| Topic: |
Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus |
| User: |
"MonsieurStat" |
| Date: |
18 Apr 2005 08:09:15 PM |
| Object: |
Unreported in U.S. press, Rummy stalks oil and Iran in Azerbaijan |
By Ward Harkavy
Republished from The Village Voice
Unreported in U.S. press, Rummy stalks oil and Iran in Azerbaijan
Hardly any country on the planet sits in a more crucial spot than the harsh
dictatorship of Azerbaijan, so that's probably why Don Rumsfeld sneaked off
to its rowdy capital, Baku, earlier this week.
Do you hear the neocons beating the oil drums of war?
Rumsfeld's visit this week to Iraq generated some smoke, especially his
laughable warnings to the Iraqis about "government corruption."
But then, like the mysterious Mr. Arkadin, Rumsfeld left Iraq, flew to Baku
for meetings, spent the night, and then sneaked out the next day-with no
announcements from the Pentagon and (as a result) no notice from the U.S.
press.
Plenty of Azeris, chafing under the Aliyev family's harsh rule and fearing
war or other trouble from the oil-hungry U.S., freaked out, and there were
stories in the Turkish and Russian press. But leave it to the excellent news
service EurasiaNet to capture the not-meant-to-be-captured moment. In a
story posted April 13, political analyst Alman Talyshli wrote from Baku:
'Rumsfeld is interested in oil!' read a headline in the April 12 edition of
the popular daily Echo. The April 12 visit of the Pentagon chief to
Azerbaijan was a natural target for local media hungry for sensational news.
But not only the press is looking for answers.
Rumsfeld's visit took place under extreme secrecy, with limited public
information, leaving many local analysts and pundits to speculate about the
reasons for the U.S. secretary of defense's trip, the third such visit in
the past 15 months.
Former U.N. weapons inspector Scott Ritter has warned that the U.S. has been
making plans to attack Iran-one of Azerbaijan's neighbors-this summer. That's
not as farfetched as you may think. Seymour Hersh has said basically the
same thing. In "The Coming Wars," a mid-January piece in The New Yorker that
zeroed in on Rumsfeld's various plottings, Hersh wrote:
In my interviews, I was repeatedly told that the next strategic target was
Iran.
Here's an excerpt from the Hersh piece that could explain Rumsfeld's sudden
fondness for grimy, violent Baku:
According to a former high-level intelligence official, Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld met with the Joint Chiefs of Staff shortly after the
election and told them, in essence, that the naysayers had been heard and
the American people did not accept their message. Rumsfeld added that
America was committed to staying in Iraq and that there would be no
second-guessing.
"This is a war against terrorism, and Iraq is just one campaign. The Bush
Administration is looking at this as a huge war zone," the former high-level
intelligence official told me. "Next, we're going to have the Iranian
campaign. We've declared war and the bad guys, wherever they are, are the
enemy. This is the last hurrah-we've got four years, and want to come out of
this saying we won the war on terrorism."
More to the point about Rumsfeld's Wednesday trip to Baku, EurasiaNet's
Talyshli wrote:
The Pentagon and U.S. Azerbaijan embassy web sites contained no information
on Rumsfeld's one-day visit to Baku, and Azerbaijani officials preferred to
keep their explanations general.
The purpose of the defense secretary's visit, Ali Hasanov, head of the
presidential administration's political department, told the ANS television
news station on April 10, "is to hold new discussions on the principles of
cooperation between Azerbaijan and the USA in the sphere of security and
[to] solve problems present in this sphere." Hasanov also emphasized
Azerbaijan's role in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's Partnership
for Peace program, citing Rumsfeld's participation "in cooperation issues
implemented within the framework of NATO."
Hey, this wasn't the first time Rumsfeld has visited Baku (see photo). [One
of the dictators we like: Rumsfeld meets with Azeri ruler Ilham Aliyev last
August in Baku.]
So maybe that's all there was to it-just another visit to another one of our
allies. Well, that's the way the declining New York Times might leave it.
Talyshli, however, showed that he could write foreign news for the
Washington Post, because he went beyond the official sources and provided
this analysis:
But, given the recent redeployment of U.S. military forces from Germany,
some Azerbaijani observers take a different view. Independent military
expert Uzeyir Jafarov, in an April 9 interview with Echo, stated that
Rumsfeld was coming to Baku to get a final answer about establishment of a
U.S. military base in Azerbaijan. Jafarov added that he believed the answer
would be positive, and could come as early as mid-April.
Pro-government political figures such as Jumshid Nuriyev, former head of
Azerbaijan's customs service, however, disagree with Jafarov, and have
argued that Azerbaijan would never agree to its territory being used for an
attack on Iran, a country with which Azerbaijan shares close cultural and
historical ties.
Whew. That means no war with Iran, right? Not exactly. Again from Talyshli:
Analysts' views on the chances for a U.S. military presence in Azerbaijan
coincide with shifts in Pentagon plans for deployment of U.S. forces. In a
February 2004 visit to Uzbekistan, for example, Rumsfeld outlined the
concept of "operating sites" in Asia that would allow the U.S. and its
allies "to periodically and intermittently have access and support." In
times of crisis, these "sites," usually manned by small groups of personnel,
could be expanded to handle larger numbers of troops and supplies.
The Azeri writer is not just out there on his own. A story in the April 11
Wall Street Journal, "Search for Crude Comes With New Dangers," focused on
how the hunt for oil is likely to get more and more dangerous, and naturally
Azerbaijan came up. (Sorry, you probably have to subscribe to get the story.
But you should subscribe. Just skip the foolish editorial pages.)
Specifically, reporter John Fialka mentioned U.S. and European plans for a
"Caspian Guard" to protect pipelines and shipping points in Baku and other
places. Here's an excerpt from Fialka's excellent piece:
Twenty years ago, new oil was coming to the U.S. from Alaska or offshore
platforms near Norway and the United Kingdom-all places with reliable
security forces and stable governments. The oil supplies expected over the
next two decades are coming from or moving through some of the least stable
and most corrupt areas in the world.
As a result, long-neglected regions such as West Africa are rising in
importance to U.S. policy makers. Emerging countries around the Caspian Sea
are attracting new attention, too, as is the tense U.S. relationship with
Venezuela's leftist government.
Now do you see why Paul Wolfowitz is already talking about 'helping' Africa
even before he gets over to the World Bank?
But what about Iran? Fialka covers all the geopolitical bases, noting:
Further complicating matters is the struggle emerging between the U.S. and a
dollar-rich, oil-hungry China seeking influence and presence in such
regions. China's efforts to secure supplies of oil in Africa and Asia could
reduce amounts available to the global market, according to Robert Hormats,
a former senior State Department aide who is now vice chairman of Goldman
Sachs International. He spoke before a House committee on the subject last
week.
U.S. officials are particularly worried that China's oil companies are
pumping up the economies of countries like Iran and Sudan, despite trade
sanctions for alleged state-sponsored terrorism that make them off-limits
for some Western companies.
And Fialka, writing the day before Rumsfeld's undercover trip to Baku,
basically gives a reason for such a trip that you might want to think about
when you're filling up your SUV's gas tank (I know I will):
The military is paying more attention to emerging oil regions as the country
plans for possible disruptions in supply. Over the next decade, the U.S.
plans to spend $100 million on the Caspian Guard, a network of police forces
and special-operations units in the Caspian Sea region that can respond to
various emergencies, including attacks on oil facilities.
The Defense Department's European Command, based in Stuttgart, Germany, is
coordinating the multi-agency effort and helping to train forces to protect
a new pipeline that will bring oil from rigs in the Caspian Sea through the
Caucasus to Ceyhan, a Turkish port on the Mediterranean, starting later this
year.
The Caspian Guard, launched in the fall of 2003, will include a
radar-equipped command center in Baku, Azerbaijan. That center will give the
Azeri government the capability, for the first time, of monitoring shipping
activity near the many oil rigs in the Caspian. The Caspian Guard also will
be useful in coping with drug and arms smugglers, says Col. Mike Anderson,
chief policy planner for the European Command.
Most of the oil from this area will be absorbed by markets in Europe, not
the U.S. But any blockage in flows likely would generate a surge in oil
prices that would register on gas pumps in the U.S., the world's largest oil
consumer.
So, all you families out there, get ready to send your kids to Iran to fight
for "democracy"-and to keep China from getting all that oil so that our oil
companies can continue to prosper.
OUR ALLIES IN BAKU
It's nice to think that American soldiers are already helping the government
of Azerbaijan. And what is that government like?
The State Department's recently released human-rights report on Azerbaijan
paints a glorious picture of our pal Ilham Aliyev's regime. Just go to the
Web site of the U.S. Embassy in Baku and click on it. You'll find this stuff
and more:
- "Ilham Aliyev, the son of former president Heydar Aliyev, was elected
President in October 2003 in a ballot that did not meet international
standards for a democratic election due to numerous, serious
irregularities."
- "Members of the security forces committed numerous human rights abuses."
- "The Government's human rights record remained poor, and it continued to
commit numerous abuses. The Government continued to restrict the right of
citizens to peacefully change their government. There were four deaths that
occurred in custody allegedly due to beatings. Police tortured and beat
persons in custody, and used excessive force to extract confessions."
- "The Government continued to restrict freedom of speech and of the press.
Defamation lawsuits brought by officials against independent journalists and
newspapers and high court fines for libel remained significant problems for
the media."
- "The Government restricted freedom of assembly and did not sanction any
demonstrations by opposition political parties during the year. The
Government continued to restrict freedom of association by harassing
domestic human rights activists and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)."
- "There were some restrictions and abuses of religious freedom, and
low-level and local government officials continued to harass minority
religious groups."
- "Violence against women, societal discrimination against women and certain
ethnic minorities, trafficking in persons, and limitations of some worker
rights remained problems."
.
|
|
| User: "Woodswun" |
|
| Title: Re: Unreported in U.S. press, Rummy stalks oil and Iran in Azerbaijan |
18 Apr 2005 09:19:03 PM |
|
|
MonsieurStat wrote:
By Ward Harkavy
Republished from The Village Voice
Unreported in U.S. press, Rummy stalks oil and Iran in Azerbaijan
I'm shocked, *shocked*, that a member of Bush's administration would be
running after oil!!
Woods
Hardly any country on the planet sits in a more crucial spot than the harsh
dictatorship of Azerbaijan, so that's probably why Don Rumsfeld sneaked off
to its rowdy capital, Baku, earlier this week.
Do you hear the neocons beating the oil drums of war?
Rumsfeld's visit this week to Iraq generated some smoke, especially his
laughable warnings to the Iraqis about "government corruption."
But then, like the mysterious Mr. Arkadin, Rumsfeld left Iraq, flew to Baku
for meetings, spent the night, and then sneaked out the next day-with no
announcements from the Pentagon and (as a result) no notice from the U.S.
press.
Plenty of Azeris, chafing under the Aliyev family's harsh rule and fearing
war or other trouble from the oil-hungry U.S., freaked out, and there were
stories in the Turkish and Russian press. But leave it to the excellent news
service EurasiaNet to capture the not-meant-to-be-captured moment. In a
story posted April 13, political analyst Alman Talyshli wrote from Baku:
'Rumsfeld is interested in oil!' read a headline in the April 12 edition of
the popular daily Echo. The April 12 visit of the Pentagon chief to
Azerbaijan was a natural target for local media hungry for sensational news.
But not only the press is looking for answers.
Rumsfeld's visit took place under extreme secrecy, with limited public
information, leaving many local analysts and pundits to speculate about the
reasons for the U.S. secretary of defense's trip, the third such visit in
the past 15 months.
Former U.N. weapons inspector Scott Ritter has warned that the U.S. has been
making plans to attack Iran-one of Azerbaijan's neighbors-this summer. That's
not as farfetched as you may think. Seymour Hersh has said basically the
same thing. In "The Coming Wars," a mid-January piece in The New Yorker that
zeroed in on Rumsfeld's various plottings, Hersh wrote:
In my interviews, I was repeatedly told that the next strategic target was
Iran.
Here's an excerpt from the Hersh piece that could explain Rumsfeld's sudden
fondness for grimy, violent Baku:
According to a former high-level intelligence official, Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld met with the Joint Chiefs of Staff shortly after the
election and told them, in essence, that the naysayers had been heard and
the American people did not accept their message. Rumsfeld added that
America was committed to staying in Iraq and that there would be no
second-guessing.
"This is a war against terrorism, and Iraq is just one campaign. The Bush
Administration is looking at this as a huge war zone," the former high-level
intelligence official told me. "Next, we're going to have the Iranian
campaign. We've declared war and the bad guys, wherever they are, are the
enemy. This is the last hurrah-we've got four years, and want to come out of
this saying we won the war on terrorism."
More to the point about Rumsfeld's Wednesday trip to Baku, EurasiaNet's
Talyshli wrote:
The Pentagon and U.S. Azerbaijan embassy web sites contained no information
on Rumsfeld's one-day visit to Baku, and Azerbaijani officials preferred to
keep their explanations general.
The purpose of the defense secretary's visit, Ali Hasanov, head of the
presidential administration's political department, told the ANS television
news station on April 10, "is to hold new discussions on the principles of
cooperation between Azerbaijan and the USA in the sphere of security and
[to] solve problems present in this sphere." Hasanov also emphasized
Azerbaijan's role in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's Partnership
for Peace program, citing Rumsfeld's participation "in cooperation issues
implemented within the framework of NATO."
Hey, this wasn't the first time Rumsfeld has visited Baku (see photo). [One
of the dictators we like: Rumsfeld meets with Azeri ruler Ilham Aliyev last
August in Baku.]
So maybe that's all there was to it-just another visit to another one of our
allies. Well, that's the way the declining New York Times might leave it.
Talyshli, however, showed that he could write foreign news for the
Washington Post, because he went beyond the official sources and provided
this analysis:
But, given the recent redeployment of U.S. military forces from Germany,
some Azerbaijani observers take a different view. Independent military
expert Uzeyir Jafarov, in an April 9 interview with Echo, stated that
Rumsfeld was coming to Baku to get a final answer about establishment of a
U.S. military base in Azerbaijan. Jafarov added that he believed the answer
would be positive, and could come as early as mid-April.
Pro-government political figures such as Jumshid Nuriyev, former head of
Azerbaijan's customs service, however, disagree with Jafarov, and have
argued that Azerbaijan would never agree to its territory being used for an
attack on Iran, a country with which Azerbaijan shares close cultural and
historical ties.
Whew. That means no war with Iran, right? Not exactly. Again from Talyshli:
Analysts' views on the chances for a U.S. military presence in Azerbaijan
coincide with shifts in Pentagon plans for deployment of U.S. forces. In a
February 2004 visit to Uzbekistan, for example, Rumsfeld outlined the
concept of "operating sites" in Asia that would allow the U.S. and its
allies "to periodically and intermittently have access and support." In
times of crisis, these "sites," usually manned by small groups of personnel,
could be expanded to handle larger numbers of troops and supplies.
The Azeri writer is not just out there on his own. A story in the April 11
Wall Street Journal, "Search for Crude Comes With New Dangers," focused on
how the hunt for oil is likely to get more and more dangerous, and naturally
Azerbaijan came up. (Sorry, you probably have to subscribe to get the story.
But you should subscribe. Just skip the foolish editorial pages.)
Specifically, reporter John Fialka mentioned U.S. and European plans for a
"Caspian Guard" to protect pipelines and shipping points in Baku and other
places. Here's an excerpt from Fialka's excellent piece:
Twenty years ago, new oil was coming to the U.S. from Alaska or offshore
platforms near Norway and the United Kingdom-all places with reliable
security forces and stable governments. The oil supplies expected over the
next two decades are coming from or moving through some of the least stable
and most corrupt areas in the world.
As a result, long-neglected regions such as West Africa are rising in
importance to U.S. policy makers. Emerging countries around the Caspian Sea
are attracting new attention, too, as is the tense U.S. relationship with
Venezuela's leftist government.
Now do you see why Paul Wolfowitz is already talking about 'helping' Africa
even before he gets over to the World Bank?
But what about Iran? Fialka covers all the geopolitical bases, noting:
Further complicating matters is the struggle emerging between the U.S. and a
dollar-rich, oil-hungry China seeking influence and presence in such
regions. China's efforts to secure supplies of oil in Africa and Asia could
reduce amounts available to the global market, according to Robert Hormats,
a former senior State Department aide who is now vice chairman of Goldman
Sachs International. He spoke before a House committee on the subject last
week.
U.S. officials are particularly worried that China's oil companies are
pumping up the economies of countries like Iran and Sudan, despite trade
sanctions for alleged state-sponsored terrorism that make them off-limits
for some Western companies.
And Fialka, writing the day before Rumsfeld's undercover trip to Baku,
basically gives a reason for such a trip that you might want to think about
when you're filling up your SUV's gas tank (I know I will):
The military is paying more attention to emerging oil regions as the country
plans for possible disruptions in supply. Over the next decade, the U.S.
plans to spend $100 million on the Caspian Guard, a network of police forces
and special-operations units in the Caspian Sea region that can respond to
various emergencies, including attacks on oil facilities.
The Defense Department's European Command, based in Stuttgart, Germany, is
coordinating the multi-agency effort and helping to train forces to protect
a new pipeline that will bring oil from rigs in the Caspian Sea through the
Caucasus to Ceyhan, a Turkish port on the Mediterranean, starting later this
year.
The Caspian Guard, launched in the fall of 2003, will include a
radar-equipped command center in Baku, Azerbaijan. That center will give the
Azeri government the capability, for the first time, of monitoring shipping
activity near the many oil rigs in the Caspian. The Caspian Guard also will
be useful in coping with drug and arms smugglers, says Col. Mike Anderson,
chief policy planner for the European Command.
Most of the oil from this area will be absorbed by markets in Europe, not
the U.S. But any blockage in flows likely would generate a surge in oil
prices that would register on gas pumps in the U.S., the world's largest oil
consumer.
So, all you families out there, get ready to send your kids to Iran to fight
for "democracy"-and to keep China from getting all that oil so that our oil
companies can continue to prosper.
OUR ALLIES IN BAKU
It's nice to think that American soldiers are already helping the government
of Azerbaijan. And what is that government like?
The State Department's recently released human-rights report on Azerbaijan
paints a glorious picture of our pal Ilham Aliyev's regime. Just go to the
Web site of the U.S. Embassy in Baku and click on it. You'll find this stuff
and more:
- "Ilham Aliyev, the son of former president Heydar Aliyev, was elected
President in October 2003 in a ballot that did not meet international
standards for a democratic election due to numerous, serious
irregularities."
- "Members of the security forces committed numerous human rights abuses."
- "The Government's human rights record remained poor, and it continued to
commit numerous abuses. The Government continued to restrict the right of
citizens to peacefully change their government. There were four deaths that
occurred in custody allegedly due to beatings. Police tortured and beat
persons in custody, and used excessive force to extract confessions."
- "The Government continued to restrict freedom of speech and of the press.
Defamation lawsuits brought by officials against independent journalists and
newspapers and high court fines for libel remained significant problems for
the media."
- "The Government restricted freedom of assembly and did not sanction any
demonstrations by opposition political parties during the year. The
Government continued to restrict freedom of association by harassing
domestic human rights activists and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)."
- "There were some restrictions and abuses of religious freedom, and
low-level and local government officials continued to harass minority
religious groups."
- "Violence against women, societal discrimination against women and certain
ethnic minorities, trafficking in persons, and limitations of some worker
rights remained problems."
.
|
|
|
| User: "Dani" |
|
| Title: Re: Unreported in U.S. press, Rummy stalks oil and Iran in Azerbaijan |
18 Apr 2005 09:27:36 PM |
|
|
On Tue, 19 Apr 2005 02:19:03 GMT, Woodswun <woodswun@tepidmail.com>
wrote:
MonsieurStat wrote:
By Ward Harkavy
Republished from The Village Voice
Unreported in U.S. press, Rummy stalks oil and Iran in Azerbaijan
I'm shocked, *shocked*, that a member of Bush's administration would be
running after oil!!
lol. :)
Woods
Hardly any country on the planet sits in a more crucial spot than the harsh
dictatorship of Azerbaijan, so that's probably why Don Rumsfeld sneaked off
to its rowdy capital, Baku, earlier this week.
Do you hear the neocons beating the oil drums of war?
Rumsfeld's visit this week to Iraq generated some smoke, especially his
laughable warnings to the Iraqis about "government corruption."
But then, like the mysterious Mr. Arkadin, Rumsfeld left Iraq, flew to Baku
for meetings, spent the night, and then sneaked out the next day-with no
announcements from the Pentagon and (as a result) no notice from the U.S.
press.
Plenty of Azeris, chafing under the Aliyev family's harsh rule and fearing
war or other trouble from the oil-hungry U.S., freaked out, and there were
stories in the Turkish and Russian press. But leave it to the excellent news
service EurasiaNet to capture the not-meant-to-be-captured moment. In a
story posted April 13, political analyst Alman Talyshli wrote from Baku:
'Rumsfeld is interested in oil!' read a headline in the April 12 edition of
the popular daily Echo. The April 12 visit of the Pentagon chief to
Azerbaijan was a natural target for local media hungry for sensational news.
But not only the press is looking for answers.
Rumsfeld's visit took place under extreme secrecy, with limited public
information, leaving many local analysts and pundits to speculate about the
reasons for the U.S. secretary of defense's trip, the third such visit in
the past 15 months.
Former U.N. weapons inspector Scott Ritter has warned that the U.S. has been
making plans to attack Iran-one of Azerbaijan's neighbors-this summer. That's
not as farfetched as you may think. Seymour Hersh has said basically the
same thing. In "The Coming Wars," a mid-January piece in The New Yorker that
zeroed in on Rumsfeld's various plottings, Hersh wrote:
In my interviews, I was repeatedly told that the next strategic target was
Iran.
Here's an excerpt from the Hersh piece that could explain Rumsfeld's sudden
fondness for grimy, violent Baku:
According to a former high-level intelligence official, Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld met with the Joint Chiefs of Staff shortly after the
election and told them, in essence, that the naysayers had been heard and
the American people did not accept their message. Rumsfeld added that
America was committed to staying in Iraq and that there would be no
second-guessing.
"This is a war against terrorism, and Iraq is just one campaign. The Bush
Administration is looking at this as a huge war zone," the former high-level
intelligence official told me. "Next, we're going to have the Iranian
campaign. We've declared war and the bad guys, wherever they are, are the
enemy. This is the last hurrah-we've got four years, and want to come out of
this saying we won the war on terrorism."
More to the point about Rumsfeld's Wednesday trip to Baku, EurasiaNet's
Talyshli wrote:
The Pentagon and U.S. Azerbaijan embassy web sites contained no information
on Rumsfeld's one-day visit to Baku, and Azerbaijani officials preferred to
keep their explanations general.
The purpose of the defense secretary's visit, Ali Hasanov, head of the
presidential administration's political department, told the ANS television
news station on April 10, "is to hold new discussions on the principles of
cooperation between Azerbaijan and the USA in the sphere of security and
[to] solve problems present in this sphere." Hasanov also emphasized
Azerbaijan's role in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's Partnership
for Peace program, citing Rumsfeld's participation "in cooperation issues
implemented within the framework of NATO."
Hey, this wasn't the first time Rumsfeld has visited Baku (see photo). [One
of the dictators we like: Rumsfeld meets with Azeri ruler Ilham Aliyev last
August in Baku.]
So maybe that's all there was to it-just another visit to another one of our
allies. Well, that's the way the declining New York Times might leave it.
Talyshli, however, showed that he could write foreign news for the
Washington Post, because he went beyond the official sources and provided
this analysis:
But, given the recent redeployment of U.S. military forces from Germany,
some Azerbaijani observers take a different view. Independent military
expert Uzeyir Jafarov, in an April 9 interview with Echo, stated that
Rumsfeld was coming to Baku to get a final answer about establishment of a
U.S. military base in Azerbaijan. Jafarov added that he believed the answer
would be positive, and could come as early as mid-April.
Pro-government political figures such as Jumshid Nuriyev, former head of
Azerbaijan's customs service, however, disagree with Jafarov, and have
argued that Azerbaijan would never agree to its territory being used for an
attack on Iran, a country with which Azerbaijan shares close cultural and
historical ties.
Whew. That means no war with Iran, right? Not exactly. Again from Talyshli:
Analysts' views on the chances for a U.S. military presence in Azerbaijan
coincide with shifts in Pentagon plans for deployment of U.S. forces. In a
February 2004 visit to Uzbekistan, for example, Rumsfeld outlined the
concept of "operating sites" in Asia that would allow the U.S. and its
allies "to periodically and intermittently have access and support." In
times of crisis, these "sites," usually manned by small groups of personnel,
could be expanded to handle larger numbers of troops and supplies.
The Azeri writer is not just out there on his own. A story in the April 11
Wall Street Journal, "Search for Crude Comes With New Dangers," focused on
how the hunt for oil is likely to get more and more dangerous, and naturally
Azerbaijan came up. (Sorry, you probably have to subscribe to get the story.
But you should subscribe. Just skip the foolish editorial pages.)
Specifically, reporter John Fialka mentioned U.S. and European plans for a
"Caspian Guard" to protect pipelines and shipping points in Baku and other
places. Here's an excerpt from Fialka's excellent piece:
Twenty years ago, new oil was coming to the U.S. from Alaska or offshore
platforms near Norway and the United Kingdom-all places with reliable
security forces and stable governments. The oil supplies expected over the
next two decades are coming from or moving through some of the least stable
and most corrupt areas in the world.
As a result, long-neglected regions such as West Africa are rising in
importance to U.S. policy makers. Emerging countries around the Caspian Sea
are attracting new attention, too, as is the tense U.S. relationship with
Venezuela's leftist government.
Now do you see why Paul Wolfowitz is already talking about 'helping' Africa
even before he gets over to the World Bank?
But what about Iran? Fialka covers all the geopolitical bases, noting:
Further complicating matters is the struggle emerging between the U.S. and a
dollar-rich, oil-hungry China seeking influence and presence in such
regions. China's efforts to secure supplies of oil in Africa and Asia could
reduce amounts available to the global market, according to Robert Hormats,
a former senior State Department aide who is now vice chairman of Goldman
Sachs International. He spoke before a House committee on the subject last
week.
U.S. officials are particularly worried that China's oil companies are
pumping up the economies of countries like Iran and Sudan, despite trade
sanctions for alleged state-sponsored terrorism that make them off-limits
for some Western companies.
And Fialka, writing the day before Rumsfeld's undercover trip to Baku,
basically gives a reason for such a trip that you might want to think about
when you're filling up your SUV's gas tank (I know I will):
The military is paying more attention to emerging oil regions as the country
plans for possible disruptions in supply. Over the next decade, the U.S.
plans to spend $100 million on the Caspian Guard, a network of police forces
and special-operations units in the Caspian Sea region that can respond to
various emergencies, including attacks on oil facilities.
The Defense Department's European Command, based in Stuttgart, Germany, is
coordinating the multi-agency effort and helping to train forces to protect
a new pipeline that will bring oil from rigs in the Caspian Sea through the
Caucasus to Ceyhan, a Turkish port on the Mediterranean, starting later this
year.
The Caspian Guard, launched in the fall of 2003, will include a
radar-equipped command center in Baku, Azerbaijan. That center will give the
Azeri government the capability, for the first time, of monitoring shipping
activity near the many oil rigs in the Caspian. The Caspian Guard also will
be useful in coping with drug and arms smugglers, says Col. Mike Anderson,
chief policy planner for the European Command.
Most of the oil from this area will be absorbed by markets in Europe, not
the U.S. But any blockage in flows likely would generate a surge in oil
prices that would register on gas pumps in the U.S., the world's largest oil
consumer.
So, all you families out there, get ready to send your kids to Iran to fight
for "democracy"-and to keep China from getting all that oil so that our oil
companies can continue to prosper.
OUR ALLIES IN BAKU
It's nice to think that American soldiers are already helping the government
of Azerbaijan. And what is that government like?
The State Department's recently released human-rights report on Azerbaijan
paints a glorious picture of our pal Ilham Aliyev's regime. Just go to the
Web site of the U.S. Embassy in Baku and click on it. You'll find this stuff
and more:
- "Ilham Aliyev, the son of former president Heydar Aliyev, was elected
President in October 2003 in a ballot that did not meet international
standards for a democratic election due to numerous, serious
irregularities."
- "Members of the security forces committed numerous human rights abuses."
- "The Government's human rights record remained poor, and it continued to
commit numerous abuses. The Government continued to restrict the right of
citizens to peacefully change their government. There were four deaths that
occurred in custody allegedly due to beatings. Police tortured and beat
persons in custody, and used excessive force to extract confessions."
- "The Government continued to restrict freedom of speech and of the press.
Defamation lawsuits brought by officials against independent journalists and
newspapers and high court fines for libel remained significant problems for
the media."
- "The Government restricted freedom of assembly and did not sanction any
demonstrations by opposition political parties during the year. The
Government continued to restrict freedom of association by harassing
domestic human rights activists and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)."
- "There were some restrictions and abuses of religious freedom, and
low-level and local government officials continued to harass minority
religious groups."
- "Violence against women, societal discrimination against women and certain
ethnic minorities, trafficking in persons, and limitations of some worker
rights remained problems."
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Unreported in U.S. press, Rummy stalks oil and Iran in Azerbaijan |
19 Apr 2005 08:52:42 AM |
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A Pan Islamist spews sewage and the little Liberal lackies come
running to lap it up.
Tony
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| User: "The Psychedelic Pope - Saint Isadore of Laytonville - Patron Saint of the Internet" |
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| Title: Re: Unreported in U.S. press, Rummy stalks oil and Iran in Azerbaijan |
19 Apr 2005 03:45:19 PM |
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Certainly was tast-worthy.
And, there was enough to
go all around with leftovers.
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| User: "The Psychedelic Pope - Saint Isadore of Laytonville - Patron Saint of the Internet" |
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| Title: Re: Unreported in U.S. press, Rummy stalks oil and Iran in Azerbaijan |
18 Apr 2005 08:40:00 PM |
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Rummies belong is cages. If luck holds
on maybe this one will be caged!
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