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24 December 2010 By Rick Rozoff On December 11 the presidents of Afghanistan,
Pakistan and Turkmenistan and the energy minister of
India met in the Turkmen capital of Ashgabat to bring
to fruition fifteen years of planning by interests in
the United States to bring natural gas from the
Caspian Sea to the energy-needy nations of South and
East Asia. Presidents Hamid Karzai, Asif Ali Zardari and
Gurbangulu Berdimuhammedov along with Indian Union
Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister Murli Deora signed
agreements – an Inter-Government Agreement and the Gas
Pipeline Transmission Agreement – to construct a
natural gas pipeline from Turkmenistan through
Afghanistan and Pakistan to India. The initials of the
first three countries involved lend themselves to the
project's acronym: TAP, now known as TAPI. The Inter-Government Agreement "enjoins the four
governments to provide all support including security
for the pipeline." [1] The next day, Wahidullah Shahrani, Afghanistan's
Minister of Mines and Industries, confirmed that
"Afghanistan will deploy about 7,000 troops to secure
a major transnational gas pipeline slated to run
through some of the most dangerous parts of the
war-torn country." [2] Speaking at a press conference in the Afghan
capital, Shahrani added: "This huge project is very
important for Afghanistan. Five thousand to seven
thousand security forces will be deployed to safeguard
the pipeline route….We will also keep an eye on the
security situation….If more troops are needed, we will
take action." [3] Four days later U.S. Army Colonel John Ferrari,
Deputy Commander of Programs for the NATO Training
Mission – Afghanistan, was quoted on the U.S. Defense
Department's website stating: "Our mission is to help the government of
Afghanistan generate and sustain the Afghan army and
police, all the way from the ministerial systems –
essentially, their version of the Pentagon – through
their operational commands, down to the individual
units." [4] Colonel Ferrari disclosed at the same time that in
the next few days the U.S. Army "will finally award a
much-delayed $1.6 billion contract for a private
security firm to supplement [the] NATO training
command's efforts to professionalize Afghan cops." The
lucrative bid, according to an American news source,
"touched off a bureaucratic tempest between Blackwater/Xe
Services and DynCorp, which held an old contract for
the same job…." [5] On the same day North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen endorsed the
U.S.'s Afghanistan and Pakistan Annual Review released
on December 15 and stated: "We will continue to train Afghan forces so they
can provide security for the Afghan people. "[A]s the long-term partnership that President
Karzai and I signed at Lisbon demonstrates, our
commitment to Afghanistan will continue well beyond
2014. NATO will also remain engaged with Pakistan…. "I welcome the release today of the United States'
annual review on Afghanistan and Pakistan. It builds
on the decisions on Afghanistan that NATO Allies and
Partners took at our summit in Lisbon." [6] What the Pentagon and NATO are training Afghan
troops for is in part to ensure that the
1,700-kilometer (1,050-mile) TAPI pipeline running
from the former Soviet republic of Turkmenistan to
India – with transshipment to nations like Japan,
South Korea and China in the offing – will function
unimpeded. The pipeline is to be started in 2012, completed
two years later and provide 33 billion cubic meters
(over one trillion cubic feet) of Turkmen gas to
Pakistan, India and Afghanistan. According to the
recently signed agreement, India and Pakistan will
each receive 14 billion and Afghanistan 5 billion
cubic meters of natural gas a year. The undertaking is being financed by the Asian
Development Bank in which the U.S. and Japan each hold
552,210 shares, the largest proportion of shares among
its 67 members at 12.756 percent apiece. The pipeline will run from Turkmenistan's
Dovletabat (also Dovletabad and Dauletabad) field
along the 350-mile Herat-Kandahar Highway in
Afghanistan to the capital of Pakistan's Balochistan
province, Quetta, to the Fazlaka region on the
Indian-Pakistani border. Five years ago the Asian Development Bank estimated
gross natural gas reserves at Dovletabat to be 49.5
trillion cubic feet (1.4 trillion cubic meters).
Turkmenistan also intends to include the new Southern
Yoloten-Osman field, where government geologists
estimate there are over 21 trillion cubic meters of
gas, to fill the TAPI pipeline. The inauguration of TAPI is the realization of
plans going back to four years after the collapse of
the Soviet Union, 1995, the year before the Taliban
consolidated control of Afghanistan. One of its prime
movers was the Union Oil Company of California
(Unocal), which merged with and became a subsidiary of
Chevron in the same year. Former Secretary of State and NATO Supreme Allied
Commander Alexander Haig visited Turkmenistan in 1992,
immediately after it became an independent state for
the first time, after which he became "an unofficial
adviser and confident" to President Saparmurat Niyazov,
"screening foreign companies and helping arrange a
Niyazov visit to Washington in 1993." [7] Haig's dealings, which would later be augmented by
the likes of Henry Kissinger and Zalmay Khalilzad,
were part of U.S. strategy in the Caspian Sea region,
which was to: "Tap the Caspian mother lodes while giving as
little leverage as possible to Russia in the north and
Iran in the south. "Across the Caspian, Azerbaijan had already
enlisted U.S. oil companies and pulled the Clinton
administration into a crusade to build pipelines that
would skirt Russia on the way to the Black Sea and the
Mediterranean. In Kazakhstan, the Clinton
administration [risked] provoking Moscow again by
promoting pipelines that would carry Kazakh oil to
western markets without Russian interference." In 1995 the White House blocked a deal between
ConocoPhillips and Iran for the transiting of gas from
Turkmenistan through the first country. "To State
Department strategists, the perfect pipeline out of
Dauletabad lay in a different direction: from
Turkmenistan across Afghanistan to Pakistan,
connecting the gas resources of Central Asia to the
surging economies of South Asia. Such a line would
deprive Iran of transit fees for Turkmen gas crossing
its territory while capturing the South Asian gas
market coveted by Iran." [8] In the same year the president of Unocal, John Imle,
"wooed Niyazov and Benazir Bhutto, then prime minister
of Pakistan…with a vision of a Unocal pipeline"
running from Turkmenistan to Pakistan. According to
the Washington Post three years after the fact: "A
Unocal link had strong appeal for Niyazov. Afghanistan
was in turmoil. A big American oil company could draw
on the political muscle of the United States…." [9] Later in the year President Niyazov announced the
selection of Unocal to construct the pipeline, which
Henry Kissinger – at the time a Unocal consultant –
deemed "the triumph of hope over experience."
(Afghan-born Zalmay Khalilzad, while Director of the
Strategy, Doctrine, and Force Structure at the RAND
Corporation, consulted for Cambridge Energy Research
Associates, which at the time was conducting a risk
analysis for Unocal on what is now the
Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India gas pipeline.
He later became U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan after
the invasion of 2001, then ambassador to Iraq and the
United Nations.} Unocal opened an office in Kandahar, which the
media unfailingly recall is the "spiritual birthplace
of the Taliban," in 1996 as the latter were completing
their conquest of Afghanistan. In 1997 a senior Taliban delegation arrived in the
U.S. to meet with Unocal officials. At the time a
Unocal spokesman said "the Taleban were expected to
spend several days at the company's headquarters in
Sugarland, Texas" and it was confirmed that "Unocal
says it has agreements both with Turkmenistan to sell
its gas and with Pakistan to buy it." [10] After last week's agreement was signed in
Turkmenistan to complete 15 years of U.S. plans, the
BBC reported that "The pipeline will have to cross
Taliban-controlled regions and Pakistan's troubled
border region. The US has also encouraged the project
as an alternative to a proposed Iranian pipeline to
India and Pakistan." [11] In fact TAPI is the American alternative to what
until then-Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
pressured – in fact blackmailed – Pakistan and India
in 2005 to kill the project was referred to as the
peace pipeline: One which was to transport Caspian Sea
Basin natural gas from Iran to Pakistan and India (the
IPI pipeline) and from there to China. The joint
endeavor would indeed have promoted cooperation and
peace not only between Pakistan and India but between
India and China as well. Washington – the White House, the State Department
and Congress – linked India's agreeing to abandon the
IPI project and cooperate with the U.S. punishing Iran
in the United Nations Security Council over its
civilian nuclear power program with actualizing the
provisions of the framework agreement signed by
President George W. Bush and Indian Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh on July 18, 2005 on full nuclear
collaboration. The U.S.-India Civil Nuclear
Cooperation Initiative. "The Americans had, so far, largely ignored India's
ties with Iran, which grew impressively during the
late 1990s….The tipping point came when both sides,
along with Pakistan, began seriously to consider the
construction of the 2,600-km Iran-Pakistan-India gas
pipeline. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice for
the first time publicly aired her concerns about the
prospective deal during her visit to New Delhi in
March 2005." [12] Also in 2005 Assistant Secretary of State for
Economic and Business Affairs E. Anthony Wayne told
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee: "Both Chinese and Indian firms have reportedly been
involved in oil and gas-sector deals in Iran that
raise concerns under US law and policy. "For example, Indian and Pakistani officials are
engaged in detailed discussions on the technical,
financial and legal aspects of building a USD 4
billion pipeline that would bring Iranian natural gas
to Pakistan and India, a project that Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice has said also raises US India formally withdrew from the project in 2009
and in January of this year Washington prevailed upon
Pakistan to abandon the pipeline in exchange for the
U.S. constructing a liquefied natural gas terminal and
arranging the supply of electricity from Tajikistan
through Afghanistan. "With the Asian Development Bank backing the TAPI
project unlike the IPI pipeline" currently: "Besides putting the IPI pipeline in cold storage,
the TAPI pipeline could also push back moves to bring
Turkmenistan gas via northern Iran. Talks were held
earlier in this respect on exchanging it with Iranian
gas, which would have been sent to India and other
countries from an under-sea pipeline. This pipeline
would have been one of the branches of a Middle East
natural gas gathering system." [14] Last month Turkmenistan was also recruited to
supply natural gas for the Nabucco pipeline running in
the opposite direction, west through Azerbaijan and
Georgia to Europe, to further U.S. strategy to squeeze
Russia out of that market. "Turkmen Deputy Prime Minister Baymyrad
Hoyamuhamedov said the country would supply natural
gas for the planned Nabucco pipeline. Hence, EU
countries would no longer have to worry about
uncertain natural gas supplies." Which means "the
European bloc will have to rely less on Russia for its
growing gas requirement." "The pledge also means the construction of the
planned 2046-mile pipeline can go ahead as uncertainty
over its gas supplies had caused delay. Nabucco will
transport gas from the Caspian region and the Middle
East across Turkey into Europe. "At present, Turkmenistan sells natural gas to
Iran, China and Russia." [15] In fact, in late November the Turkmen government
pledged to "provide up to 40 billion cubic meters of
natural gas per year, more than the planned capacity
of Nabucco which is 31 billion per year." [16] As such Nabucco will be "drawing gas from
Turkmenistan in addition to Azerbaijan and Iraqi
Kurdistan" in what Christian Dolezal, spokesperson for
the Nabucco Consortium (Nabucco Gas Pipeline
International GmbH), called a "remarkable step." "Dolezal said the first gas supplies for Nabucco
are expected to come from Azerbaijan – about 8 billion
cubic meters per year at first, of which 6 billion
could come from the Shah Deniz 2 field. Another 10
billion cubic meters are expected from Iraqi
Kurdistan, and the consortium is awaiting the outcome
of talks with the Iraqi government. "The construction of the Nabucco gas transit
pipeline will start in 2012, and the first natural gas
deliveries through it should be a fact in 2015…." [17] The Nabucco pipeline will supplement previous
Western-initiated projects like the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
oil and the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum natural gas pipelines
beginning in Azerbaijan and proceeding westward
through Georgia to Turkey. A previous article in this series detailed that the
overall strategy is "not limited to efforts to muscle
into nations and regions rich in oil and natural gas
(and uranium), nor to employing fair means or foul,
peaceful or otherwise, to seize the commanding heights
of the international energy market. "The overarching objective is to control the
ownership, transport and consumption of energy
worldwide. To determine who receives oil and natural
gas, through which routes and at which prices. And to
dictate what the political and military quid pro quo
will be for being invited to join a U.S.-dominated
international energy transportation and accessibility
network. "Azerbaijan and Georgia are salient examples. The
last two-named nations have increased their military
budgets by well over 1,000 percent in the first case
and by over 3,000 percent in the second in the span of
a few years. "In the Caspian Sea Basin and its neighborhood,
which takes in the Afghanistan-Pakistan war theater
and the turbulent and explosive Caucasus, Azerbaijan
last week marked the fifteenth anniversary of what was
called the Contract of the Century in 1994, engineered
by the United States and Britain to open up the
Caspian region to Western energy companies. "The intent of all of them is to prevent Iran from
exporting hydrocarbons to Europe and to expel Russia
entirely from its previous contracts to provide Europe
with natural gas and Caspian oil. Russia currently
supplies the European Union with 30 percent of its
gas, but the West – the U.S. and its EU allies – is
well on its way to replacing Russian oil and gas with
supplies from Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan via
Azerbaijan and from Iraq and North Africa through
Turkey where all of the three pipelines [Nabucco,
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum] end."
[18] In addition to transforming Azerbaijan and Georgia
into U.S. and NATO outposts in the South Caucasus and
on the Caspian Sea – Azerbaijan borders both Iran and
Russia and Georgia borders Russia – Washington and its
North Atlantic military bloc are increasing military
ties with the other Caspian coastal states,
Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan. The expanding American and NATO role in Central and
South Asia – in Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan,
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan – is inextricably connected
with NATO nations' Eurasian energy strategies. In 2008 Matthew Bryza, then-Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs,
delivered an address which contained these assertions: "The East-West Corridor we had been building from
Turkey and the Black Sea through Georgia and
Azerbaijan and across the Caspian became the strategic
air corridor, and the lifeline, into Afghanistan
allowing the United States and our coalition partners
to conduct Operation Enduring Freedom." "Our goal is to develop a ‘Southern Corridor' of
energy infrastructure to transport Caspian and Iraqi
oil and gas to Turkey and Europe. The
Turkey-Greece-Italy (TGI) and Nabucco natural gas
pipelines are key elements of the Southern Corridor." "Potential gas supplies in Turkmenistan and Iraq
can provide the crucial additional volumes beyond
those in Azerbaijan to realize the Southern Corridor. "Washington and [Turkey] are working together with
Baghdad to help Iraq develop its own large natural gas
reserves for both domestic consumption and for export
to Turkey and the EU." [19] The U.S. and Britain led NATO Partnership for Peace
military exercises in Kazakhstan, from where the West
plans to construct a pipeline under the Caspian Sea to
Azerbaijan, last August, and the country has recently
agreed to allow overflights to the U.S. and NATO for
the war in Afghanistan. [20] In August it was disclosed that U.S. military
equipment is being transferred from Iraq to
Afghanistan "via Turkey, Azerbaijan, the Caspian Sea
and Turkmenistan." [21] Despite its formal status of neutrality,
Turkmenistan has allowed the transit of American and
NATO "armored vehicles, combat helicopters and crates
of ammunition" to the Afghanistan-Pakistan war
theater. In addition, the U.S. "has gained access to use
almost all the military airfields of Turkmenistan,
including the airport in Nebit-Dag near the Iranian
border" and "An American military contingent is
located in Ashgabat to oversee the operations related
to refueling of military airplanes. NATO is also
trying to open up a land corridor to bring freight by
road and rail…." [22] The second station of the soon-to-be-launched
Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India pipeline is
Herat, the capital city of the Afghan province of the
same name which borders eastern Iran. From there it will head to Kandahar, where the U.S.
and NATO have been conducting what the Western press
refers to as the "battle for Kandahar" since August in
an attempt to clear the area of Taliban fighters and
sympathizers. The pipeline will then proceed to Quetta, the
capital of Balochistan. The U.S. and NATO have expanded the Afghan war into
Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas and
increasingly into Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. It has also
launched attacks inside Balochistan and has pressured
the Pakistani government to permit them to conduct
full-scale military operations in the province. In October NATO helicopters crossed 200 meters into
Balochistan. In the same month it was reported that "US
officials may be eying a repeat of the cross-border
incident by seeking raids into Balochistan." "US military officials [are] advocating crossing
the border with US forces and expanding the war
formally into Pakistan." [23] Last month the U.S. Defense Department presented a
report to Congress revealing that "Pakistan Army
General Headquarters recently approved an ODRP and
Coalition presence at the PAKMIL 12 Corps HQ in
Quetta, Balochistan." [24] ODRP stands for the Pentagon's Office of Defense
Representative, Pakistan and Coalition is a reference
to NATO's International Security Assistance Force. A U.S. military buildup in Balochistan presents a
direct threat to Iran, whose province of Sistan and
Baluchistan borders the Pakistani province, the
largest provinces in the respective nations. The U.S.
is accused of supporting separatist elements in the
Iranian territory and could exploit Baloch agents on
the Pakistani side of the border in an attempt to
destabilize Iran. Three years ago China completed a port in Gwadar on
Balochistan's Arabian Sea coastline, which is to be
expanded into a deep-sea port and naval base with
Chinese technical and financial assistance. China also intends to turn the port into an energy
transit center for oil and natural gas originating
from Iran and other parts of the Middle East as well
as Africa and plans to construct an oil pipeline from
Gwadar to China's Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. The TAPI and related pipeline projects will not
only adversely affect Iran and Russia. Turkmen gas that had formerly flowed through Russia
and Iran will now be diverted via the TAPI and Nabucco
pipelines – as many as 73 billion cubic meters –
strengthening the West's influence in the region in a
number of spheres, including in regards to energy,
transport, financial and economic, political and
military matters. …. The NATO Training Mission – Afghanistan (NTM-A) was
launched at the military bloc's sixtieth anniversary
summit in Strasbourg, France and Kehl, Germany last
year, and after this year's summit in Portugal
thousands of new trainers have been pledged by NATO
member states. According to the NATO website, "NTM-A brings together efforts to train the Afghan
National Security Forces (ANSF) with the aim of
increasing coherence and effectiveness among all
contributors. Support to the ANSF including the
building of an Afghan institutional training base for
both the Afghan National Army (ANA) and Afghan
National Police (ANP) and coordinating international
efforts to train, equip and sustain these forces. "The NATO Training Mission Afghanistan (NTM-A)
operates under a dual-hatted command, with one
commander for both the US-led Combined Security
Transition Command- Afghanistan (CSTC-A) and the NATO
Training Mission – Afghanistan. The mission provides a
higher-level training for the Afghan National Army
(ANA), including defense colleges and academies, as
well as being responsible for doctrine development,
and training and advising Afghan National Police
(ANP)." [25] The NATO Training Mission – Afghanistan is modeled
after the NATO Training Mission – Iraq [26],
established by a decision made at the 2004 NATO summit
in Istanbul, Turkey. Its first commander was General
David Petraeus, now in charge of over 150,000 U.S. and
NATO troops in Afghanistan. The NATO Training Mission – Iraq is the model for
building from the top down the armed forces of a
conquered and subjugated nation by the Western
alliance, including training military and security
forces to guard the country's energy infrastructure. In Iraq and now even more so in Afghanistan, NATO
is assisting the U.S. in achieving vital geopolitical
objectives in strategically vital parts of the world.
1) The Hindu, December 13, 2010 http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2010/12/
army-set-to-award-mega-contract-to-train-afghan-cops 6) North Atlantic Treaty Organization, December
16, 2010
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/inatl/europe/caspian100598.htm 8) Ibid
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/west_asia/37021.stm 11) BBC News, December 11, 2010 http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=122557 17) Ibid http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/../
west-using-its-military-might-to-control-world-energy-resources 19) U.S. Department of State, June 24, 2008 http://www.state.gov/p/eur/rls/rm/106232.htm 20) Kazakhstan: U.S., NATO Seek Military Outpost
Between Russia And China http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/../
kazakhstan-u-s-nato-seek-military-outpost-between-russia-and-china 21) Azeri Press Agency, August 20, 2010 http://www.eurasianet.org/node/61652 23) Asian News International, October 15, 2010
http://www.defense.gov/pubs/November_1230_Report_FINAL.pdf 25) North Atlantic Treaty Organization
http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/news_52802.htm 26) Iraq: NATO Assists In Building New Middle
East Proxy Army http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/../
iraq-nato-assists-in-building-new-middle-east-proxy-army
concerns." [13]
2) Daily Times, December 12, 2010/Asian News
International, December 13, 2010
3) Agence France-Presse, December 13, 2010
4) NATO Training Mission Meets Procurement, Training
Goals
U.S. Department of Defense, December 16, 2010
5) Spencer Ackerman, Army Set to Award Mega-Contract
to Train Afghan Cops
Danger Room, December 16, 2010
7) David B. Ottaway and Dan Morgan, Gas Pipeline
Bounces Between Agenda]
Washington Post, October 5, 1998
9) Ibid
10) Taleban in Texas for talks on gas pipeline
BBC News, December 4, 1997
12) The Hindu, August 25, 2005
13) Press Trust of India, July 27, 2005
14) The Hindu, December 13, 2010
15) Industrial Fuels and Power, November 22, 2010
16) Nabucco Spokesman: Turkmenistan Natural Gas
Promise ‘Remarkable'
Sofia News Agency, November 25, 2010
18) West Using Its Military Might To Control World
Energy Resources:
Pentagon's Global Mission To Secure Oil And Gas
Supplies
Stop NATO, September 22, 2009
Stop NATO, April 14, 2010
22) Catherine A. Fitzpatrick, Is the U.S. Violating
Turkmenistan's Neutrality
with the NDN?
EurasiaNet, August 1, 2010
24) Report on Progress Toward Security and Stability
in Afghanistan
November 2010
Stop NATO, August 13, 2010