by Alexander Mercouris
The reaction to the cancellation of the Sound Stream project has been a wonder to behold and needs to be explained very carefully.
In order to understand what has happened it is first necessary to go back to the way Russian-European relations were developing in the 1990s.
Briefly, at that period, the assumption was that Russia would become the great supplier of energy and raw materials to Europe. This was the period of Europe’s great “rush for gas” as the Europeans looked forward to unlimited and unending Russian supplies. It was the increase in the role of Russian gas in the European energy mix which made it possible for Europe to run down its coal industry and cut its carbon emissions and bully and lecture everyone else to do the same.
However the Europeans did not envisage that Russia would just supply them with energy. Rather they always supposed this energy would be extracted for them in Russia by Western energy companies. This after all is the pattern in most of the developing world. The EU calls this “energy security” – a euphemism for the extraction of energy in other countries by its own companies under its own control.
It never happened that way. Though the Russian oil industry was privatised it mostly remained in Russian hands. After Putin came to power in 2000 the trend towards privatisation in the oil industry was reversed. One of the major reasons for western anger at the arrest of Khodorkovsky and the closure of Yukos and the transfer of its assets to the state oil company Rosneft was precisely because is reversed this trend of privatisation in the oil industry.
In the gas industry the process of privatisation never really got started. Gas export continued to be controlled by Gazprom, maintaining its position as a state owned monopoly gas exporter. Since Putin came to power Gazprom’s position as a state owned Russian monopoly has been made fully secure.
Much of the anger that exists in the west towards Putin can be explained by European and western resentment at his refusal and that of the Russian government to the break up of Russia’s energy monopolies and to the “opening up” (as it is euphemistically called) of the Russian energy industry to the advantage of western companies. Many of the allegations of corruption that are routinely made against Putin personally are intended to insinuate that he opposes the “opening up” of the Russian energy industry and the break up and privatisation of Gazprom and Rosneft because he has a personal stake in them (in the case of Gazprom, that he is actually its owner). If one examines in detail the specific allegations of corruption made against Putin (as I have done) this quickly becomes obvious.
His agenda of forcing Russia to privatise and break up its energy monopolies has never gone away. This is why Gazprom, despite the vital and reliable service it provides to its European customers, comes in for so much criticism. When Europeans complain about Europe’s energy dependence upon Russia, they express their resentment at having to buy gas from a single Russian state owned company (Gazprom) as opposed to their own western companies operating in Russia.
This resentment exists simultaneously with a belief, very entrenched in Europe, that Russia is somehow dependent upon Europe as a customer for its gas and as a supplier of finance and technology.
This combination of resentment and overconfidence is what lies behind the repeated European attempts to legislate in Europe on energy questions in a way that is intended to force Russia to “open up” its the energy industry there.
The first attempt was the so-called Energy Charter, which Russia signed but ultimately refused to ratify. The latest attempt is the EU’s so-called Third Energy Package.
This is presented as a development of EU anti-competition and anti-monopoly law. In reality, as everyone knows, it is targeted at Gazprom, which is a monopoly, though obviously not a European one.
This is the background to the conflict over South Stream. The EU authorities have insisted that South Stream must comply with the Third Energy Package even though the Third Energy Package came into existence only after the outline agreements for South Stream had been already reached.
Compliance with the Third Energy Package would have meant that though Gazprom supplied the gas it could not own or control the pipeline through which gas was supplied.
Were Gazprom to agree to this, it would acknowledge the EU’s authority over its operations. It would in that case undoubtedly face down the line more demands for more changes to its operating methods. Ultimately this would lead to demands for changes in the structure of the energy industry in Russia itself.
What has just happened is that the Russians have said no. Rather than proceed with the project by submitting to European demands, which is what the Europeans expected, the Russians have to everyone’s astonishment instead pulled out of the whole project.
This decision was completely unexpected. As I write this, the air is of full of angry complaints from south-eastern Europe that they were not consulted or informed of this decision in advance. Several politicians in south-eastern Europe (Bulgaria especially) are desperately clinging to the idea that the Russian announcement is a bluff (it isn’t) and that the project can still be saved. Since the Europeans cling to the belief that the Russians have no alternative to them as a customer, they were unable to anticipate and cannot now explain this decision.
Here it is important to explain why South Stream is important to the countries of south-eastern Europe and to the European economy as a whole.
All the south eastern European economies are in bad shape. For these countries South Stream was a vital investment and infrastructure project, securing their energy future. Moreover the transit fees that it promised would have been a major foreign currency earner.
For the EU, the essential point is that it depends on Russian gas. There has been a vast amount of talk in Europe about seeking alternative supplies. Progress in that direction had been to put it mildly small. Quite simply alternative supplies do not exist in anything like the quantity needed to replace the gas Europe gets from Russia.
There has been some brave talk of supplies of US liquefied natural gas replacing gas supplied by pipeline from Russia. Not only is such US gas inherently more expensive than Russian pipeline gas, hitting European consumers hard and hurting European competitiveness. It is unlikely to be available in anything like the necessary quantity. Quite apart from the probable dampening effects of the recent oil price fall on the US shale industry, on past record the US as a voracious consumer of energy will consume most or all of the energy from shales it produces. It is unlikely to be in a position to export much to Europe. The facilities to do this anyway do not exist, and are unlikely to exist for some time if ever.
Other possible sources of gas are problematic to say the least. Production of North Sea gas is falling. Imports of gas from north Africa and the Arabian Gulf are unlikely to be available in anything like the necessary quantity. Gas from Iran is not available for political reasons. Whilst that might eventually change, the probability is when it does that the Iranians (like the Russians) will decide to direct their energy flow eastwards, towards India and China, rather than to Europe.
For obvious reasons of geography Russia is the logical and most economic source of Europe’s gas. All alternatives come with economic and political costs that make them in the end unattractive.
The EU’s difficulties in finding alternative sources of gas were cruelly exposed by the debacle of the so-called another Nabucco pipeline project to bring Europe gas from the Caucasus and Central Asia. Though talked about for years in the end it never got off the ground because it never made economic sense.
Meanwhile, whilst Europe talks about diversifying its supplies, it is Russia which is actually cutting the deals.
Russia has sealed a key deal with Iran to swap Iranian oil for Russian industrial goods. Russia has also agreed to invest heavily in the Iranian nuclear industry. If and when sanctions on Iran are lifted the Europeans will find the Russians already there. Russia has just agreed a massive deal to supply gas to Turkey (about which more below). Overshadowing these deals are the two huge deals Russia has made this year to supply gas to China.
Russia’s energy resources are enormous but they are not infinite. The second deal done with China and the deal just done with Turkey redirect to these two countries gas that had previously been earmarked for Europe. The gas volumes involved in the Turkish deal almost exactly match those previously intended for South Stream. The Turkish deal replaces South Stream.
These deals show that Russia had made a strategic decision this year to redirect its energy flow away from Europe. Though it will take time for the full effect to become clear, the consequences of that for Europe are grim. Europe is looking at a serious energy shortfall, which it will only be able to make up by buying energy at a much higher price.
These Russian deals with China and Turkey have been criticised or even ridiculed for providing Russia with a lower price for its gas than that paid by Europe.
The actual difference in price is not as great as some allege. Such criticism anyway overlooks the fact that price is only one part in a business relationship.
By redirecting gas to China, Russia cements economic links with the country that it now considers its key strategic ally and which has (or which soon will have) the world’s biggest and fastest growing economy. By redirecting gas to Turkey, Russia consolidates a burgeoning relationship with Turkey of which it is now the biggest trading partner.
Turkey is a key potential ally for Russia, consolidating Russia’s position in the Caucasus and the Black Sea. It is also a country of 76 million people with a $1.5 trillion rapidly growing economy, which over the last two decades has become increasingly alienated and distanced from the EU and the West.
By redirecting gas away from Europe, Russia by contrast leaves behind a market for its gas which is economically stagnant and which (as the events of this year have shown) is irremediably hostile. No one should be surprised that Russia has given up on a relationship from which it gets from its erstwhile partner an endless stream of threats and abuse, combined with moralising lectures, political meddling and now sanctions. No relationship, business or otherwise, can work that way and the one between Russia and Europe is no exception.
I have said nothing about the Ukraine since in my opinion this has little bearing on this issue.
South Stream was first conceived because of the Ukraine’s continuous abuse of its position as a transit state – something which is likely to continue. It is important to say that this fact was acknowledged in Europe as much as in Russia. It was because the Ukraine perennially abuses its position as a transit state that the South Stream project had the grudging formal endorsement of the EU. Basically, the EU needs to circumvent the Ukraine to secure its energy supplies every bit as much as Russia wanted a route around the Ukraine to avoid it.
The Ukraine’s friends in Washington and Brussels have never been happy about this, and have constantly lobbied against South Stream.
The point is it was Russia which pulled the plug on South Stream when it had the option of going ahead with it by accepting the Europeans’ conditions. In other words the Russians consider the problems posed by the Ukraine as a transit state to be a lesser evil than the conditions the EU was attaching to South Stream .
South Stream would take years to build and its cancellation therefore has no bearing on the current Ukrainian crisis. The Russians decided they could afford to cancel it is because they have decided Russia’s future is in selling its energy to China and Turkey and other states in Asia (more gas deals are pending with Korea and Japan and possibly also with Pakistan and India) than to Europe. Given that this is so, for Russia South Stream has lost its point. That is why in their characteristically direct way, rather than accept the Europeans’ conditions, the Russians pulled the plug on it.
In doing so the Russians have called the Europeans’ bluff. So far from Russia being dependent on Europe as its energy customer, it is Europe which has antagonised, probably irreparably, its key economic partner and energy supplier.
Before finishing I would however first say something about those who have come out worst of all from this affair. These are the corrupt and incompetent political pygmies who pretend to be the government of Bulgaria. Had these people had a modicum of dignity and self respect they would have told the EU Commission when it brought up the Third Energy Package to take a running jump. If Bulgaria had made clear its intention to press ahead with the South Stream project, there is no doubt it would have been built. There would of course have been an almighty row within the EU as Bulgaria openly flouted the Third Energy Package, but Bulgaria would have been acting in its national interests and would have had within the EU no shortage of friends. In the end it would have won through.
Instead, under pressure from individuals like Senator John McCain, the Bulgarian leadership behaved like the provincial politicians they are, and tried to run at the same time with both the EU hare and the Russian hounds. The result of this imbecile policy is to offend Russia, Bulgaria’s historic ally, whilst ensuring that the Russian gas which might have flown to Bulgaria and transformed the country, will instead flow to Turkey, Bulgaria’s historic enemy.
The Bulgarians are not the only ones to have acted in this craven fashion. All the EU countries, even those with historic ties to Russia, have supported the EU’s various sanctions packages against Russia notwithstanding the doubts they have expressed about the policy. Last year Greece, another country with strong ties to Russia, pulled out of a deal to sell its natural gas company to Gazprom because the EU disapproved of it, even though it was Gazprom that offered the best price.
This points to a larger moral. Whenever the Russians act in the way they have just done, the Europeans respond bafflement and anger, of which there is plenty around at the moment. The EU politicians who make the decisions that provoke these Russian actions seem to have this strange assumption that whilst it is fine for the EU to sanction Russia as much as it wishes, Russia will never do the same to the EU. When Russia does, there is astonishment, accompanied always by a flood of mendacious commentary about how Russia is behaving “aggressively” or “contrary to its interests” or has “suffered a defeat”. None of this is true as the rage and recriminations currently sweeping through the EU’s corridors (of which I am well informed) bear witness.
In July the EU sought to cripple Russia’s oil industry by sanctioning the export of oil drilling technology to Russia. That attempt will certainly fail as Russia and the countries it trades with (including China and South Korea) are certainly capable of producing this technology themselves.
By contrast through the deals it has made this year with China, Turkey and Iran, Russia has dealt a devastating blow to the energy future of the EU. A few years down the line Europeans will start to discover that moralising and bluff comes with a price. Regardless, by cancelling South Stream, Russia has imposed upon Europe the most effective of the sanctions we have seen this year. .
hoehenangst@gmail.com said…
nord stream is only running at 50%, all due to the 3rd energy package.
None of the European pipelines run to full capacity.
http://www.eegas.com/fsu.htm
http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/files/2014/03/chart5sharplesjudge.jpg
I absolutely love reading Mecouris here. Brilliant synopsis on the irrelevance of the Europoodles.
Russia isn’t done marginalizing the gas needs of the Europoodles
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/10/15/russia-japan-pipeline-idUSL3N0SA0ZE20141015
Krutikhin and other analysts believe China will have a strong hand to renegotiate gas prices because Russia will have huge investment costs and pipeline capacity to fill, with only one customer on the other end.
Herberg said Russia tried for years to avoid such a trap, arguing against single-customer pipeline projects, only to fall prey to isolation after annexing Crimea and supporting separatists in Ukraine.
There are also signs that Russia has thrown open its previously-barred doors to Chinese investment in its energy sector as sanctions put ventures with Western companies on hold.
At the APEC meeting, Russia’s state-owned Rosneft oil company announced a framework agreement to sell a 10-percent stake in its prized Vankor oilfield to CNPC for an undisclosed price. http://www.rfa.org/english/commentaries/energy_watch/gas-11242014110411.html
I was in Bulgaria in 2010 and even then gas prices were very high, even beyond the reach of many people. Compounded by EU regulations that made the use of firewood to heat their homes. Now things are going to get worse.
Israeli companies all around the resort towns buying up good agricultural land to put up villas for EU tourists. Even the ‘bomb attack’ at the airport clearly was an inside job.
Went to a Sygenta seminar where farmers were being sold GMO seeds.
The Bulgarians are a lovely people, but ill served by their politicians. Even their media ownership is suspect; too much entertainment and ‘news’ and closely pushing people to the EU.
Erika ,
thank you for a brilliant analysis that you posted!
I feel relieved.
Reccomend to all the Serbs here to read it :
http://orientalreview.org/2014/12/02/cold-turkey-ankara-buckles-against-western-pressure-turns-to-russia/
Russia has NOT abondon us yet.
It takes “only” that Greeks or Bulgarians leave the EU.
Lets hope.
The Wend.
http://beforeitsnews.com/war-and-conflict/2014/12/american-dollar-rescue-strategy-2454866.html
Not all countries were with the EU on this one, here in Austria our president send a clear message to the EU that they should mind their own business and that we will build our part of the south-stream and act as the hub for the energy flow. This is a harsh blow for us and we know exactly that we can “thank” the EU for it.
Despite what the news and media are saying and some idiotic politicans may think, there is not much love left here for the EU.
I recently noticed an interesting factoid about the Khodorkovsky Affair
in The Colder War: How the Global Energy Trade Slipped from America’s Grasp by Marin Katusa. Katusa claims Lee Raymond, who was President of Exxon-Mobil flew to Moscow while Khodorkovsky was in the USA attempting to sell Yukos Oil. Lee Raymond asked Vladimir Putin if he approved of Khodorkovsky’s sale of Yukos Oil. Putin replied he didn’t know Khodorkovsky was shopping the Russian strategic energy assets to the West and thanked Lee Raymond for his assistance. Michael Khodorkovsky was arrested on his return to Moscow. Today Exxon Mobil is a valued partner of Russia’s Oil and Gas Sector.
One more note…Brazil’s offshore oil is mostly contract drilling. I assure you oil service companies like <a href=”http://slb.com/>Schlumberger</a> are not going to be forced out of Russia by the Neo-conservative dilettantes of the USA State Department. IMO..most of the sanctions are political cover and political theater for the home audience in the USA and Europe.
Thank you for the excellent analysis by Alexander Mercouris!
It appears Russia is consolidating its Eurasian Project with the Turkey gas deal, offering them the same price for gas as that paid by Europe. It will be interesting to see Europe come to Turkey with their hat in their hand.
The thought crossed my mind that ‘maybe’ Russia and Europe haved settled the Ukraine problem and the gas will flow through neutral territory. A world of possibilities opens up when we see reported political and economic affairs as puppet theater. Later!
here’s a 2nd huge reason that article appeared a week ago in der Spiegel (almost certainly a powerful upper-tier clique of german industrialists) telling this spineless wonder to “get leitering, or get out!”
This so-called ‘Free Trade Agreement’ (sic) between the US and Europe Obama is pushing on the European Commission and for which on behalf of Europe, Germany’s Madame Merkel seems to be a forceful standard bearer, if signed, would be serving the interests of corporations rather than of the 600 million European citizens.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-transatlantic-trade-and-investment-partnership-ttip-would-abolish-europes-sovereignty-the-eu-would-become-a-us-colony/5417382
Thanks, Erika for the link to the analysis by Andrew Korybko in Oriental Review. It’s an excellent piece, I highly recommend it as a perfect complement to this analysis. As you said, it deals more with Turkey. I was impressed by the deep decisions that Turkey has evidently made, and its pivot away from the US, into a multi-polar nation strong enough, like Russia, to play any and all sides it wants to partner with.
Cold Turkey: Ankara Buckles Against Western Pressure, Turns to Russia
Honestly there’s far too much good reading in the analysis to quote, but here are some excerpts.
The US crossed the line by armingand training the Kurds (some of whom are registered as terrorists by Turkey), and faced with such an existential threat to their state (that would either be unleashed wittingly or unwittingly with time), they [Turkey] knew they had to pivot, and fast.
[…]
Russia had no choice but to find a replacement route and saw that the only viable stand-in was Turkey, which just so happened to be undergoing its most serious crisis ever with the US.
[…]
Turkey understands that it has made a definitive move by joining the project and that there is no going back from this decision.
[…]
Since it’s now behaving in a multipolar fashion, Turkey is playing all sides to its advantage, so it will still retain a defense relationship with NATO and the US, but it will no longer behave as an absolute lackey. Taking things further, Turkey’s shift to the East might allow Iran to one day build pipelines through it to access the Western market…
[…]
There’s also been talk of the country entering into a free-trade agreement with the Russian-led Eurasian Customs Union, so it might incidentally find its EU replacement with Brussels’ eastern adversary, Moscow.
Finally, thanks to Saker for so generously hosting and highlighting such high quality analysis, as good as his own.
For a Syrian perspective:
http://www.syrianperspective.com/2014/11/syrper-exclusive-what-lavrov-is-telling-muallem-what-muallem-is-telling-putin-and-lavrov.html
Read this and the article from oriental review that I listed earlier as this was the set-up to the Russia-Turkey meeting.
And from Fort Russ:
http://fortruss.blogspot.ca/2014/12/the-taming-of-europe-or-new-putins.html
Okay, what the heck is US thinking?
http://bigstory.ap.org/article/eda51eba03d749e8962afcccc0f1653e/expelled-us-diplomat-return-bahrain
Are they planning a colour revolution in Bahrain?
Also why is Ken Roth going to Russia to speak about human rights? He’s going to be there tomorrow? at the Interfax Press Centre or so twitter claims.
https://twitter.com/TanyaLokshina/status/540234779007143937
I don’t see the South Stream as dead.Just renamed and relocated.And since it will go on land through Turkey it may turn out to be easier to build and cheaper than an undersea pipeline would be.With a terminal built at the Greek border connecting lines can still be built,just now on a slightly different route, to all the countries the South Stream was meant to service.This move may have, we can hope, woke some Europeans up to them needing to agree to the pipeline and stop stalling.I guess we’ll see in the coming weeks or months.
And on news from Ukraine.As well as Poroshenko disgracing his country by making foreigners the real rulers of the country.Making them Deputy Ministers in the government.And saying the cabinet meetings would be conducted in English now (so much for the nationalist demands for only the Ukrainian language in government).But nazi mobs in Zhitomir,with the police looking on,doing nothing.Proceeded to attack Russian owned Banks in that Oblast capital.And Svoboda in the Rada had a priest come in and sprinkle Holy Water on the section of the Rada Chamber that used to be occupied by Communist Deputies to the Parliament.I kid you not,they did.There is no way around it,the junta has to go.And go soon to save that country and people from more insanity.
Uncle Bob
Russia ready to continue talks with Austria, Hungary, Serbia on South Stream — envoy
“The gas pipeline thread may go in any direction from the Turkish hub,” Russia’s Ambassador to the European Union Vladimir Chizhov said
http://itar-tass.com/en/economy/764957
Dear The Wend,
http://itar-tass.com/en/economy/764957
Serbia is not forgotten – Russia plans everyting ;).
Rgds,
Veritas
Haha, is there anyone around who could just tell us what happened to that truly fabulous, beautiful thing called RAPA (Russian Aggression Prevention Act)? Also, I found immense joy reading the comments of the Bulgarians themselves:
“We turned out to be the same stupid prostitutes as the Poles“
“The truth is that Putin and Erdogan are statesmen and work for the good of their countries, not like our assholes, unfortunately“
With regard to the first quoted comment above, maybe the drooling Psheks could actually provide LNG for free to the West if they manage to get things started. Psheks do this kind of senseless grovelling on sheer vocation.
All in all, the very real anger and impotent raging and fuming against Putin and Russia add up to a most beautiful proof positive of how much it hurts Western supremacists to find themselves forever being outsmarted by what has preposterously been singled out as inferior peoples, countries, and leaders. Way to go, Russia!
Russia will still sell gas to south-central Europe. However, now all of that gas will have to pass through the Ukraine for the foreseeable future. This will be a tremendous windfall for Kiev, which can raise its tarifs to anything it wants, and Europe will have no choice but to pay them. Of course, none of this windfall will benefit the average Ukrainian. It all will end up paying for interest to the IMF, the “anti-terrorist operation,” and more wealth for the oligarchs.
The US, says McCain, will begin shipping gas to Europe in 2020.
I can’t stop laughing.
If you have money to invest, go “long” on blankets. The EU will be needing them for the next six years.
Il Discobolo
(Two headlines, out of theme, but relevant to see the hypocrisy of the ANGLO/USA)
USA, December 2, 2014 07:06 AM /
The Associated Press
Washington. House unanimously approves bill to end payment of pension benefits to former Nazis.
Ukraine, December 01, 15:19 UTC+3
Kiev. The Parliament will discuss to recognize as warring combatants the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (Nazi-collaborators in the Second World War ). If approved, former Nazis will receive pension benefits.
Just read this article titled Grandmaster Putin’s Golden Trap http://fortruss.blogspot.com/2014/11/grandmaster-putins-golden-trap.html.
It gives an excellent analysis on why Russia is keeping so calm in the face of collapsing oil and ruble prices. The translation is a little rough, but the main idea goes like this: Russia sells its oil and gas for USD, which, as has been pointed out an innumerable amount of times, is artificially infalted. Russia turns around, taking an infalted currency and buys physical gold, which has been artificially deflated (http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article40366.htm) by the US in an attempt to shore up the USD.
The result is that Russia makes money both coming and going by buying something undervalued (gold) with something overvalued (USD), offsetting the slide on the oil and ruble markets.
Russia will be more than happy to continue to do so, as China will be more than happy to settle any transactions in gold.
Besides offsetting losses in oil revenues, this gives Russia the ultimate laugh to the bank when gold rebounds. As a finite resource, any attempt to artificially drive down the market will inevitably correct itself. Not even mentioning the upward pressures on gold when investors flock to the metal as a hedge against falling currency markets.
This is nothing short of the ultimate ippon by Putin
Don Wiscacho
but this hurts south eastern Europeans only about whom the anglos controlled west care nothing.
Russia must stop gas and oil delivery to england and germany the two nations who have been heavily involved in pricking Russia and creating Ukraine coupe.
a third rate country like england dared to ask switch to stop Russian payment system !
russia must punish her anglo enemies first.
Before Putin makes a decision he wants to see all possible outcomes. He wants to advance on several fronts at the same time and know what the decision costs beforehand. This is the second time he surprises the world and pulls down the pants on the EU while gaining lots of other things.
We need to understand how he thinks. Merkel should know better, Brussels and Washington will never learn, but we should try. I grew up not far from the Russian border and, though I am not Russian and have a limited command of the language, my children speak better, I really do think I understand him better than some angry Russians who grew up in anglosaxon countries. They want everything now, at once or immediately. Some of them never stop bashing Putin because they don’t understand him. If you are one of them, please be adviced it is difficult to adopt the soul of Russia from a country far away. Saker did, he studied Russia for years at work. Paradoxically, we both studied Russia during the Cold War and found it easier than today when everything is yes-no, either-or and good-bad. Paradoxically, we were both anti-USSR. That being said, I am delighted to see anglosaxons and europeans give massive support for Putin on this blog. They understand the other side of the coin, the mentality among conflictloving Western leaders, the dangers to our global community and, as a result, they instantly recognize the sanity of Vladimir Putin. We also have contributors from Africa, India, Asia and South America. Thanks, friends.
After the new deal, gas will continue flowing through Ukraine for a while. The deal supports the economy of Ukraine until the new pipeline is built and that is one of the bonuses for Russia, for which Ukraine is little Russia. Well, at least a big part of it. Putin does not want the country in trouble.
It the gas is stolen, that is Europes problem and when the country needs more money that is also Europes problem. Europe wanted Ukraine and got what it wanted, or rather not what it wanted.
The third energy package looks rather silly now. The sanctions, too. In fact, Brussels looks silly and has lost face internationally. How is that seen in China?
North Stream supplies Germany, the UK and other countries with Russian gas. Something for people in southern and eastern Europe to take notice of. Why did Brussels kill South Stream?
I wait for the next surprise, I think Putin wants to compensate Serbia.
Btw, foreign ministers in the government of Ukraine make foreigners responsible for the disasters in waiting. I am surprised Soros, Nuland and the others don’t see that coming.
Thank you for this excellent analysis.
Here’s a little history of yuko and western corp. Amerikan criminals. This is 32 pages but worth the time for some back ground.
http://espi.ru/Content/Conferences/Papers2004/foli.pdf
We should start a betting pool..
Putin visits India on Dec 11th..
We know things change when vlad arrives on his chariot.. and this is probably his most important and challenging one.
The US did not have chance of pushing China. But they are all out on India. And the new PM with large majority including at the state levels can revise or pass any and all legislation that are frozen for 50 years including status of states and rights.
But the new PM is not looking favorably at the US since he is on the wanted list for genocide. But he is looking at how to create growth and change the country. Who ever helps will get his cooperation. I cant see what he is going to do next let alone what Putin will do next but it should all be very very interesting and relevant.. All I can say is, on a scale of 1-10 and at 5 right now, in the middle of this month that 5 will change by at least a 2 point margin, cant see it moving more. A 1 point margin would be the trip to Australia to cuddle with koala bears… Good for the cuddly bears, nada for humanity..
So the author of this article calls it strategically brilliant that Russia has been forced into the untenable position of bribing a NATO member colony into accepting a deal it couldn’t persuade another American colony Bulgaria into accepting. What’s the difference? The NATO creature is quietly devouring the Ukraine whole while Donbass endures scotched earth. Europe’s severance from the “Lisbon to Vladivostok” strategy has just been confirmed with the death of South Stream, Russia is being irreparably forced into the voracious arms of China, and we’re expected to call this victory over the hegemon, I wonder what a failed strategy would’ve looked like.
What happens when Turkey predictably folds under NATO pressure at the point of implementation the way all those EU colonies just did? Because all that’s happened is a PR stunt in front of cameras. No details as to just how this brilliant coup is to be actually implemented in practice. How many things can go wrong from the gambit of American strong arming to convulsing Turkey in an outright civil war and everything else in between, before any profits/services actually change hands on this deal.
China has learned the hard way dealing with AFRICOM with their myriad of expensive investments on the African continent that counting your profits before you’re safely home with the American thugs shadowing your every move can be a very costly venture. I suppose we can call it a stroke of genius when Turkey folds and China becomes Russia’s last refuge. Just like the brilliant execution of the Novorossiya strategy, with all those destitute victims at the mercy of the artillery gunners. Some chess play, some judo throw.
David Chu !
Alexander Mercouris has a Facebook page
Every counter move by Russia comes as a shock to the AZs.
Late evening yesterday I posted in another thread a Financial Times article that reported:
Financial Times, UK (FT.com – headlined top of page at 7:09 pm) (regis required)
Anger as Russia scraps $50bn gas plan Eastern European nations dismayed by decision to abandon pipeline
And from Reuters
“The proposed undersea pipeline to Turkey, with an annual capacity of 63 billion cubic metres (bcm), more than four times Turkey’s annual purchases from Russia, would face no such problems. Russia offered to combine it with a gas hub at the EU’s southeastern edge, the Turkish-Greek border, to supply southern Europe.[.]
Russia is already Turkey’s main energy supplier, and Turkey Russia’s second biggest trade partner after Germany. Those economic interests have outweighed deep differences over Ukraine and especially Syria’s nearly four-year-old civil war.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Russia considers Turkey reliable partner capable of making independent decisions
Turkey has both the political will and resources to implement its decisions, Russia’s Ambassador to the European Union Vladimir Chizhov said
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Good luck Bulgaria!
Bulgaria seeks compensation from EU for South Stream project
Russian President Vladimir Putin proposed to Sofia on Monday to demand compensation for losses from the halted project from the European Union
So the price of oil has fallen? What else is new? Did it not fall from $147 to $35 just a few years ago?
Russia would be a loser if production in the Artic was online. So disregard the propaganda.
For all those hand wringers, worry-ers and Mr. Putin’s bashers out there, here is an analysis of the global oil producing countries most affected-Profit/Loss with price oil at $70/barrel.
These stats come from Natixis via Swiss National Bank (originally written in 2013, is continuously updated) and are cited by Thomson-Reuters Finance:
Take a look –
The Profit/Loss GLOBAL price Comparison for Oil Supply price based on Oil @ $70/bbl. The list covers:
Major Exploration Country,
Exploration Type, (Onshore, Deep-water, Northsea, Shale, Sand, Biodiesel, Ethanol, Artic etc)
Marginal Production Cost
Transport Costs to major distribution channel
Profit per Barrel at Price 70$
The countries are listed from highest profit descending to negative.
• Saudi Arabia Onshore $65
• Middle East ex Saudi Onshore $52
• Russia Onshore $40
• Other former USSR Onshore $37
• Venezuela/Mexico Onshore $34
• Norway/UK Northsea $18
• United States Deep-water $11
Shale Oil, Oil Sands and Oil Supply Globally: Market Price Compared to Production Costs
Link to the full Analysis with charts and graphs
+ = = = == +
So who is hurting the most? Sure ain’t Russia because arctic production is not yet online…nice reserves as Saudi’s biggest field runs dry.
“”the German government prepares for a long conflict with Russia.” German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said the crisis with Russia could take more than a decade,http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014“
that is exactly russia msut nto allow.
anglosaxon are too coward to fight ontheir own they create allies and mercenaries of convenience to fight on their behalf.
Russia must bring the conclusion quick and not waste time
attack and destroy england and rest of the lot will be silenced because all of them are moved by English lies and propaganda-with england finished the evil is gone.
[from Blue]
TheTurningAway said…
…
What happens when Turkey predictably folds under NATO pressure at the point of implementation the way all those EU colonies just did?
…
What happens is Europe freezes for lack of gas, which would then go to China or elsewhere, or stay in the ground waiting for when it is needed.
The money from sales is nice for Russia, but is not critical, and Russia can be self sufficient even without China and BRICS; not freezing is critical, and so is energy for Europe to keep producing things and trying to hold their economy and political system above water. Russia would be hurt by such events, but for Europe it would be catastrophic.
__Blue
Russia’s Monetary Solution: GOLD backed RUBel
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-12-03/russias-monetary-solution
Well about the Turks, I agree with what have said Mark Sleboda ( referred by Anonymous at 03 December, 2014 07:21 ) :
– “perfidious Turkey (another snake in the grass for everyone, do not trust these bastards any further than you can throw them)”.
All the mercenary jihadism to Syria has passed through, was staying, was trained and armed in his famous “refugee camps” in the Syrian border.
Bad companions. Take care.
I understand that Russia must do something resounding, but the game is becoming dangerous.
I, as a European, I’m sorry, and I hope not passing too bad the next few years (I need the car for work).
I hope that European leaders, already lost dignity to US demands, crawl a little and pray to Vladímir Vladímirovich to reconsider his position.
Thank you to Alexander Mercouris for his analyse. Very informative.
An extremely interesting article surfaced on zerohedge a short while ago:
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-12-03/russias-monetary-solution
So, Mr. Putin was told during G20, that Russia is not welcome to participate in int. affairs!
They must live in a distant world, another planet.
It appears that in Washington their corrupt comgress is about to give Poro a green light to attack Donbass again. Does that mean, that the USA/Nato and Kiew have NO interest to fullfil the Minsk accord they do not tire to mention daily?
There is a great picture of Putin, which I’m sure everyone here will enjoy seeing, at the bottom of the discussion about this article, here:
http://www.smirkingchimp.com/news/59866/the-importance-of-the-cancellation-of-south-stream-by-alexander-mercouris
Just scroll down to see the picture.
Guys, there has been an attack in Grozny. I’m following twitter to find out what is hapopening
https://twitter.com/hashtag/Grozny?src=hash
Moscow airspace closed.
https://twitter.com/hashtag/Moscow?src=hash
Hi Ann in Western Canada!
I was going to reply to your first comment on this post, but decided not to, and then you mentioned me in another of your comments here!
Thanks for the heads up on facebook for this amazing writer!
What I was going to say was this: In July 2003, I went back to Victoria, BC where my parents lived. I was shocked at the crummy old cars on the street of Victoria! In the US, like you said, cars are brand new (financial heroin does wonders for appearances!).
In 2006, I went back again and this time, the cars in Victoria were all or mostly brand new! So, I guess the Canucks have also discovered the wonders of financial heroin! Maybe not in your neck of the woods, but definitely in places like Vancouver and Victoria!
@Blue
Your assumption seems sound on the tactical level, but is flawed strategically. The American strategy according to Bzrzhinski in its streamlined form, is to corral both China and Russia in a ring of fire, with all those permanently simmering conflicts on their borders serving as an electrified barbed wire fence to hem those two land based powers in.
China will gladly accept this arrangement because without a potent navy to challenge NATO supremacy on the vital waterways of commerce, their only alternative becomes risky and indefensible lines of communication/ business ventures in far flung resource rich locations across the globe. Case in point is China’s vulnerability to being preyed upon by AFRICOM ( they simply lack the force projection capability to deter aggression that far out from China’s borders). Given this threat, Russia’s resource rich territory becomes a very inviting and relatively risk free hunting ground. With American encouragement , and being cut off from all other access to resources, a billion hungry Chinese, can quickly become a nightmare for 150million Russians. Too much territory to protect and not enough forces to fend off predatory advances.
No matter how you slice it, strategically, it isn’t to Russia’s advantage to be boxed in with China in isolation for too long. Russia gets reduced to the junior partner role in a relationship that can only turn predatory with the passage of time. And the Americans won’t need to do much beyond harassing the Chinese into seeing the efficiency of retreating from the global stage.
Now as to your assertion that Europe will be starved of resources without Russia, who do you suppose will get handsomely paid off for services rendered with all those vulnerable and coveted African colonies? They thrived for centuries on that arrangement during the age of colonialism, and with the world stage cleared of competitive China and Russia, it’ll be business as usual.
All the BRICS nations fall neatly back into their old colonial places with China and Russia corralled. India will be checked by Pakistan as always and the American whip will lock South America back behind the Monroe doctrine boundaries. Business as usual. And there’ll be none to challenge since NATO has them all in check as it is now.
All this to say that Russia retreating inwards is not a win strategically speaking. It plays right into the overall strategy of containment that’s been at work since day 1. The proof is in why Russia has been fighting for so long to maintain their leverage over Western Europe. Those European predators aren’t interested in playing second fiddle to Russia’s leadership. They want to return to the good old days when they all had a healthy piece of the pie, look how much effort they put into keeping Africa colonized even today. It’ll be shortsighted to assume they’re seriously interested in the arrangement Russia is offering( the right to be insignificant and landlocked albeit at peace). Try to see the bigger picture because the details are full of chaff and misdirection
Saker this just in; Turkey demands bigger discount on Russian gas http://en.trend.az/business/economy/2339444.html
One problem, and for which I have seen Russia as less than an honest interlocutor, is its relationship with Iran. From nuclear deals to scrapping contracts to deliver S- 300’s, it has failed, and blaming Medvedev won’t wash.
As for the Iran Pakistan India gas pipeline, the thoroughly corrupt Pakistanis have put a stop to that idea.
Many thanks for this article. RT has up a very well dubbed video of Putin with Erdogan – just thought I would mention it as I was not speaking so kindly of RT on a previous thread. Thanks to them also.
Chechen fighters are some of the lead ISIS fighters & threaatened some time back to invade Chechenya. The one who was doing the most bragging was searched out & killed by Cheche fighters who went to the ME to find him. The resident Chechens don’t want these guys cuz they kill the religious leaders, impose sharia, etc. The Portuguese commenter on facebook is saying there are 100s of them (I think): “varias centenas” is ‘some hundreds.’
Part II,
And before you educate me on the affection the Russians and Chinese have for each other and the improbability of them killing each other, let me gently remind you that in geopolitics, there’s little emphasis on personal emotions, only interests matter. It’s the same in war, soldiers rarely kill their enemies out of anger or hatred, they just do it to survive.
When you permit yourself to be maneuvered into a position where your survival depends on the elimination of another, you’ll do it without the consideration of any of other factors besides your overwhelming need to survive. That’s what makes this setback for Russia so dangerous for the resistance strategically. It portends unpleasant choices to come and IMHO the option of isolation should be reserved for last where ever possible. If only because avoiding isolation increases Russia’s room to maneuver.
Inversely, this is the same reason the probability of America fighting China is so low. There’s simply no need as China’s living space need not conflict with America’s sphere of influence. The Chinese can afford to retreat in the face of American aggression for as long as there’s a path of least resistance.
And with Russia across their border, and the Americans an ocean away, it’s easy to predict where the real potential for future conflict lies. I hope I’m wrong, but I doubt it, it’s too obvious to dismiss.
Great article! Thanks.
Dave
Stavros said…
VICE News belongs to Rupert Murdock. Enough said.
Not true, Murdock he owns only a small stake <5%
It was then revealed on August 29, 2014, that A&E Networks—a joint venture of Hearst Corporation and The Walt Disney Company—would acquire a 10 percent minority stake in Vice Media for US$250 million.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vice_(magazine)
LARCHMONTER445 said, “Putin won big with gas, with controlling Turkey’s aggression against Syria and with coaxing Turkey toward Eurasia and the SCO.”
Hi, Larchmonter. I don’t think this will affect Erdogan’s aggression toward Syria at all; he wants a piece of Syria & to ethnicly cleanse the Syrian Kurds.
I think Southstream was a better deal for Russia cuz it had multiple clients. With Turkstream there is only 1 gas recipient, so Russia is in a weak bargaining position on the selling price. After the construction outlay, Russia MUST sell to Turkey. Oh well, I guess a long-term contract.
Part I
Excellent piece and all on very solid ground.
The Anglo-Zionists are probably weeping — or maybe not. Their entire strategy to isolate and punish Russia seems to have had a devastating negative impact on their own position but things are much more tangled then most of us, fed on a steady diet of mainstream media bullshit and ‘alternative’ disinformation, can possibly imagine.
This is a speculative post but I hope you will indulge me and consider how my paradigm fits. I believe we are witnessing a division of the world into three distinct spheres of influence. The NWO is taking shape according to the long dreamed of plan hatched up by Tavistock and promoted by Orwell after World War 2.
Ask yourself, how could the Anglo-Zionist elites be so consistently stupid? There is plenty of information to which we are not privy and some of it could certainly explain the apparently blatant irrational decision making centred on Gog, Magog, New York, Washington and so on. In this New Great Game the Pentagon might actually be more of an enemy to the Banksters and their main man Obama then are Russia and Putin. Recall the recent inexplicable ouster of Hagel who is portayed as a gentle and pricipled hero by the energy-cartel controlled media.
Putin’s decision certainly looks good on those awful European politicians and the Soros-types who pull their strings, at least on the surface. The living standards of all Europeans are now apparently set for a much sharper decline then was already planned. Only Germany and Merkel seem to come out OK earning an opportunity to buy up the crumbling EU for pennies on the dollar. Things could get very ugly when brain dead Europeans wake up to the damage done by their rotten to the core AZ political and economic elites.
Or is Europe still in play? Germany could easily offer itself up as Europe’s saviour and ride to the rescue after the removal of the Gladio-NATO-Nazi stay behind occupation force. It is very possible aging Euro-slaves would demand it if only to save their pensions.
I believe we are witnessing not so much of a competition as a division into spheres of influence, in line with Orwell’s predictions/openly stated plans for the future. Remember he was a product of the British Imperial elite and he never lost his All Star status despite his apparent denunciations of the progenitor Anglo-British Empire. There is a reason his movie and book 1984 have featured so prominently for nearly 70 years. There are no coincidences in this regard as I hope you are all finally begining to understand. The media is a mind control grid and it works on smart people the same as everyone else.
Erdogan was a wild card all along. If I were him I would keep out of public places for awhile. He may be an opportunist but with this deal he flips Turkey nearly into the Eurasian camp and away from the Neocon Bolshevists. He has done terrible damage to the people who have worked so hard to oust him and he still has many enemies within the Gulenist-pro Israel military and intelligence services but overall his decisions will likely be a strong net benefit Turkey. It could also be potentially disasterous for Israel. The clock is ticking on the Zionist dream and the Ottoman’s appear to have staged a comeback against the original Jewish Anglo-Zionist backers of the Ataturk revolution.
Part II
I think it is seriously possible that certain interests in London are sick to death of the Zionist entity and have decided its usefulness has come to an end. Israel is in deep shit and we can only hope that someone capable of blackmailing the world with a Samson Option doesn’t take power. I don’t believe Netanyahu is such a person but there’s no way to tell and I have zero confidence regarding my predictions of him or the unstable to virtually insane Israeli polity.
As for Russia, ask yourself, if you were Putin, would you trade an alliance with Iran for one with Turkey? I know I would do it in a heartbeat. Rouhani and his pro US backers have miscalculated badly and Iran will be punished for the criminal stupidity of its leaders. Recall their willing cooperation with the ouster of Maliki. They will get less than nothing for their foolish refusal to strongly back Russia and China. To be fair and get the full picture it is important to remember there is still a strong resentment of Russia in Iran alongside an obvious love for the USA. These two nations exist on the same vibrational level much more than do Orthodox and Shia which are in reality mostly irrelevant in this completely despiritualized late period near the end of the Kali Yuga.
Iran has already started its pipeline across Iraq and Syria so the incredible consequence of this sudden reversal is that the war in Syria and Iraq does more harm to their own and certain Western interests (neocons/militarists/Israel) than it does to harm Russia. Perhaps the Banksters are preparing to set the whole Middle East on fire not to punish Russia (who would gain an enormous benifit as the only reliable major producer of oil and gas) but to save themselves from the NATO Nazi Neocon Big Oil cartel.
Think of Bohemian Grove versus the Bilderbergers. There are no common memebers between the two organizations for good reason. Now we are also seeing how the interests of Iranian and Saudi leadership may actually be coming together. Remeber the Empire is divided into two major factions and Putin’s sudden move may have exposed a gaping fault between them. Again, this is a disaster of epic proportions for the neocons. There will be very serious reprecussions for the on-going power struggle to control the tripartite NWO. I am wondering if Brezinski has actually had a strong hand in engineering an enormous Yalta-like division of the world — in loose cooperation with or in spite of Russia. Recall who backed Putin in the first place (London bankster mafia) and the fact that all media in the West is controlled not by the Banksters but by Big Oil miltarists. Occupy was actually a Bankster inspired rvolt against the mainstream media which they do not control. The 99 versus 1 percent meme was invented by banksters for heavens sake! The Big Oil Nazis and their media hate Putin but plently of others love him and he occaisonally gets suprising endorsements from certain important people in the West linked to financial interests — all of whom want a piece of Russia excluding energy which Putin has himself placed off limits. This alliance between them is a logical and workable possibility.
The great thing about being an anonymous avatar is I can speculate like a madman all I want. I have been speculating about this possible turning of the tables for over a year and while I am still reluctant to claim I was right all along — I think I was right all along.
:p
Now for some more out of the box thinking of which a freak like Benjamin Fulford would be proud.
Part III
I don’t know if this is a good time to mention the possibility but if there were ever a moment when the Banksters would have a strong motivation to reveal their ‘secret’ and/or supressed energy technologies, now would be it — if indeed these things exist and are as promising as some of us would like to believe. If the ‘conspiracists’ are correct then it is possible that the fight between banksters on the one hand and oil men/NATO Nazi occult militarists on the other could get much uglier thanks to Putin’s maneuver. In the game of fiat paper versus cannon the cannon always has the power to carpe diem, so to speak. Just ask Mao. This is the part that makes me seriously nervous and much less giddy.
As for the sad sack gangsters of south-eastern Europe, they will have to satisfy themselves by continuing to act as a transit point for heroin, weapons, organs and g-d knows what else. By all rights Bulgarian leaders should be treated in the manner of Mussolini and hung by their…
Balls! Putin has balls and I’m so glad he finally taught those souless Zionist androgynous Eurocrats a lesson. I think this is a bigger shift than anything that’s happened recently between Russia and China. The AZ project United States of Europe is as DEAD as dead can be.
Perhaps Merkel will use the opportunity and pick up where the Anglo-Zionists have failed so miserably. Yes Merkel seems despicable but I think she has had German interests at heart all along. She knows how to play this game and stands to regain co-leadership of Eurasia with Putin, not seen for centuries thanks to British meddling which is no longer sustainable. We’ll see if she can survive herself in the short term but if so Germany and Russia have a tremendous opportunity to pick up the wreckage of Eurasia and make a power block from Lisbon to Vladivostok and eventually to Japan and Korea. I would watch North Korea closely as it is always a wild card and the mostly North Korean Yakuza could cause terrible trouble for the USA, China or Russia if they wish. Japanese gangsters are by no means out of this game and they must be smarting from their recent dalliances with the Neocons and the policies of Abe which have cost Japan a great deal in power and prestige.
Everything is in flux after what appears to be a Putonian coup de grace. I don’t think we’ve even begun to consider the reprecussions although Mercouris piece is a very good start from where the ground is most solid. Where the ground is shifting my analysis has far more explanatory power than anything you’ll read anywhere else.
Penelope said…
Well it is more nuisanced.. Having multiple customers all come into the store front to buy stuff means a lot of staff to take care of them and listen to their gripes..
If you only sell to wallmart, then all you deal with is wall mart.. Thats not a good thing.. But when you also sell to target and best buy and costco.. And Wallmart starts demanding, well suddenly you dont have enough products to satisfy everyone.. But the producer does have some say and influence on how the products are sold. Right now Russia has no say on Syria.. Turkey has a huge reason to keep Russia happy and to benefit from this. They dont like the Kurds but that really does not mean they want to ethnic cleanse them as they being a third of the Turkish population. You wont believe how people change when they stand to make a lot of money and gain prestige and power. Soon they will start courting Iran to lessen the leverage Russia has and to gain more customers. Just like how wallmart started.. get a someone big to sell you products cheap and then add in everyone else. This is all business.. It does temper ideological agendas because money surpasses everything.
What is so important in all this is where this is all going.. Getting Pakistan and India on board with Iran means locking up the gas market for the majority of the world. Energy security, cheap prices, production delivery and industry, all close together and tied in with transportation beats having to ship items by ship and traverse the oceans anytime. The Chinese are doing this.. Russia needs some others to balance that with south east asia and that is why Putin’s visit on Dec 11th is so important.. It would also neuter plans by Qatar to become the next superboi. You also got to remember that even 10 years ago, all these middle eastern countries provided sanctuary to terrorists and gang leaders who were blowing up stuff in India. That has slowly been changing, Once they begin to realise that the AG’s can protect them, but those customers are so far away.. If they want to do business, then they need to have customer service.. There is a huge turn around in the attitudes of all these middle eastern and even Turkish countries. From ignoring interpol notices and security cooperation, now they actively call.. 20 years ago that would be unthinkable. Indian diplomats would never even get an appointment to see high ranking officials in these countries. While any westerners could just have a walk in appointment for anything.
Greetings from Singapore:
Nice article on this issue from Indian Punchline:
QUOTE
Putin pulls when Obama pushes
Assuming your opponent has a strength of six and you have a strength of four, if both exert in pushing against each other, your four is sure to lose to his six. One of the basics of applying force in judo is that if you do not push but pull as he pushes, you add your four to his six so that with a strength of ten you can easily pull him down.
‘Judo Knight’ Russian President Vladimir Putin, president of Russia, would know that only too well and he ‘applied force’ on his US adversary President Barack Obama by his surprise decision to scrap the South Stream gas pipeline project.
The $40 billion Gazprom-funded South Stream would have brought gas from Russia under the Black Sea to Bulgaria and on to southeastern Europe. Putin announced while on a visit to Ankara, Turkey,
“Taking into account the European Commission’s position, which is not contributing to the realization of this [South Stream] project, taking into account the fact that we have only recently received permission from the respective organizations in the Netherlands… Taking into account the fact that we still have not received Bulgaria’s permission, we think that Russia is unable to continue realization of this project in such conditions.”
On the face of it, Moscow ‘retreated’, given the European Commission’s lukewarm attitude under American pressure, not to increase further its energy dependence on Russia. But in reality, Putin outmaneuvered the West. He said,
“We will redirect the flow of our energy resources to other regions of the world, including by advanced and fast realization of liquefied natural gas projects. We will advance to the other markets and Europe will not receive these volumes, at least from Russia. We think that this is not corresponding with Europe’s economic interests and causes damage to our cooperation. But this is the choice of our European friends.”
In sum, Russia has mothballed South Stream, but it will nonetheless sell more gas to Europe via Turkey and there is nothing that the European Commission (or Washington) can do about it if the countries of southern Europe find it advantageous to tap into the energy hub that Russia is planning to create on Turkey’s border with Greece.
The surprising part is that Turkey is teaming up with Russia despite their differences over the Syrian conflict. Clearly, Turkey is asserting its independent foreign policies by refusing to adopt the Western sanctions against Russia. Moscow appreciates that under Prime Minister Recep Erdogan’s leadership, Turkey has opted for a nationalistic, autonomous foreign policy and emancipation from the US.
Of course, the Turkish-Russian strategic understanding has wide-ranging implications for regional politics. Washington won’t like what is happening, as this sardonic commentary by RFERL testifies.
The scrapping of the South Stream once again underscores that Putin is determined to diversify Russia’s energy export markets. The Asian markets become a top priority for Russian energy exports.
Delhi should draw the appropriate conclusions and seriously explore how like China, India too could benefit out of Russia’s ‘pivot’ to Asia. Putin’s forthcoming visit to Delhi on December 11 provides a fantastic opportunity to bring about a quantum leap in the energy cooperation between the two countries.
By M K Bhadrakumar – December 2, 2014
UNQUOTE
Rgds
Medjeral
Let us pray for peace and understanding. Here are some links to Russian Orthodox liturgical music to put one in the proper frame of mind and spirit for this.
Rachmaninoff – Vespers
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VgBLkrfjjys
Rachmaninoff – Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom (Plus Other Works)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1PUy3-j5CAw
Russian Easter
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zuxlGxjfh9w
The works and their timings may be found at a post by Victor Leibenko a bit down the comment thread. You will need to click on “Read More” to expand to the entire listing.
JerseyJeffersonian
Brilliant analysis, much appreciated.
Raj Rao
I would like to see a Saker commentary on ascendant Eurasian Sovereignty with Turkstream and whatever Ace Putin has up his sleeve in India next week
And placing the hub near Greece is an appeal to their Orthodox cousins the Greeks to peel off from EU and choosing not to renew sanctions in March
Some additional small speculations asrising from my thesis:
The bankers suiciding themselves seem to be those connected to the neocons/energy cartel/militarists/Bohemian Grovesters. They are therefore being murdered for their betrayal of fellow bankers, possibly because they are greedy or perhaps under duress from Mossad. I don’t believe the CIA is as riddled with pro Israel traitors as is commonly supposed while the NSA appears to be much more solidly in the neocon camp. This further confirms that Snowden is working for the CIA in cooperation with the KGB in an effort to undermine the NSA.
Poroshenko and Putin can now clearly be seen as allies working to remove NATO and their jackboot mercenary forces from Ukraine but as with my earlier reference to Mao, power flows from the barrel of a gun and the Nazis have most of the weapons.
If the NATO faction is wise to the plan (almost certainly), then they are sacrficing their own Polish and other junior SS thugs knowing full well they will die very soon. It would be good if we got the message out to these willing fools as it will sap their will to fight although with Nazis this rarely works and the only solution is to kill them down to the very last man. Their only hope (the Nazis) is to draw Russia into a full intervention which seems more and more unlikely with each passing day. Only if Poroshenko is seriously threatened by a new Maidan will Russia be forced to intervene directly and this seems next to impossible given the respective competencies of Russia versus NATO in Ukraine.
VICE is the shallowest all style, no content type news.
David Chu !
Yes, here in the gulf islands people who are rich have homes that are empty much of the year, but the locals are very much not rich. Some of the pioneer familys here are quite well off because of land sales, but the general pop. is under poverty line I think…almost anyway…Its really hard to find work…businesses need 50% capital up front to start up…Banks will only lend if 50% is already available…can you imagine someone having $50,000 in their bank account ??? So there’s very little business, except of course pot…also lots of alcoholism…I used to work in the Bottle Depot…what a busy place….but that of course consumerism, not business. And now that pot is legal all the people who depend on it for an income are screaming…lots of parents with children…
where Wolf…you’re amazing when you’re in a good mood…
Seriously, this could be sent as a piece of op-ed to some news site. Try Russia Insider…maybe there’s a (hobbyist) career for you there…I’m serious…that was fantastic, and it probably took you about an hour max to write it…amazing.
Just one thing I can think of… the Kali Yuga has ended…1899. Couldn’t prove it but has something to do with aspects.
I’m hoping this means the Istanbul Crimea routes re-open
http://www.ibtimes.com/russia-china-conduct-joint-naval-exercises-mediterranean-pacific-2015-1726261
`That brings two potential U.S. adversaries closer together and sees China assert its presence in a region, the Mediterranean, far from its shores in another development that marks its emergence as a serious military power,’ reads the article.
Russia and China learnt the lessons of Libya. This is a development for partners to project into Africa and counter Africom.
@JerseyJeffersonian
Thanks for the links.
Fabulous (from an Anglican athieist).
A lot of the analysts outside of the west commenting on the Russia-Turkey announcement are quite forthright in saying that Russia is at war. With more moves yet to come, I suspect we will begin to get the feel of an entire offensive from Russia this winter.
Erika at 03 December, 2014 20:55 posted a great link that gives us the Syrian perspective in this Turkey pivot.
To my mind, Syrian Perspective is the site to read for news from that country, and Ziad Fadel is the pre-eminent commenter on Syria’s military and geo-political policy. His article was written 7 days ago, before the Turkey announcement, and dealt with the substance of the talks in Sochi between Lavrov, Putin and Syrian Foreign Minister, Waleed Al-Mu’allim.
This is the meeting highlighted by Erika’s previous link, to the Oriental Review article. That article could only speculate on the talks, but Ziad Fadel in his article spells it all out, because he has inside knowledge.
Here’s the link:
Syrper Exclusive: What Lavrov Is Telling Mu’allem; What Mu’allem Is Telling Putin And Lavrov
Fadel speaks in very colorful language, because he’s at war, and he has a great sense of irony and humor. So he may be over the top a little in his forecasts. On the other hand, he may be right on the money. Some juicy quotes:
This meeting could be the most important of the entire war in Syria. … The Russians have to know with whom Damascus would negotiate and whom Damascus fiercely rejects. Neither the Syrians nor the Russians will brook any surprises.
[…]
The Russians will tell Mr. Mua’llim that Russia will not object if the SAA deploys and uses its S-300 anti-aircraft missile defense system especially when the U.S. and Britain or France target the SAA…Putin has told Mr. Mua’llem that he can count on Russia to continue building up the Syrian army, providing diplomatic support with an air umbrella (if necessary) to block any NATO assault on Syria.
[…]
Expect more aggressive Russian moves at the U.N. in light of France’s volte-face on the contract for the Mistral helicopter carrier. Russia is aware of how unpopular Hollande is in France.
[…]
Once Iran has made the decision in consultation with Russia and Syria (and Iraq), Saudi Arabia will get a taste of an insurgency which will spread from Bahrain to the Dhahraan oil fields all the way to Qatar. Arabian monkeys will get a taste of what anti-Wahhabists do with serrated bread knives.
You are watching the collapse of the Arabian oil and gas empire. We believe that Mr. Putin has told Mr. Mu’allem that a new multi-polar world order has no place for pre-Iron Age apes like the Saudis and the Qataris. We think Mr. Putin is going to start kicking them to the curb.
Hey Folks,
Just wondering.
They are talking about building a new pipe line. But there is already a “BlueStream” pipe line operating between Russia and Turkey. Do they need an extra one ?
Does anybody have details about this issue?
thanks
Interesting text… but « a few » qualifications are in order.
Mercoris is fully right regarding the attempts from the West to gain control overRussia’s fossil fuel extracting companies, the role played by a number of oligarchs notably Khodorkovsky in that regard, and the actions of the Russian government under Putin to stop them and preserve Russian national control over their resources. And of course, he is right that Russian decision to abandon South Stream project and sign contracts with Turkey is not detrimental to Russia, contrary to what some partisan commentators have claimed.
Now for some qualifications :
1. Mercoris says « It was the increase in the role of Russian gas in the European energy mix which made it possible for Europe to (…) cut its carbon emissions ».
>>> Sorry, that’s just not true. Proof is that all European nations have relatively low carbon emissions compared to their GDP, no matter whether it’s a nation that buys majority of gas from Russia, only a minority part, or not at all. That’s also true of Japan, which does not import gas from Russia.
The reasons why Western European and Japanese economies are far more carbon-efficient than US economy, not to speak of Chinese or Russian economies, are different ways of internal organization, starting with taxes on gas for cars, continuing with large public transport networks. They have nothing to do with gas imports from Russia.
2. Reading Mercoris’ text, one could get the impression that South Stream cancellation means Europeans, or at least some of them, cannot buy gas from Russia any more.
>>> That would be completely wrong. In fact, North Stream in addition to all other pipelines, some of them going through Ukraine, will continue to work. Europeans can continue to buy gas from Russia, as long as they have money for that. In fact, Europeans are by far the largest client for Russian gas, and although Moscow is trying to diversify its client base, that is not going to change any time soon.
That’s how much of a « devastating blow to the energy future of the EU » (Mercoris’ words) South Stream cancellation really is
(follow-up from previous)
3. According to Mercoris, Russia has « Russia has given up on (its EU) relationship »
>>> That’s very far from reality. Russian foreign trade is slightly more than 50% directed towards the EU. Adding other European countries including Belarus and Ukraine, it’s two thirds of Russian foreign trade which is directed westwards. That should be compared with a quarter directed towards Asia, and 5% towards the US.
In economic trade terms Russia to say it plainly… IS a European country! :-D
Whatever the feelings, angers, bafflements and all ; among anti-Russians within the European Union and anti-Europeans within Russia, reality speaks, and it speaks louder. The business relationships will continue.
Personnally, I’m a Western European (French) and I’m very far from being anti-Russian, so that reality does not bother me at all.
Anti-Russian Europeans and anti-European Russians will just have to adapt, and swallow their cries and their contempts. I expect these gentlemen to provide a fine spectacle, and I’ve already bought the popcorn ;-)
4. Regarding the EU Third Energy Package, Mercoris claims that the problem it posed to Russia was that if she accepted it, she would face more stringent demands later. He implies that this was the European motivation for this package.
>>> That’s forgetting a very important factor, namely that Russia has often played political games with gas price towards individual EU nations, rewarding this one, punishing that one, with aim to gain influence rather than to earn money in exchange for its product. Objective of Third Energy Package was in good part to hinder that behaviour : if Gasprom did not have control over the pipeline, it could not oppose EU nations to use it to exchange gas so that the nation paying the cheapest price would make the other enjoy from same price. Meaning that in the end Moscow would be deprived of this political tool.
By the way, now that South Stream is cancelled, South-Eastern EU nations will branch onto the Turkey pipeline so as to buy gas from Russia… and the pipelines distributing that gas within the EU will be under European control. Meaning that Third Energy Package objective will be reached after all : Moscow will not find it easy to reward or punish individual EU nations through gas price, it will have to negotiate price with Europeans as a whole.
Hello Saker.
As some said before: In paragraph 8 it is written: His. Should be: This.
The 3rd last paragraph starts with this sentence:
This points to a larger moral.
I think some words like ‘double standard’ are missing.
Note: I have started to make translations from this blog into Dutch, om my blog. Anyone can copy them. Or refer to them. But if you think your readers may be offended by my mission statement, then better just copy the article and do not refer to my blog.
Greetings, Jan Verheul.
Time for the Zveno revival, the only hope Bulgaria has left if any.
Montenegro Serbians need to rejoin with Serbia.
Then the Balkans have a chance.
Thank you ALEXANDER MERCOURIS for this fine explanation of of the South Stream pipeline debacle.
Your information has confirmed what I already suspected.
The west, devious, dishonest, and dis-informing is a stark contrast to Putin’s straight talking facts…
Turkey demands Russia increase discount on natural gas.
Ofcourse they will.. Who wont?
But the price all depends on many factors. I highly doubt Turkey can threaten Russia. Who are they going to get Gas from? They stand to make a lot of money here distributing gas to everyone. And this is just a start, they try the Ukie blackmailing and this will end up with Turkey not getting anything. Remember the ukies asked for bigger and bigger discounts even after being offered a discount and in the end they started to say, we want the original discount. I am pretty sure Russia would not have started building or will start building the pipeline if Turkey starts breaking the contract even before the ink is dry.
You know the reason why India got special status in the nuclear proliferation club as well as why India checkmated the US in the food trade business.. Its because India sticks with their obligations and contracts no matter what. There are many things wrong with the country but you wont find anyone say Indians wont hold their end no matter who comes to power. Turkey has a chance here to become a reliable partner in trade just for a start.. Everyone is watching them. You think Iran would trust them if they starts to blackmail Russia? You think Qatar will not think twice since Turkey would then control them as well. You give that impression and no one will do business with you. You also got to understand that the MSM will try to paint Turkey in bad light and opportunistic and backstabbing genocidal country.. Not one of my favorite countries and neither is China. But as long as they belive in win win instead of win lose like the US/UK we can all live well.
Wouldn’t Russia rather geotiate with an Eastern European Union that had its own interests at heart? Quote: “According to both our politicians and the Mainstream Media The British people are faced with a stark choice; either remain in The Greater Europe and go-down-with-the-ship or abandon the vessel completely and take our chances on the open sea! The trouble is a two-state-solution does not suit the monetarised NATO/Trans Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership agenda which now drives European politics ( one reason Cameron would really like to see us in rather than out of Europe**). Cameron’s attempted “bi-partisan” stance has already had it’s consequences for British democracy,” Go to: http://gkhales.blogspot.co.uk/2014/11/the-omertas-deceivers.html
http://www.ibtimes.com/europe-has-several-possible-replacements-russian-gas-all-are-risky-expensive-will-take-years-develop
One of the best pieces I have read on this page.
With analysis as essential as this, and in a style that couldn’t be clearer, there is a definite need to correct the major typos. You may be surprised, but this would go a long way toward keeping many skeptics’ eyebrows from raising unnecessarily and hence dismissing the piece outright.
‘This’ instead of ‘His’, and of course the ‘Sound Stream’, are just two examples in the early part of the piece, where the mistakes change the author’s intended meaning, and could understandably confuse already wary readers.
It is understood that English is your third or fourth or fifth language, and that you have no time for proofreading. With such an enormous community, however, it would be great if one or more persons could take up the job.
Pieces like this are hard to come by, and can open and change many people’s minds.
We need to buy Russian gas so they can buy German cars and Italian wine
Larchmonter445 said…
The US, says McCain, will begin shipping gas to Europe in 2020.
He could. The man’s a gas bag. He’s full of it ;)