Gazprom temporarily
turning off supplies to Ukraine in January of this year to enforce
a price increase, resulting in shortages throughout the European
Union, which receives a quarter of its gas from Russia.
The supply shutoff was followed by a speech last month by Gazprom
chief Alexei Miller to 25 EU ambassadors in which he threatened
to switch gas sales to China if Gazproms investment interests
in Europe were restricted.
Cheneys intervention in European politics can only exacerbate
the divisions between European governments over energy policy
and make life increasingly difficult for Merkel, who is attempting
to build a close alliance with both Moscow and Washington.
Only last month, the German government endorsed the 1
billion ($825 million) credit guarantee made by former chancellor
Schröder for the North European Gas Pipeline Company (NEPGC),
of which he is now chairman. The pipeline will go directly from
Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea, bypassing Ukraine, Poland
and Belarus.
NEPGC is owned by Gazprom, together with the German companies
E.ON and Wintershall as junior partners. Russias share of
Germanys gas imports is due to increase from 41 percent
now to 60 percent in 2025.
Merkel has decided to continue with the strategic partnership
developed under Schröder, and whilst there are divisions
within the German ruling elite over this closeness to Russia,
business has in general pushed for it, with bilateral trade between
the countries increasing by 25 percent from 2004 to 2005.
By putting its national interests first, Germany has antagonised
other members of the European Union, especially the new entrants
in eastern Europe. Cheney was deliberately boosting the leaders
of New Europe by speaking at the Community of
Democratic Choice meeting in Vilnius.
Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus called for a common European
Union front against Russia in an interview in the Financial
Times the day before Cheneys intervention. Adamkus called
on the EU to oppose Russias use of its energy supplies to
gain political influence in Europe. He condemned the
German NEPG that will bypass the Baltic and eastern European countries.
I believe I can understand the Russian position but I cant
understand the German position, he said. As a member
of the EU, they acted without even extending the courtesy of advising
the Baltic states [about their plans].
Polish responses to the German pipeline have been less restrained.
Defence Minister Radek Sikorski said, In Poland we have
a particular sensitivity to corridors and deals above our head.
Referring to the 1939 carve-up of Poland between the Soviet Union
and Nazi Germany, he added, that was the Molotov-Ribbentrop
tradition.
The Polish government claims that the NEPG is motivated entirely
by Germanys political interests in wanting gas supplies
that bypassed eastern Europe. It will cost at least $10 billion,
and it would have been much cheaper and quicker to upgrade the
existing pipeline connections.
Sikorski was speaking at an annual transatlantic conference
for political and business leaders, the Brussels Forum, which
took place the weekend before Cheneys visit. This appears
to have been the occasion to give the US ruling classs anti-Russian
agenda a preliminary airing. Right-wing Republican Senator John
McCain gave the keynote speech in which, in addition to making
a comparison between Iranian President Ahmadinejad and Hitler,
he demanded joint US-European opposition to the Putin regime.
Putin had some perverted vision of a restoration of the
Soviet empire, and in all the days of the Soviet Union,
Russia never turned off a spigot of gas. Putin did, he thundered.
The hostility to Russian influence in Europe is not confined
to the eastern countries; the financial circles in the City of
London are also clearly vexed. Gazprom chief Alexei Miller was
responding to threats from the British government to block a bid
from Gazprom to take over Centrica, a major gas-distribution company
in the UK. The threat was withdrawn, and Prime Minister Tony Blair
has assured the world that he remains committed to free market
principles, even if it involves Russian companies buying up strategic
British concerns. But the EU bureaucracy in Brussels, presumably
prompted by Britain, has pronounced that whilst the EU would apply
the same competition rules to Gazprom as to any other company,
the fact that Gazprom has a monopoly over gas exports from Russia
to the EU would be a significant factor in the application
of the rules.
In the pages of the Financial Times, there has been
a detailed examination of a Swiss-based company RosUkrEnergo,
which is half owned by Gazprom. Most of the other half is owned
by Ukrainian trader Dmytro Firtash, whose identity was a secret
until two weeks ago. According to one article, Firtash insisted
that he was not a parasitic middleman charging extortionate
fees to supply Russian and Turkmen gas to Ukraine and Europe,
but that RosUkrEnergo was a complement to Gazprom.
Firtash, who apparently has close relations with a number of British
businessmen, is considering floating his company on the London
Stock Exchange. If he is to achieve that, he will need to be more
transparent in his business dealings than he has been in the past.
He assured reporters that he intended to be more open, but, like
St. Augustine, he demurred, not just yet.
The EU Commissioners, whilst diplomatic in their language,
are clearly opposed to the German-Russian energy deal. Andris
Piebalgs, the EU energy commissioner, is quoted as saying, We
should never have the situation we will have with this [German-Russian]
pipeline. One partner country [Germany] decided a project that
is not acceptable to others, not even discussing it.
Also speaking at the Brussels Forum was European Commission
President Jose Manuel Barroso. According to reports of the discussion
at the conference, he called for the US to join Europe in pressing
Moscow to open up its energy markets. Russians had to decide whether
they wanted a real democracy or a half-democracy,
he said. The Kremlin was increasingly resorting to the use
of energy resources as an instrument of political coercion.
The demand for democracy from the EU bureaucracy
in relation to Russia is selective and hypocritical. Just as Cheney
made no reference to the total lack of democratic rights in Kazakhstan,
where he was heading after Lithuania, the EU has close connections
with the regime in Turkmenistan, the source of much of RosUkrEnergos
gas, which it sells to Europe. The US-based organisation Human
Rights Watch has pointed out that the foreign and trade committee
of the EU parliament has proposed to reopen a trade agreement
between the EU and Turkmenistan, on hold since 1999 because of
concerns over human rights. Keeping the supply of gas from Turkmenistan
to the EU is clearly the underlying rationale. Turkmenistan is
said to be keen to bypass Russia and Ukraine with its gas.
The EU is Turkmenistans third largest trading partner
(after Iran and Ukraine), and its exports to the country have
increased by 14 percent over the last five years. According to
the London-based campaign group Global Witness, Turkmen President
Saparmurat Niyazov keeps most of the countrys gas earnings
in off-budget overseas accounts, including some $2 billion held
at Deutsche Bank. French building company Bouygues has been erecting
many of the grand projects that Niyazov has ordered.
Since independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, less and
less money has been spent on the impoverished population. The
regime has one of the worst human rights records in the world,
with arbitrary arrest and oppositionists routinely tortured, killed
or thrown into jail for years. Niyazov has absolute power and
has created a personality cult in which schools, streets and hospitals
are named after him, his picture is displayed everywhere, and
most of the books in schools and libraries are written by him.
The mounting energy crisis in Europe has given minor tyrants
like Saparmurat Niyazov increased political leverage, as it has
Putin and the oligarchs who surround him. Having enriched themselves
from the denationalisation of Soviet natural resources, they now
see a way to take to the world stage.
In the final analysis, however, the energy crisis is being
driven by the aggressive nature of US foreign policy, which has
destabilised oil supplies from the Middle East. With characteristic
disregard for the political implications of his actions, Cheney
has stirred up the conflicts within Europe to a point where the
cooperation between EU members threatens to break down. His speech
reflects a reckless approach to foreign policy that disregards
the entire history of the twentieth century, when conflicts over
strategic resources and conflicting national interests produced
two world wars in Europe.
Since the end of World War II, US foreign policy has been directed
towards maintaining European cooperation in an attempt to avoid
a repetition of this recurrent disastrous conflict. Cheneys
speech demonstrated the extent to which the US under the Bush
administration has broken with the tradition.
See Also:
Germanys Merkel sides with Bush
against Iran
[8 May 2006]
Cheney lectures Russia on democracy
[6 May 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |