Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

KoKo

(84,711 posts)
Sat Aug 30, 2014, 11:21 AM Aug 2014

Et Tu, Mullah? Did Iran Just Knife Putin in the Back?


August 18, 2014 -- On Thursday, Ukraine’s parliament passed a law that will allow foreign investors to lease up to 49 percent of Ukraine’s transit pipelines and underground gas storage facilities. The bill, which had failed to pass just weeks earlier, was approved by the slimmest of margins, 2 votes, suggesting that there might have been some arm twisting or bribery behind the scenes. The new law is a victory for the Obama administration and western elites who want to control the flow of gas from Russia to the EU, set prices, and make sure that transactions continue to be denominated in dollars

Here’s a little more background from an article in Reuters:

“Ukraine’s parliament approved a law on Thursday to allow gas transit facilities to be leased on a joint venture basis with participation from firms in the European Union or United States….The government has said the joint venture will bring in investment and remove the need for the South Stream pipeline, which Russia’s Gazprom is building to take gas to southeastern Europe across the Black Sea, avoiding Ukraine.

If South Stream is built, it threatens to deprive Ukraine’s badly strained budget of the transit fees that it currently receives from Russia for gas heading towards Europe.

The EU imports 30 percent of its natural gas needs from Russia, and about half of that comes via Ukraine, with some already having been diverted through the Nord Stream pipeline under the Baltic Sea.” (“Ukrainian parliament backs bill to open gas pipelines to EU, U.S. firms”, The Star)



You can see that the bloody, fratricidal conflict in Ukraine has nothing to do with democracy, sovereignty or even “evil” Putin. It’s all about gas and pipelines. It’s all part of Washington’s grand plan to put a wedge between Russia and the EU, control the flow of vital resources, and establish NATO bases on Russia’s western flank. The fact that the article mentions South Stream is particularly revealing. The Obama administration is doing everything in its power to sabotage South Stream so that Russia will be unable to bypass troublemaking Ukraine and sell its gas directly to countries across Europe. (Here’s a map of South Stream.)

Washington doesn’t want free trade between neighbors. Washington wants every drop of Russian gas to pass through its tollbooth so it can maintain a stranglehold on Europe’s economy and on Moscow’s
revenues. Here’s more on South Stream from Bloomberg:

“The $46 billion South Stream project, spearheaded by OAO Gazprom, is on hold and will probably remain in limbo for years as Russia continues to foment armed conflict in eastern Ukraine and the EU retaliates with bans, Eurasia Group said.

That means the war-torn country will remain a key transit point for about half of Gazprom’s shipments to Europe, according to the New York-based risk research group. The EU previously had mixed positions on South Stream. With Russian troops massing near the Ukraine border, the bloc now has little choice but to stand united in opposition.

“There’s no way Europe is going to put South Stream negotiations back on the table now, given the larger geopolitical context of the Ukraine crisis,” Emily Stromquist, a Eurasia analyst in London, said in an interview.

The proposed 2,446-kilometer (1,520-mile) pipeline would run under the Black Sea and enter the EU in Bulgaria. That would end Gazprom’s dependence on the Ukrainian gas-transit system.” (“Putin’s Pipeline Bypassing Ukraine Is at Risk Amid Conflict”, Bloomberg)


So, you see, the US is using every trick in the book to prevent Russia from selling its gas to the EU.

But, why?


Because the US is left out, that’s why. Washington doesn’t want what’s best for the EU or Russia. Washington want what’s best for Washington. What they want is to pivot to Asia by pitting Moscow against Brussels, thus, creating the pretext for deploying cat’s-paw NATO to Ukraine so they can point their missiles at the Russian capital and bully everyone in the region. That’s the plan.


http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/08/18/did-iran-just-knife-putin-in-the-back/
14 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies

BillZBubb

(10,650 posts)
2. Your text doesn't have anything to do with Iran?
Sat Aug 30, 2014, 11:43 AM
Aug 2014

I also strongly disagree that the US doesn't want what's best for the EU. It is a pretty sad twist of logic to blame the US for the fact that Russia under Putin is grabbing land from Ukraine.

The moves the US is making are aimed at containing Russian expansionism. That is a good thing for Ukraine and the EU.

dixiegrrrrl

(60,010 posts)
4. Iran is discussed in the article.
Sat Aug 30, 2014, 11:58 AM
Aug 2014

Was not part of the info in the OP, true.
Entire article worth a read.

blm

(113,015 posts)
3. Uh....this is pro-Putin propaganda, KoKo. Russia is threatening Ukraine and EU
Sat Aug 30, 2014, 11:56 AM
Aug 2014

because of Putin's delusional goal of re-assembling USSR. He has been using Russia's oil to do it.

Now that US is behind the scenes brokering deals to address the oil needs of both EU and Ukraine while they present a reasonable alternative to the fear of Putin's threats, that BOTHERS you?

KoKo

(84,711 posts)
7. It's about pipelines and Pivots and who controls the oil...
Sat Aug 30, 2014, 02:06 PM
Aug 2014

I can't believe that after all your years here you don't see this another "whip up to a never ending war" with Even Worse Terrorists who are coming to get us and lets just throw in propaganda that Putin wants to bring back the old Soviet Union as coming from the same playbook that got us into invading Iraq, Afghanistan, toppling Gadaffi in Libya and attempting to topple Assad in Syria. Plus our interventions in Africa, Pakistan, Yemen. We had Neocon from the State Department, Victoria Nuland intercepted talking about her man "Yats" who is now the Prime Minister of Ukraine where she says "Fuck the EU" and and war monger John McCain visiting Ukraine and smiling in Photo Ops with RW Svoboda Party thugs before the Ukrainian Coup on the Government.

You are welcome to post any links to articles that refute that its about Oil and Pipelines and that ISIS is very convenient popping up just when we need another round of bloodthirsty terrorists who are so strong the world has to unite to take them out before they kill us all.

Been there and heard that and paid for it with my taxdollars...I'm looking for the real reasons for why "Putin is Evil" and how the vast "Army of ISIS" could steal most of our arms/weaponry and be on a bloodthirsty march, beheading, raping torturing and pillaging when supposedly we have excellent sattelite surveillance, Drone Killing Capacity and CIA and other "Boots and Ears" on the ground in all the countries who would have been Warning BEFORE ISIS was capable of invading Iraq, taking over cities, forcing people onto mountains and taking over the largest dam in Iraq and now attempting to seize the Golan Heights..

We can't trust what we are told by our Government and Corporate Media....we know that by now. We must always dig deeper and question everything. It's our money...

blm

(113,015 posts)
12. Utter baloney. ISIS is direct result of Bush's invasion and
Sun Aug 31, 2014, 11:52 AM
Aug 2014

many progressives warned that backlash like ISIS is exactly what the US could expect for generations to come - even Sen. Byrd predicted this backlash, perhaps that will jog your memory. You want to claim those progressive warnings were wrong and ISIS is an oil plan by Obama and Kerry?

Get real. You don't understand why Iran is a crucial part in countering Putin and ISIS - and I haven't an hour to spend right now cluing you in.

Use your BRAIN, KoKo.

blm

(113,015 posts)
14. Yes, you did. According to you Putin is NOT trying to put USSR together and
Sun Aug 31, 2014, 01:50 PM
Aug 2014

and ISIS is being made out to be more of a threat than they are because, evidently, Kerry and Obama are making them out to be so to coddle big oil.

If you don't think so, you can't tell by your posts. There are only two people negotiating quietly what is going down in Ukraine and Iran and Iraq right now BEHIND THE SCENES and that is Kerry and Obama - I applaud how they are handling it to minimize use of warfare and weaponry as much as possible.



muriel_volestrangler

(101,271 posts)
6. An opinion piece that's already radically out of date
Sat Aug 30, 2014, 12:50 PM
Aug 2014

Repeated denials that Russia could possibly have any troops in, or about to go into, Ukraine; claims that the US is ignoring ISIS - the writer seems to lack any knowledge of insight on world events at all.

KoKo

(84,711 posts)
8. That's your interpretation of the article?
Sat Aug 30, 2014, 02:14 PM
Aug 2014

Maybe you did a hasty scan?

Tell me what you think is going on or post an article that you feel refutes the Pipeline Wars argument? It's good to hear different views.

muriel_volestrangler

(101,271 posts)
9. The idea that Iran is 'stabbing Russia in the back' is silly
Sat Aug 30, 2014, 02:29 PM
Aug 2014

Iran always wanted to be able to sell its gas via Nabucco; but the US was vetoing it. The change now is that it looks like the US may be removing the veto:

June 2008:

The United States opposes the planned Nabucco pipeline to Europe being supplied with Iranian gas, Washingon's diplomatic envoy to the Caspian Sea region, where the route would start, told Reuters on Thursday.

The new route will not displace the Russian energy giant Gazprom (GAZP.MM), but force it to compete for an increase in consumers, the U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza said in an interview.

Although some supporters for the U.S. and EU-backed pipeline that would bypass Russia by crossing countries on its southern borders such as Turkey have suggested sourcing supplies from Iran, Bryza spoke out against it.

"The U.S. supports the Nabucco pipeline as a way for Europe to help diversify supplies of natural gas, this means, new sources - but not from Iran," he told Reuters in an interview.

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2008/06/05/russia-nabucco-bryza-idUKL0583264520080605?sp=true

July 2009:

Russia is free to supply gas to the Nabucco pipeline and countries participating in the project must accept it as a partner, the United States special energy envoy said on Sunday.

Richard Morningstar reiterated Washington's opposition to the possible use of Iranian gas in the Nabucco pipeline, after Turkey said Iranian gas could be used in the project.

Transit agreements for the U.S.-backed Nabucco pipeline are set to be signed in Ankara on Monday by Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary and Austria. Germany is also a partner in the project.

The European Union has supported the project as a way of reducing its reliance on Russian gas, with possible suppliers for the 7.9 billion euro ($11 billion) project to include Iraq, Egypt, Iran, Azerbaijan, Russia and Turkmenistan.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2009/07/12/us-nabucco-idUSLC53505820090712?sp=true

What this shows is the US now sees Russia as more of a problem than Iran.

KoKo

(84,711 posts)
10. Thanks...those early links gives some interesting background on beginning of both pipelines.
Sat Aug 30, 2014, 03:26 PM
Aug 2014

I looked for updates and ended up at Wiki...but found their information hard to pull together without dates and with a controversial topic like pipelines Wiki sometimes can have a bias or two depending on who submits articles.

In your second link it said that Russia was also invited to participate in the pipeline...but Russia still preferred the South Stream route. Article says: "Russia is free to supply gas to the Nabucco pipeline and countries participating in the project must accept it as a partner, the United States special energy envoy said.." Since that was from 2009...it's hard to know how much might have changed since then. It seemed from Wiki that bothe pipelines routes and the countries involved have kept changing since the original agreements with disputes popping up constantly..

If neither pipeline has even begun to be built it would seem that it will be a few years in the future before Europe gets some relief from its dependency on Russia.

I'm going to dig around some more, when I have time, to see if either pipeline has even been started since its so unclear about the final decision on routes.





KoKo

(84,711 posts)
11. The Powers Behind The Islamic State, Saudis, Pipelines & ETC.+ Transcript Link
Sat Aug 30, 2014, 08:01 PM
Aug 2014

The Powers Behind The Islamic State, Saudis & The Rest + Transcript Link

Investigative journalist Nafeez Ahmed gives specific examples of how Saudi, Qatari, and American interests have supported the group formerly known as ISIS, and what the global community can do now to rein them in - August 25, 14


Bio

Dr. Nafeez Ahmed
is a bestselling author, investigative journalist and international security scholar. A regular Guardian contributor on the geopolitics of interconnected environmental, energy and economic crises, he is the author of A User's Guide to the Crisis of Civilization and How to Save It, which inspired his documentary feature film, The Crisis of Civilization. His debut science fiction novel inspired by true events is ZERO POINT.
Transcript:
http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=12278
ESSICA DESVARIEUX, TRNN PRODUCER:

Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Jessica Desvarieux in Baltimore. We're continuing our coverage of the ongoing turmoil in Iraq. Now with the rise of the extremist group the Islamic State, the drums of war in Iraq are beating louder and louder in the mainstream press. I'm pleased to welcome our guest,

Nafeez Ahmed, to help us put things in perspective. Nafeez is a best-selling author, investigative journalist, and international security scholar who writes regularly for The Guardian. He has a new novel out called Zero Point, which he says anticipated the Iraq crisis that's going on right now. Thanks for joining us,
afeez.

NAFEEZ AHMED, JOURNALIST, THE GUARDIAN: Thanks,

Jessica.DESVARIEUX: So, Nafeez, there's ISIL, there's ISIS, there's the Islamic State--IS some people are calling it. But they're all the same group, right? Can you sort of give us a sense of the evolution of this extremist group and how they get started?

AHMED: Well, the origins of the group come from militant groups affiliated to al-Qaeda that are operating in Iraq and Syria. And that's where it gets murky, because, as we know, these groups were kind of engaged in all kinds of militant activity fighting the Assad regime. They were also active in responding to U.S. occupation after the 2003 invasion. So there's a mix of different actors involved. So in Iraq we had elements of even the Ba'ath party and ex-Saddam supporters who were actually--according to many reports, they were being recruited by these al-Qaeda militants. And in Syria we had this increasing kind of--the borders of separation between the Iraqi troops and the Syria groups, it became increasingly much more porous, because they were fighting back and forth, they were crossing borders. And what makes it more murky is how these groups really became as kind of virulent and kind of influential as they have, which is really the kind of--you know, you follow the money. And you follow the money, we're looking at the involvement of the Gulf states, which have really empowered these groups over time and increased their ability to operate. They've increased their arms, logistical trading. So we've had the Saudis engaged in funding these groups in Syria.

DESVARIEUX: Do we have proof of this?AHMED: We have absolute proof. I mean, it's really a matter of public record. It's come out from--you've got a range of different forms of evidence, from documents produced by Westpoint military analysts to investigative reports by journalists on the ground writing for publications like The New York Times, Washington Post. So it's very clear. And we've had semiofficial and official confirmations from the CIA, from people in the State Department, other people in the Pentagon, even from British officials that have been involved in coordinating the Gulf states and supplying these kinds of virulent groups that we know are affiliated to al-Qaeda to basically topple Assad. And that's obviously had a direct blowback effect in Iraq, because these very same groups that were being supported are now streaming across the border, and they've now formed this kind of breakaway group, which is styled off as ISIS or ISIL or whatever and now have called themselves the Islamic State. And what makes it really more disturbing is, going deeper into that evidence of the role of the Saudis and the Qataris and Kuwait, which has been confirmed by various different sources, is really the way in which the U.S. and the U.K. have overseen that process. And that's something which isn't so much acknowledged in the mainstream, that actually Britain and the United States were involved in knowingly kind of facilitating the support to these groups, despite knowing their links to al-Qaeda calling back as early as 2009

.DESVARIEUX: Wow. How did they support these groups?AHMED: So we had--you must remember the big batch of files that was obtained by WikiLeaks from the private intelligence company Strategic Forecasting, Stratfor.

DESVARIEUX: Yes.AHMED: So that batch of files contains some really interesting correspondence, including correspondence where some senior executives at Stratfor were describing meetings that they had had with senior Pentagon officials and senior U.S. army officials where those officials openly described how U.S. special forces and British special forces had been operating in Syria long before the kind of major, major civil unrest that kind of really broke out, and they had been operating in kind of supporting these groups. And it was very clearly stated by these officers at the time--and the emails are there, people can check them out, and I've written about them in some of my Guardian articles and some of my other articles elsewhere--that they quite explicitly said that this is about destabilizing the Assad regime from within. They had even explored the possibility of airstrikes on targets. But the favored policy was using these groups as a proxy force to destabilize Assad's regime.

DESVARIEUX: Remind us again: why do they want to destabilize Assad so badly?AHMED: So there's a lot of different kind of ways of looking at this, and I think it's difficult to kind of pinpoint which one is necessarily the most important one. But one of the ones that I focused on is the role that Assad has played in kind of cozying up to Russia, allowing Russia to kind of develop a foothold in the region. And that's kind of tied to this increasing pipeline geopolitics in the region. So you've got this interesting kind of geopolitical jockeying over pipelines running across Syria from this field that is a kind of disputed field that Iran has access to and also Qatar has access to. Now, the exact border of that field is a little bit disputed, and both Iran and Qatar have been trying to kickstart ways to get that field into production. The pipelines would cross Syria and they would basically, ideally, supply Europe. It's a very ambitious project. Some people have raised lots of questions about whether these projects are really just pipedreams, in a sense. You know, are they viable, really, given the politics of the region? And this kind of stuff has been going on for years. They've been discussing these kind of ideas. But there was definitely real efforts to get these projects kind of off the table. So Iran signed a memorandum with Syria. Qatar had been having real negotiations with Saudi and Turkey and other countries. So these were kind of two competing pipeline routes. And, obviously, the U.S. favored the one which would involve Qatar and it wasn't very happy with the one that involved Iran and kind of would favor Russia. The United States has for long time wanted to ensure that it kind of sidelines Russia and Iran in all of these various pipeline projects. So when Iran signed this kind of memorandum with Assad, that was kind of considered like a major kind of strategic setback, and something kind of needed to be done. And apart from that, there were also many other--there was generally other kind of geopolitical issues apart from the fact that Russia has a military base there. There's also issues such as the role that Assad has played in relation to the Middle East conflict, the support that they've provided to Hamas, their relationship with the Iranians, and that whole general thing. So there's this general perception of Syria being this part of the so-called axis of evil in a way. You know. So the whole pipeline thing kind of accelerated that fear, I think, and made them want to do something. And they had a lot of indications that with different crises that Syria is going through domestically--economic crisis, there was a widespread drought due to climate change that was accelerating--and we even have State Department cables, also leaked by WikiLeaks, where literally we have State Department officials talking about how there is going to be civil unrest in Syria very soon, very likely, because of food prices and the strain on food due to these droughts and due to the effect on farmers. So they knew something was going to kick off in Syria. They knew that there was going to be popular--kind of popular uprising of some kind. And it seems that they planned to kind of exploit that, to get some of these jihadist guys in there, hijack that movement, direct it in a way that they felt that they could control. But, of course, as we've seen, it's kind of gone out of control

.DESVARIEUX: It is out of control. And, I mean, I actually have been personally affected by some of this, because I shared on the program earlier than I lost my friend, Jim Foley. He was a journalist who was covering the Syrian conflict. And these men who beheaded him--let's not mince words here--they're not good guys. I mean, these are extremists, fanatics that are distorting Islam to rise to power. And there are going to be folks out there who are going to say, you know what, Nafeez, we need to figure out a way to stop these guys. You know, we're hearing more aggressive language by politicians saying that we--possibly even boots on the ground, things of that nature. So there's sort of this impulse to use aggression in order to combat some of this. What would you say to folks like that based on the context?

AHMED: Well, the first thing, I think that is very important to grasp: the role that our governments have played in fomenting the crisis that we see. The rise of ISIS was kind of predictable, and it's something that some analysts--analysts have warned about civil war in Iraq for years. I guess the accelerated nature of what we're seeing, most people haven't anticipated that, but it was predictable. And when we look at the way in which we've been funding some of these groups, it's kind of ironic that we have the very same people now calling for boots on the ground, calling for a response, are the same people that have been very loud in their support for arming some of the most virulent of elements of these rebel groups. And even though the Obama administration, for instance, has given a lot of lip service, saying that we only want to fund, you know, the kind of moderate rebels and so on and so forth--but the Obama administration has actively coordinated the financing that has come from the Gulf states to the very types of groups that they historically have always favored, which is the most virulent jihadist al-Qaeda affiliated organizations. So there is a contradiction here in what we're being told now and the way in which policymakers have kind of created this crisis and now not taken responsibility for this crisis. And there is an argument to be made, I think--and it's unclear to--you know, I wouldn't put this forward as a kind of a firm interpretation of what's happening, 'cause I think there are many different actors and many different interests at play, but if we look at some of the reports that we've had over the last few years of the plans for the region, there are certainly elements in the Pentagon of a neoconservative persuasion who have seen the rise of this kind of group in a way as a boon to reconfigure the Middle East. Now, the evidence for that comes from a range of quite credible sources. So one of the sources I looked at was a publicly available RAND report that was published a couple of years. It was commissioned by the U.S. army. And it was a kind of a thought piece. It was a policy briefing. It was looking at policy options for the United States in essentially reconfiguring the Middle East and exploring how to counter terrorism. But those policy options were pretty Machiavellian in some ways, very, very--I mean, obviously there were strategic calculations and the overarching objective, ostensibly, was countering terrorism. But what they proposed to do was very worrying. There were various there was a range of scenarios that were explored. One of them was divide-and-rule, openly talking about empowering Salafi jihadists to some extent in order to kind of weaken Iranian influence, openly talking about empowering, using the Gulf states, because they have access to the petroleum resources, so using them to kind of funnel support to these groups that would eventually create kind of like a vortex of intra-Muslim conflict that would get terrorists and extremists on different sides fighting each other, that would weaken all of them and allow U.S. interests and Israeli interests to kind of consolidate their own kind of security while these guys are fighting amongst themselves. So here we see, you know, when you have these kind of very shortsighted geopolitical kind of concepts about how to obtain a victory against counterterrorism, you can kind of see where it leads you up this really dangerous garden path, thinking that we're going to solve this problem by funding these groups. So if we look at what's happening now, look at how this funding has happened, and we look at the RAND reports, for example, you get a pretty clear indication that some of that policy seems to have been at play to some extent. How far it's gone and to what extent no one can know. It's speculation. But that's what worries me, that you've got this kind of hubris that we can do this, we know what we're doing. It's the same hubris that we saw with the neocons after 9/11, pre-Iraq War, post-Iraq War, the same hubris of running in to the Middle East, reconfiguring the region. You know, another piece of evidence that I thought was quite disturbing that I've written about the past was the 2005--these maps from 2005 in the arms Armed Forces Journal, where a senior adviser to the Pentagon responsible at that time for kind of future planning in kind of warfare was proposing that the Middle East be broken up along ethnic and religious lines to create a more peaceful Middle East. So again you see this thread of thinking which--again, it's imperial hubris, really, to think that--you know, whether it's kind of motivated by good reasons or not, it's the same kind of colonial mentality we saw with the British, that we'll go in, we'll redraw the borders, we'll kind of tame the savages. So I'm concerned that that's the kind of mentality that we've seen. So talking about military intervention and boots on the ground now in that context is very worrying, because are we seeing that our interests are actually being kind of merged with that kind of imperial hubris?

DESVARIEUX: Yeah. But, Nafeez, then what do we do? Because some people are saying, these groups are out of control, you're just going to get more chaos, more people are going to die. What do you do? In this situation, how do we handle this?

MORE TRANSCRIPT at:

http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=12278






Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Et Tu, Mullah? Did Iran J...