Untitled Document
It’s more useful to assume that the answer is ‘no.’
Then we must ask what is Russia doing with its gas price policy demands and
supply cut-off to Ukraine?
It’s clear that the move is one part of a complex series of Russian
moves in the ongoing Grand Chess Game. That game is between Washington as sole
global superpower, and Russia as a reconstructing nuclear power--one with a
vast resource wealth needed by its Eurasian neighbours from China to Germany
and beyond. Russia, which holds far the world’s largest known reserves
of natural gas, is playing its own energy card with Ukraine as the current field
of that battle.
The Ukraine drama is clearer if we look at it in the context of a series of
very quiet but dramatic moves recently by the Putin government in the realm
of energy and national military preparedness.
Part I: The Ukraine issue
Just one year after the Washington-backed Ukrainian President Viktor Yushencko
came into office in Kiev, promising to bring Ukraine into NATO and into the
EU, Putin and the Russian state-controlled Gazprom natural gas monopoly of Russia,
cut gas supplies to Ukraine on January 1. The ostensible reason was that Ukraine
refused to pay a 450% price increase for Russian gas demanded by Gazprom for
its delivered gas.
By January 4 both countries announced that they had reached a compromise settlement.
The terms appear to be a face-save for both sides: Ukraine’s state Naftogas,
and Russia’s Gazprom. Under the Byzantine fine print Ukraine agreed to
pay Gazprom’s demand of $230 per 1000 cu m for gas. The gas flows to Western
Europe were reported back to normal after falling by up to 30% on January 1-2.
Some 75% to 80% of all Russian gas exports to Europe flow via pipeline through
Ukraine at present. That fact has become a strategic Achilles Heel for Russia
now that Yushchenko’s Ukraine is moving towards NATO.
There are two aspects to this peculiar situation which bear further examination.
The first is commercial; the second is geopolitical.
Fallacy of ‘world market price’
For more than a quarter century the major Western oil companies led by ExxonMobil,
ChevronTexaco, BP and Shell, have tried to establish the artificial construct
of a ‘world market price’ for natural gas, similar to the Brent
or Dubai or WTI daily price benchmarks. A global market in gas is far more awkward
than for oil simply because of the transport problems. Gas needs pipelines or
costly LNG terminals and tankers and is thus less mobile. Oil by contrast is
controlled by four giant Anglo-American oil majors—ExxonMobil, ChevronTexaco,
British Petroleum (BP) and Shell. Those four determine world oil prices. Because
it has not been possible to create a controlled global market for natural gas,
the gas tends to be pre-sold in contracts typically of 20-25 year term.
What has resulted is a patchwork of different prices, usually in some opaque,
undisclosed manner, tied to a formula linking it to crude oil such that, when
oil in dollars drops by say, $1, gas would drop along with, but by how much
is a proprietary secret of the gas companies and for obvious business reasons—lack
of price transparency can hide a multitude of sins. That non-transparent price
formula allows companies like Germany’s E.ON-Ruhrgas to charge significantly
more for its gas to end-users when oil prices climb above $60, even though most
of its gas deliveries from Gazprom are in typically 20 to 25 year fixed price
contracts with small variances possible.
The Gazprom Ukraine dispute opened the Pandora’s box of confidential
gas pricing to the world as Russia revealed Western customers paid some $450
tcm compared with the then $50 tcm Ukraine enjoyed.
Gazprom argued that raising that to $230 or about half the western price, was
a fair price. Gazprom is in the process of becoming a global energy giant on
a par with BP or ExxonMobil.
Putin also signed a decree on December 28 lifting the limits on foreign ownership
of Gazprom, an ostensibly market-oriented move. It made good a promise Putin
made two years ago on the controversial arrest of Yukos Oil chairman and political
rival, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, namely that he would liberalize the shares of Gazprom,
in a matter of ‘months not years.’
Gazprom share ownership by foreign interests was previously capped at 20% of
total shares, and the Russian government held the remaining and controlling
share. Foreign investors were limited to Gazprom London-listed American Depository
Receipt shares.
Gazprom shares will now be listed on the Russian stock market later this month.
Gazprom has a current market capitalization of $160 billion, dwarfing the next
largest Russian stock company, LUKoil with $50 billion capitalization, and Surgotneftegaz
with $40 billion.
The new law will also bring Gazprom into the widely followed Morgan Stanley
Capital International emerging market index, dramatically shifting weightings
there for index tracking investors. That has major implications for international
financial portfolio investment.
Gazprom argues it was ‘commercially’ justified in breaking an August
2004 Gazprom-Naftogaz supplement contract which specified a fixed $50 price
until 2009, a price it said then was ‘not changeable.’ All that
being said, the Gazprom-Kremlin move was clearly a hardball Russian geopolitical
warning, with an eye to both NATO and upcoming Ukrainian Parliament elections
in two months.
Ukraine’s political shift
What changed in the ‘not changeable’ Gazprom-Ukraine contract between
August 2004 and January 2006, of course, was not Gazprom but rather the political
complexion of Ukraine. The victory of the Washington-financed Yushchenko candidacy
for President in December 2004, and his inauguration in early 2005 on a pledge
to bring Ukraine into NATO, did not go down well in Moscow, which considers
Ukraine historically and strategically a part of ancient Russia—Kiev Rus.
It was also clear to the Kremlin that Yushchenko’s call to bring Ukraine
into NATO was no mere election gimmick to distance his party from his pro-Moscow
electoral opponent.
Yushchenko’s wife, Kateryna Chumachenko Yushchenko, a Chicago-born Ukrainian-American,
had previously served in the Reagan White House and State and Treasury departments,
and did liaison work with Afghani and other anti-Soviet US-sponsored opposition
groups, such as Bush neo-conservative Zalmay Khalilzad’s Friends of Afghanistan.
She also sat on the board of a pro-NATO neo-conservative US think-tank, New
Atlantic Initiative, along with Radek Sikorski, Poland’s effusively pro-Washington
Defense Minister. Sikorski is a close friend and former American Enterprise
Institute colleague of Richard Perle and the other neo-con hawks.
The New Atlantic Initiative was created in June 1996 following the Congress
of Prague, where more than 300 conservative politicians, scholars, and investors
discussed a ‘new agenda for transatlantic relations.’ The ‘new
agenda’ they promoted was quite simply to encircle Russia and render it
politically impotent by bringing the former Soviet satellite states into NATO
and into a US-defined ‘free market.’
The New Atlantic Initiative has headquarters in the offices of the neo-conservative
base of operations, the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) in Washington, DC.
There, Richard Perle, his co-author David Frum, Michael Ledeen, Lynne (wife
of Dick) Cheney and Irving Kristol are all based. A more hard-core nest of neo-conservative
hawks would be hard to find on that side of the Atlantic.
The New Atlantic Initiative openly states it was set up to bring the countries
of the former Soviet bloc into NATO and the European Union. Its original ‘patrons’
were Václav Havel, Margaret Thatcher, Helmut Schmidt, Leszek Balcerowicz,
Henry Kissinger, and Bechtel’s George Schultz, Secretary of State under
Ronald Reagan. Its executive director in 1996 was current Polish Defense Minister,
Radek Sikorski.
Kissinger at that time chaired the NAI International Advisory Board, which
was filled with neo-conservatives, including the authors of the Project on the
New American Century (PNAC) people (the group of hawks calling for ‘regime
change’ in Iraq already back in September 2000).
The NAI board included PNAC author and former LockheedMartin executive, Bruce
Jackson, now of the Project for Transitional Democracies. Also former Pentagon
adviser Richard Perle; Michael Ledeen, one of the close neo-con advisers to
Karl Rove; neo-con publisher William Kristol; now UN Ambassador and neo-conservative,
John Bolton; Don Rumsfeld; Deputy State Department Secretary Robert Zoellick.
The fact Yushchenko immediately opened oil pipeline talks in May 2005 with
Chevron, as a Polish-oriented counter to the Russian pipeline Brody route, was
also not lost on Moscow. Poland, a new NATO as well as EU member, is firmly
in the pro-Washington camp, with its Defense Minister, Radek Sikorski, a Washington-trained
neo-conservative hawk.
As viewed from the eyes of a Kremlin President, Russia was being encircled
by pro-NATO former satellite states. Not only that, but with neo-conservative
assets in the Presidency of Ukraine and the Defense Ministry of Poland, the
encirclement was becoming potentially quite threatening to vital Russian national
security interests as seen from the Kremlin. Poland is now in NATO, and Ukraine
appears to be well on the way.
The NATO encirclement of the Russian Federation, as we have earlier detailed,
involved a series of so-called ‘Color Revolutions.’ In Georgia the
US-educated and backed lawyer Mikhail Saakashvili replaced the old KGB survivor,
Edouard Shevardnadze. Georgia was a key strategic piece for the route of the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline from the Caspian, a project backed by Washington
to get Caspian oil out to the West, independent of Russia. That pipeline was
completed in September and is slowly being loaded.
The next major strategic blow to Moscow came with the mentioned Ukrainian ‘Orange
Revolution’ inauguration of Yushchenko in January 2005.
Then in July 2005, came another US-backed ‘color revolution,’ the
‘Tulip’ Revolution in Kyrgyzstan in Central Asia, bringing another
former Russian territory. Kyrgyzstan had been part of Russia since 1864. It
is now being drawn into the US orbit of influence under newly-elected ‘Tulip’
President, Kurmanbek Bakiev.
And underscoring the desires of Washington for Ukraine, on January 9, 2006,
NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer told reporters in Brussels that
he expected to see Ukraine inside NATO by 2008.
Putin reacts
Putin is many things but he can’t be accused of being passive in the
face of strategic threats to Russian national interests. Moscow moved swiftly
last summer to exploit a growing rift between Uzbekistan and Washington, and
the result was a ban by Uzbekistan of US military overflights and use of its
airbase, a right that had been granted by President Karimov after September
2001 to get Uzbekistan into the ‘good’ side of the US War on Terror.
Relations between Uzbekistan and Moscow today are very close, including in military
mutual defense agreements. That rapprochement dealt a major blow to the Washington
encirclement on the Eurasian space of both Russia and China.
The next move in this complex geopolitical power chess game will also be in
Ukraine where Yushchenko faces parliamentary elections in March. Discontent
with his lack of progress on the economy had given him very low poll ratings.
Some Russian experts believe Putin is playing hardball with Yushchenko to remind
Ukraine voters where their energy security lies, i.e. not with Yushchenko and
his Western friends, but with Moscow. Russia regards a NATO Ukraine inside the
EU as a ‘strategic threat’ to put it mildly.
The Gazprom Ukraine ‘compromise’
By ending the dispute so swiftly, with a doctored compromise, Putin made his
point, and he immediately reassured edgy West European gas importers that Gazprom
never intended to cut their gas, only the uppity Ukraine’s.
Under the terms of the new deal, Gazprom will sell the gas which Ukraine receives,
but in a devious way. It will be sold for $230 per thousand cubic meters (tcm)
to an Austrian trading company, Rosukrenergo. Rosukrenergo is in turn owned
by Gazprom and the Austrian Raifeissen Investment AG. Then Rosukrenergo simultaneously
buys gas from Turkmenistan for $50 a tcm. The two are ‘mixed’ and
Ukraine’s Naftogas buys the final gas for a price of $95 tcm. Both sides
can claim ‘victory.’
Gazprom also agreed to pay a 50% higher Transit Fee to Ukraine for its pipeline
route through Ukraine to Europe, a fee of $1.60 instead of $1.06 per tcm per
100 kilometer. As well, both parties will settle in dollars not in the form
of gas.
The West was caught in a dilemma in opposing the Gazprom price demand of $230.
First, as it was only half the ‘market’ price, showing some restraint
on Gazprom’s account. Second, because Western organizations from the WTO
to the IMF to the Washington Bush Administration have been demanding Gazprom
begin selling its gas in Eastern Europe at ‘market’ prices and not
at a ‘subsidized’ price. Ukraine is far the largest Eastern Europe
gas customer of Gazprom.
Significantly enough, on January 5 US Energy Secretary Sam Bodman told US companies
they should not be discouraged from investing into the Russian energy sector
merely because of the Ukraine dispute, adding that the dispute had not undermined
his confidence that Russia was a good place to invest. ‘We continue to
encourage our companies to explore opportunities with Russia,’ he added.
Washington clearly has a larger agenda in the region. So too does Putin. And
the two agendas are manifestly divergent.
The swift settlement of the Ukraine gas dispute, as well as the details of
the compromise, in which Ukraine de facto pays what it offered before the cut-off,
suggests what Yushchenko claimed. It was not an issue of commercial policy.
It was and is an issue of power politics--Russian power geopolitics.
Its real focus is how Putin perceives the danger posed by an ever-more-ambitious
USA foreign policy in Eurasia and what he can do to contain that threat. It’s
clear the cut-off was intended to send a sharp signal to Kiev: don’t get
any cute ideas of joining NATO and becoming a part of a hostile alignment to
Russia. Here the US build-up of potential war threat against Iran also figures
into the Kremlin calculus.
Part II: Russia’s strategic response to Washington
Moscow’s military muscle shows
On December 26, as most of the West was distracted in Holiday cheer, the Russian
military activated a new fleet of Topol-M missiles. The new generation weapon
is capable of fitting a nuclear warhead, as well as changing trajectory to foil
an enemy interception device such as the current generation of US anti-missile
defense weapon.
This was no small act of macho bravado. General Nikolai Solovtsov, commander
of Russian Missile Forces, simultaneously announced the mobilization of a new
battalion for the Topol-M missiles. The missiles have a 1 megaton impact, some
75 times the Hiroshima A-bomb of 1945. Solovtsov is an outspoken critic of the
US decision to forge ahead with its anti-missile defense, which is a Rumsfeld
priority. The Russian general announced that the Topol-M was, ‘capable
of piercing any missile defense system,’ and was immune to electromagnetic
blasts used by current US missile defenses. For military experts that is impressive.
Russia announced it has also formed 20 new nuclear missile units, its largest
increase of nuclear spending since the 1962 Cuba Missile Crisis.
London’s respected Jane’s Defense Review says the new Topol-M missiles
could ‘evade the ballistic missile defenses currently being fielded in
Alaska and California.’ That’s perhaps an unexpected surprise for
Mr. Rumsfeld, the champion of the US defense shield.
The fanfare in Russia around the Topol rollout is the greatest since the Soviet-NATO
confrontation around the Soviet SS-18 missiles and the NATO Pershing II’s
in the 1980’s. The recent flood of petrodollars into Moscow Treasury accounts
has allowed the military to significantly upgrade defense technology for the
first time since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990. In November 2005
the Kremlin announced a $ 1.8 billion spending increase for the nuclear missile
program. The move was greeted with applause from the Russian population according
to reports.
Not irrelevant, Ukraine has now asked to rejoin the Russian nuclear umbrella
and be protected by Topol-M missiles along the Volga River.
In September 2005, Russia also successfully tested a submarine-launched version
of Topol-M, called Bulava, from the White Sea. That missile successfully hit
its target 30 minutes later on Kamchatka on the Far East side of Russia, an
extremely impressive feat not lost on Pentagon strategists.
Putin, under strong US protest, has also pushed ahead with his decision to
sell anti-aircraft missiles to Iran. Russian technicians are building the Iranian
nuclear power complex. The current leaks in the German press as well as Turkish
media, whether true or not, of advanced Pentagon preparations for a possible
nuclear strike on Iran’s nuclear installations, has to be seen in the
context of these Russian military advances. This is becoming a very high-stakes
game of chess in Eurasia. Zbigniew Brzezinski’s map of Eurasia, which
he describes as the prime geopolitical threat to US global dominanation, we
should recall, includes the oil-rich Middle East in addition to Russia, Central
Asia, China and Western Continental Europe.
This renewed Russian military assertion on the advanced nuclear missile front
is also accompanied by major other moves to extend Russian energy policy abroad
in a clear politically-drawn map. More accurately said, it is a geopolitical
map, as the Russian map is about political geography-where the energy resources
are and who controls them.
There are three notable new elements of the Putin energy strategy now being
undertaken: the start of construction of the Eastern Siberia oil pipeline going
to Vladivostock on the Russian Far East coast, the signing with Germany for
construction of a new Baltic underwater gas pipeline from Russian territory
to Germany, bypassing Ukraine or Poland. Finally, on January 9, Moscow announced
Gazprom had concluded an agreement with the Moscow-aligned government of Alexander
Lukashenko to explore ways of expanding Russian gas delivery to the European
Union via Belarus, again bypassing Ukraine.
Russia’s new Gas and Oil Pipeline strategy
These three projects combined with the clear Russian signals that she is not
about to abandon its support of the Iran nuclear plant construction, and Russia’s
unveiling of new missile technologies, indicate Russia is emerging as a serious
counterweight to what had been a one-sided move by the United States to divide
and control the giant Eurasian landmass. Moscow is now well aware of Washington’s
strategy of pre-empting any rival nation or group of nations in Eurasia from
challenging American hegemony and global ‘total spectrum dominance’
as the Pentagon likes to call it.
It is useful to recall that it was the ever-bolder sequence of US-led moves.
to surround Russia with an iron cordon of US and NATO military bases, which
has prompted this Russian reaction.
Moscow is not naïve or inexperienced when it comes to analyzing power
relations and geopolitical advantage. In March 2005, Leonid Shebarshin, ex-head
of the Soviet Foreign Intelligence Service, who now heads a Russian economic
and security consulting company, told the Russian paper, Vremya Novostei, ‘On
the pretext of fighting international terrorism, the US is trying to establish
control over the world’s richest oil reserves.’ He added, ‘The
US has usurped the right to attack any part of the globe on the pretext of fighting
the international terrorist threat. The fight against that all-mighty ubiquitous
myth [Al-Qaeda], deliberately linked to Islam, is of great advantage for the
Americans as it targets the oil-rich Muslim regions.’
On December 9, Gazprom began construction of a 744 mile pipeline--the Northern
Pipeline or more properly the North European Gas Pipeline (NEGP). It will deliver
Russian gas to Germany. The undersea Baltic route will bring Russian gas from
Vyborg between Finland and St Petersburg, through international waters, to the
northeast German port of Greifswald. That allows Gazprom to bypass an existing
pipeline from Russia through Poland. Future spurs from the main line could deliver
gas to Sweden, Finland and the UK. British gas output peaked in 2000 and is
rapidly declining, such that the UK in 2005 became a net gas importer the first
time since the 1970’s.
The NEGP project is a major $5 billion deal negotiated by then-German Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder and Putin just before Schroeder left office. The deal is with
Germany’s largest gas company, E.ON-Ruhrgas and BASF’s Wintershall
AG, Germany’s largest oil and gas producer. We now know Schroeder was
also offered a lucrative seat on the board of the new project company.
The project immediately sent alarm bells ringing in Washington and by proxy,
in Washington-dominated Poland and Ukraine. Poland has called the pipeline a
‘conspiracy’ against Polish interests, and has appealed to the International
Energy Agency to block the deal claiming it robs Poland of gas transit fees
(sic!). The IEA chief economist has sided with Poland whatever that is worth.
It seems likely, despite words by Chancellor Merkel to the contrary, that Berlin
will continue to back the project. The Latvian press stated on December 12,
‘Merkel understands perfectly the importance of the pipeline for her country:
for some time Germany will become an exclusive supplier of Russian gas to Europe
in a situation where the amount of gas extracted by European companies is steadily
decreasing. Under the circumstances, Germany has nothing to gain from involving
Poland in the project, because the laying of the pipeline may make Berlin dependent
on Warsaw to some extent.’
The second new Russian gas export project is the Belarus enlargement. Belarus
is today a de facto, and soon to be de jure, part of a regrouped Russia. The
US-led efforts to affect regime change there with a ‘color revolution’
a la Ukraine, to date have fallen flat. Hours after Russia and Ukraine settled
their gas dispute, Gazprom announced it was in talks to build new underground
gas storage facilities in Belarus. The two countries already have a common economic
zone. The gas would come from Russia’s huge Yamal peninsula gas field.
The third pillar of a global independent energy export strategy, one that is
clearly intended to outflank the now-obvious Washington encirclement of Russian
energy routes, is the Russian oil pipeline from Eastern Siberia to Nakhodka
on Russia’s Pacific coast, at the Sea of Japan near Vladivistock.
Construction on this pipeline was inaugurated also at the beginning of January.
The pipeline will run more than 2,423 miles and would be able to transfer up
to one million barrels a day of oil of a quality similar to that in Abu Dhabi.
The full size of the Russian East Siberian field is not yet known and exploratory
drilling will be required, but early estimates are over 6 billion barrels. The
project could take more than a decade and costs could hit $20 billion owing
to the harsh climate conditions.
The project is expected to cost at least $8 billion, and will be largely financed
by the Japan Bank for International Co-operation, a state agency, and the large
private Japanese banks. Interestingly, during a state visit to Japanese Prime
Minister Koizumi last November, Putin refused to give Japan a guarantee that
Russia would give a priority to routing the line from Lake Baikal to Nakhodko
on the Sea of Japan, rather than building a ‘China Route’ going
instead to Daqing in northeast China from Russia’s Skovorodino.
The pipeline, which will be built by Russia’s Transneft, will be in two
stages. Stage one, just begun, will run from Siberia to Skovorodino, far from
the coast to Japan but close to China. That will be completed in 2008. The plans
for a second stage were left open during Putin’s Tokyo talks, leaving
his Japanese hosts more than nervous. Clearly, Putin and Russia’s Gazprom
are playing their cards close to the chest. The Koizumi government is regarded
in Moscow as a Pacific proxy of Washington.
The Institute of Analysis and Prognostication Kazakhstan-USA, a Kazakhstan
strategic institute, in a recent roundtable discussion of ‘US Policy in
Central Asia,’ noted the resources reality defining much of US and NATO
policy towards Eurasia and the Central Asian republics since the collapse of
the Soviet Union 15 years ago: ‘The proven world gas reserves as of 1
January, 2001 are 164 trillion cm. It is believed that these reserves will be
enough for 62 years. Russia and Iran have 50% of the world's natural gas reserves,
while the territory of Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Middle
East (especially Iran-w.e.) has 70% of the world reserves.’ And Russia
itself holds fully 32% of those world gas reserves.
The Iran calculus
Little wonder Iran is such an obsession of Washington military strategists
these days. Iran has also been regularly purchasing not only nuclear engineering
expertise from Moscow. It has also been buying Russian anti-missile defenses.
A Russian company, Antei, which produces anti-aircraft missile systems has
developed a new efficient system called Tor M1. The US and other NATO countries
have precision weapons and a reliable shield is necessary. The new Russian Tor
M1 anti-aircraft missile system is such a shield. According to the Federation
of American Scientists, the Tor system is the only system in the world which
can detect and identify various targets. It can detect targets at a height ranging
from 10 meters to 6 kilometers. Tor is autonomous and has short reaction time.
The latest technologies of Russia's defense industry are used in it.
This is the system believed to be already in place in Iran against possible
US air-strikes. The stakes are now far higher than the Iraq campaign, where
12 years of blockade and US air control rendered Saddam Hussein’s military
a farcical opponent for the US Shock and Awe massive March 2003 air assault.
Clearly, as Washington turns up the heat by leaking hints it is preparing a
possible nuclear attack on Iran, the potential for backfire against the United
States is rapidly becoming colossal. That is not to say that the Bush Administration
isn’t mad enough to try it. But it is all becoming very problematic for
the role of the US in the world.
On January 4, the Kazakhstan Gazeta wrote, ‘The situation is getting
more and more complicated. On the one hand, Americans do not want Russia to
strengthen its influence in Kazakhstan and Central Asia...’ They noted
that ‘the United States committed a serious error in alienating Uzbekistan
in recent months. ‘The Americans were carrying out a double game with
regard to Uzbekistan, but their politicians and analysts got mistaken in their
prediction, so the US policy on this country ended in a complete fiasco. The
usage of double standards in their approach is far from causing a growth of
confidence of our peoples in the United States of America,’ the paper
concluded. ‘The fiasco of the Americans with regard to Uzbekistan, when
first a gradual modernisation of the republic had been declared, then, after
the Andijan events, the official relationship with Tashkent worsened, showed
to all that the American politics and expert estimations were far from being
omniscient and always successful. It is a very important moment for the regional
countries: all observers noted that the geopolitical situation around Central
Asia and Kazakhstan is directly connected to contradictions between big powers.’