During the course of the Syrian Civil War, Kurds in the North of Syria were relatively left at peace. They formed an autonomous region, have an elected government, and were well on their way to a life of tranquillity.
Then ISIS saw a weakness and shifted its fire to the Kurds.
The Kurds, in response, brought out their own militia, the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), which has now affiliated with the Turkish Kurdish militia, to fight back. Ankara is disturbed, having fought the Kurdish militia for a decade. The issue is in doubt.
During a more reckless period of US history, both the Syrian militia and the Turkish militia were declared to be
terrorist" organizations. Now the US and its coalition partners need both. They may be reclassified as Freedom Fighters. More likely, the "terrorist" classification will be ignored out of expediency.
After the break, there are two current newspaper articles, one describing Turkey's response to ISIS from a Russian point of view, one from a US point of view. It is interesting to note their similarities and differences. Turkey is caught on the horns of a dilemma. Time will tell how it solves the dilemma.
This is Suruc, about 90 miles northeast of the Syrian city of of Aleppo, where some of the most damaging fighting is taking place right now:
Sunday, September 28, 2014
Saturday, September 27, 2014
The article below is consistent with the facts as I know them and may or may not be accurate. I hope that it is not because I hope for better from Tirkey.
The paper the author works for, Hürriyet Daily News, is the oldest current English-language daily in Turkey, founded in 1961, and is opposed by the government.
Last June, Turkey's own Frankenstein, who went by the name of ISIS, attacked the Turkish consulate compound in Mosul, and took 49 Turks, including the consul general, hostage.
The hostages are still in captivity. So is Turkey.
For each [Islamic] sect, the other is "not even Muslim."
It all began when Turkey's leaders thought they could build a Sunni belt under Turkish hegemony, and resting geographically under the Crescent and Star. For that to actually happen, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Lebanon, Syria and Iraq had to be ruled by Sunni -- preferably Muslim Brotherhood-type -- leaderships subservient to Ankara.
This Turkish gambit came at a time when the turbulent Middle East was even more turbulent than it always is: the Arab Spring had unmasked a 14-century-long hatred between Islam's two main sects, a schism started by rival clans in the Prophet Muhammad's tribe, the Quraysh. This is a feud that would survive beyond even their imagination.
Syria, with which Turkey shares a 500-mile border, was sadly being ruled by a Nusayri (Syrian Alawite), an offshoot of the Shia faith. Bashar al-Assad soon became, as the Sicilians say, "a stone in (then Prime Minister, now President) Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's shoe."
In the background, the Sunni-Shia feud was heating up. The Turks failed to get the message. In 2013, Iraq's acting defense minister, Saadoun al-Dulaimi, accused Turkey of controlling Sunni anti-government protests in (Shia majority) Iraq.
For some time the United States even toyed with the idea of creating a "moderate crescent" of Sunni nations in order to contain Shia Iran, Shia-controlled Iraq and Lebanon's Hizbullah.
The sectarian blindness explained a lot of complexities: Why, for instance, King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia fiercely supported the Syrian opposition, or sent troops across the border into neighboring Bahrain to help stamp out a Shia uprising there; why al-Qaeda's leaders called on jihadists to join the fighting in Syria; or why, for Erdoğan, al-Assad was the "butcher of Damascus," while Sudan's Sunni leader Omar al-Bashir, with an international arrest warrant for crimes against humanity and the killing of hundreds of thousands, was "just an innocent friend." The hatred explains, even to this date, why the Shia and Sunnis in Iraq kill each other by the thousands every month and bomb each other's mosques.
The Wahhabis are virulently anti-Shia, and vice versa. They view the Shia as satanic "rejectionists." And, for their part, the Shia view the Wahhabis as simply perverted. For each sect the other is "not even Muslim." Saudi schools teach pupils that Shi'ism is simply a Jewish heresy.
In 2006, senior Wahhabi cleric Abdul Rahman al-Barrak released a fatwa which stated that the Shia are "infidels, apostates and hypocrites ... [and] they are more dangerous than Jews or Christians." Al-Qaeda's younger twin, al-Nusrah, declared in 2012: "The blessed operations will continue until the land of Syria is purified from the filth of the Nusayris and the Sunnis are relieved from their oppression."
The wreckage of the Shrine of Jonah, in Mosul, Iraq, which was destroyed by insurgents of the Islamic State in July 2014.
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The Sunni supremacist Erdoğan would therefore even shake hands with Satan for the downfall of the Nusayri al-Assad. And he did. Turkey quickly became the mentor of all Syrian opposition groups which, ideally, would first defeat al-Assad, then form an Islamist government and volunteer to become a de facto colony of the emerging Turkish Empire.
At the outset, Turkey's support was about policy and planning: conference after conference, meeting after meeting, declaration after declaration. The innocent Turks were merely expending diplomatic efforts to end the bloody civil war in a neighboring country.
In reality, Ankara slowly made Turkey's southeast a hub for every color of radical Islamist militant arriving from dozens of different countries, including thousands from Europe. The militants would cross the border into Syria, fight al-Assad's forces, go back to Turkey, get medical treatment there if necessary, replenish their weapons and ammunition and go back to fight again. In an audio recording leaked on the internet in March, Turkey's top intelligence officer admits that, "Turkey has so far sent 2,000 trucks full of weapons and ammunition into Syria."
Last June, Turkey's own Frankenstein monster, who went by the name of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria [ISIS] -- later reflagged as "The Islamic State" [IS] -- appeared at its old master's doors. IS attacked the Turkish consulate compound in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, after having captured large swathes of Syrian and Iraqi territory. It also took 49 Turks, including the consul general, hostage.
Ironically, only a day before the attack on the Turkish consulate, an opposition parliamentarian, speaking in parliament, warned that the consulate was exposed to the risk of an attack from ISIS -- to which the government benches replied loudly: "Stop telling lies!" And only 20 hours before the Turkish consulate was attacked, Turkey's then-Foreign Minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, tweeted that "We have taken all precautions at the Mosul consulate general."
The hostages are still in captivity. So is Turkey, strategically and militarily. When U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel arrived in Ankara on Sept. 8 to discuss a joint methodology to fight IS, and asked the Turks what services they could offer, the most important Turks in Ankara, including Erdoğan, shyly looked in the air and explained why they could not actively or publicly engage IS. And so 49 unfortunate Turks are still in the hands of the Turkish Frankenstein.
More than two years ago Davutoglu prophesized that al-Assad's days in power were numbered. In a span of weeks, he predicted, the "butcher of Damascus would go." But there is another man who can compete with Davutoglu in any "Realistic Guesses on the Future of the Middle East" competition. At the end of 2011 when the last US troops left Iraq, President Barack Obama described Iraq as "sovereign, stable and self-reliant."
Burak Bekdil, based in Ankara, is a Turkish columnist for the Hürriyet Daily News and a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
Sunday, September 7, 2014
Turkish and Russian views of NATO's coalition against ISIS
Turkey has a lot of restive Kurds, assigned to it by inconsiderate Britain when it breached the 1920 Treaty of Sèvres, which provides for a Kurdish nation.
Kurds have a long memory. Kurds in Iraq have achieved near-independence, and wish to join their countrymen now living in Iran, Syria, and Turkey.
Turkey borders Iraqi Kurds, Iranian Kurds, and Syrian Kurds. The Syrian Kurds are especially hard-hit by the Syrian civil war. It is in Turkey's interest to support Kurds, who are under attack by ISIS.
Russia's southern republics are separated from Turkey only by Georgia. Jihadists are killing ethnic Russians and are being killed by the Russian army. The rise of ISIS strengthens Russian Jihadists.
Russia and Turkey have a common interest in seeing the defeat of Jihadist groups in Syria. Russia is already involved in that effort. but works at odds to the West.
Articles from the International Business Times and RT, reprinted after the jump, show how far apart they are from central NATO objectives. Turkish internal politics cause it to dither. Russia sees NATO's involvement as a disastrous repeat of Bushco's adventure in Iraq.(RT, an official Russian government newspaper, reads like a propaganda piece, and may not represent Russian government's thinking. One hopes that is the csd.) We'll see how long it takes the parties to recognize that Obama has international policies differ from Bushco's.
Vote for the next US president who shares Obama's foreign policies.
Kurds have a long memory. Kurds in Iraq have achieved near-independence, and wish to join their countrymen now living in Iran, Syria, and Turkey.
Turkey borders Iraqi Kurds, Iranian Kurds, and Syrian Kurds. The Syrian Kurds are especially hard-hit by the Syrian civil war. It is in Turkey's interest to support Kurds, who are under attack by ISIS.
Russia's southern republics are separated from Turkey only by Georgia. Jihadists are killing ethnic Russians and are being killed by the Russian army. The rise of ISIS strengthens Russian Jihadists.
Russia and Turkey have a common interest in seeing the defeat of Jihadist groups in Syria. Russia is already involved in that effort. but works at odds to the West.
Turkey and it's neighbors
Turkey's proximity to the Russian South and what Kurdistan would look like if implemented
ISIS Jihadists, not intended to be representative
Articles from the International Business Times and RT, reprinted after the jump, show how far apart they are from central NATO objectives. Turkish internal politics cause it to dither. Russia sees NATO's involvement as a disastrous repeat of Bushco's adventure in Iraq.(RT, an official Russian government newspaper, reads like a propaganda piece, and may not represent Russian government's thinking. One hopes that is the csd.) We'll see how long it takes the parties to recognize that Obama has international policies differ from Bushco's.
Vote for the next US president who shares Obama's foreign policies.
Jihadist threat to Central Asia after the proposed NTO withdrawal from Afghanistan
The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace published a scholarly article about likely jihadist activity in Central Asia—Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan—after NATO completes its withdrawal of forces from Afghanistan this year.
The article addresses this fateful question: Jihadism in Central Asia: A Credible Threat After the Western Withdrawal From Afghanistan? ..The author's introductory paragraphs are here:
Blog author's comments:
Here is a map of South and Central Asia:
Here is a map of present and potential members of the Turkic Council:
Central Asia is more important to you than you might think.
The countries named are all Turkic-speaking. Four of them have joined Azerbaijan and Turkey in the Turkic Council, an intergovernmental agency dedicated to further deepening comprehensive cooperation among Turkic Speaking States, as well as making joint contributions to peace and stability in the region and in the world. Member States have confirmed their commitment to democratic values, human rights, the rule of law, and principles of good governance.
The Union will in time become something like the European Union. Trade barriers between member states have been eliminated, and they are now engaged in joint military exercises.
Turkey has the strongest military in the Middle East.
Much of Central Asia is awash in petrochemicals, and is vigorously courted by the US, China, and Russia. NATO is currently scheduled to withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of this year; think of that with NATO's new agreement to become involved in Syria and Iraq, because of Islamist activity there. The West is unlikely to cede Central Asia to Russia and China without a contest of wills.
Please take a look at the article; see what you think.
The article addresses this fateful question: Jihadism in Central Asia: A Credible Threat After the Western Withdrawal From Afghanistan? ..The author's introductory paragraphs are here:
The article's conclusion is here:Central Asian governments view with alarm and pessimism the withdrawal by the end of 2014 of most of the Western troops that have been present in Afghanistan since a NATO-led security mission began in 2001.Kabul’s neighbors expect the already-unstable situation in Afghanistan to deteriorate and threaten their own security and stability. They fear that a radical Islamist regime in Afghanistan will emerge from a Taliban military victory—a scenario that many Central Asian leaders and analysts believe is inevitable and will spill over across Afghanistan’s northern border.
CONCLUSION
The gradual withdrawal of NATO-led forces from Afghanistan is currently the most widely debated political event in Central Asia. Governments, diplomats, and security analysts are constantly speculating about the consequences of the drawdown for Central Asian societies. It is simplistic to assert that the departure of Western troops will have no negative impact. Until Afghanistan is truly stabilized under a political actor who is strong and willing enough to target and eliminate Central Asian jihadism and its allies, Kabul’s problems will have an effect on the country’s northern neighbors.
However, the idea that jihadist forces wishing to target the Central Asian regimes will sweep into the Fergana Valley on January 1, 2015, and turn it into a new tribal area or a new Afghanistan is sheer fantasy. The Taliban have been able to count on ethnic and tribal structures as well as on Pashtun nationalism, which made it possible for the movement to have a lasting impact.
The Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and the Islamic Jihad Union are indeed dangerous groups. But so far, they have not had the same impact on Central Asian nations as the Taliban. The IMU and the IJU are well trained and closely connected to transnational jihadism and al-Qaeda, and they have the professionalism required to strike in their post-Soviet homelands. But a massive spillover from Afghanistan and Pakistan that would destabilize the region’s leaders is a pipe dream.
In fact, the impact of these groups will be as significant as the Central Asian regimes allow it to be. The jihadists that threaten them are doomed to remain small groups, as Central Asian societies are clearly unwilling to follow the militants’ extremist political path.
The governments of the region have a great opportunity after 2014. The regimes must institute the necessary police and border-control operations to avoid incursions. At the same time, they must get serious about the other problems emanating from Afghanistan, including drug trafficking, and work within the framework of international bodies such as the Shanghai Cooperation Organization to stabilize their southern neighbor. And they must resist the temptation to disproportionately assert the jihadist danger abroad. Above all, they must focus on developing domestic policies that take full account of the social and economic issues that could provide the jihadists with new recruits in the future.
Central Asian leaders need to learn from their own past mistakes, and from those of Arab authoritarian regimes, and adopt a reformist mind-set in the way they deal with political and religious affairs. It will probably take a generational change for this lesson to be truly understood. Repression of opposition and the promotion of local Islam have worked in the short term, but such tools might not be enough in the longer term.
Unfortunately, as the issue of Afghanistan is so close to home, Central Asian leaders might not have the luxury of time to change their ways. After 2014, the region’s governments will need to decide whether to stay the course or to adopt a more reformist path. The latter choice could help safeguard Central Asia’s stability while Afghanistan gradually rebuilds itself.
Jihadist groups operating in Central Asia pose a real threat, but they are not the only or even the primary danger facing the region’s regimes.
The states of Central Asia—Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan—are closely watching the political situation in Afghanistan, a neighbor with whom three of them share a border. This situation concerns them very deeply.∼∼∼∼∼∼∼∼∼∼
Blog author's comments:
Here is a map of South and Central Asia:
Here is a map of present and potential members of the Turkic Council:
Aquamarine are the present members; blue are potential members.
The full article is reprinted after the jump. Central Asia is more important to you than you might think.
The countries named are all Turkic-speaking. Four of them have joined Azerbaijan and Turkey in the Turkic Council, an intergovernmental agency dedicated to further deepening comprehensive cooperation among Turkic Speaking States, as well as making joint contributions to peace and stability in the region and in the world. Member States have confirmed their commitment to democratic values, human rights, the rule of law, and principles of good governance.
The Union will in time become something like the European Union. Trade barriers between member states have been eliminated, and they are now engaged in joint military exercises.
Turkey has the strongest military in the Middle East.
Much of Central Asia is awash in petrochemicals, and is vigorously courted by the US, China, and Russia. NATO is currently scheduled to withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of this year; think of that with NATO's new agreement to become involved in Syria and Iraq, because of Islamist activity there. The West is unlikely to cede Central Asia to Russia and China without a contest of wills.
Please take a look at the article; see what you think.
Friday, September 5, 2014
Jihadist threat
Fighters emanating from and financed by Afghanistan, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar are called by several different names.
The Carnegie Foundation for International Peace, in an article which will appear in a later post, has this definition, wich I will use from now on
The Carnegie Foundation for International Peace, in an article which will appear in a later post, has this definition, wich I will use from now on
The term “jihadist threat” is used in this article with a distinct, specific meaning: a Salafist or radical Islamic approach that does not seek to conquer hearts and minds. Other Islamists with strong political organizations, such as Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, Turkey’s Justice and Development Party (AKP), or Tunisia’s Ennahda party, have adopted more pragmatic and moderate positions.
Tuesday, September 2, 2014
The wars that really are about the oil
This article is a great puzzle. Why would the US spend so much money, for so little return, to keep nations from warring over oil? Is America big-hearted?
And then consider what the world would look like if Germany and China were at war over Saudi oil. What if they were to war with Russia over Russia's oil! What a mess the world would be in!
Can statesman be as farsighted as this article supposed them to be? Have you an alternative explanation?
Maps, pictures, and matter in italics are added by me.
Durell
Russia - Former Soviet Union Pipelines map. Click on the map to enlarge. The symbols on the map are explained here.
See here for a thorough discussion of the various choke points that can stop the flow of oil.
Such generosity of spirit. Is generosity of spirit characteristic of the Bush administration? Click the map to enlarge it.
And then consider what the world would look like if Germany and China were at war over Saudi oil. What if they were to war with Russia over Russia's oil! What a mess the world would be in!
Can statesman be as farsighted as this article supposed them to be? Have you an alternative explanation?
Maps, pictures, and matter in italics are added by me.
Durell
The wars that really are about the oil
You can’t understand any of the world’s crises without understanding petropolitics
Is international conflict really just a fight over oil? It sometimes seems that way. In Syria and Iraq, the militants of the so-called ‘Islamic State’ sell captured oil while battling to establish a puritanical Sunni theo-cracy. From Central Asia to Ukraine, Russia is contesting attempts (backed by the US) to minimise Europe’s dependence on Russian oil and natural gas. Meanwhile, Obama’s ‘pivot to Asia’ allows the US to threaten the choke points through which most of China’s oil imports must pass.
See here for a thorough discussion of the various choke points that can stop the flow of oil.
Conspiracy-mongering petrodeterminists who try to reduce world politics to nothing but a clash for oil are too crude (pun intended). No shadowy cabal of oil company executives pulls the strings of world politics. Most of the world’s oil and gas is the property of government-owned companies, and even private oil companies like ExxonMobil and BP generally defer to their home-country governments. But a grasp of global petropolitics is nonetheless vital to any understanding of the crises in international relations we see today. We also need to know a little recent history.
The end of the Cold War left America’s leadership wondering how to justify the US military protectorates over western Europe and Japan. The 1990 invasion of Kuwait by Saddam provided the answer: instead of temporarily protecting its European and East Asian allies from the Red Army, the US would henceforth perpetually protect them from other threats, including the disruption of the oil supplies on which their economies depended.
By policing critical regions like the Persian Gulf on behalf of all industrial nations, Washington hoped to forestall re-armament and unilateral scrambles for security, including energy security, by the other great powers. George W. Bush expressed this idea in a 2002 address at West Point: ‘America has, and intends to keep, military strengths beyond challenge, thereby making the destabilising arms races of other eras pointless and limiting rivalries to trade and other pursuits of peace.’
The US-Japanese relationship was the best fit for this model of patron-client politics. Japan is dependent for most of its crude oil imports on Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, and Kuwait, with small amounts from Iran, Russia and the rest of the world. It follows that Japan is also dependent on the US navy to patrol the sea lanes from the Persian Gulf through the Indian Ocean and the waters of East Asia. When Japan contributed cash rather than soldiers to defray the costs of the Gulf War, many Americans protested, failing to understand that this was exactly what American strategy called for.
Americans who hope that ‘energy independence’ can reduce US involvement in the Middle East similarly fail to understand the post-Cold War strategy of their own country. Thanks to the revolution in oil and gas production made possible by hydraulic fracturing technology (fracking) and horizontal drilling, the US has passed Russia as the world’s leading energy producer and Saudi Arabia as the leading producer of crude oil. A relatively small portion of America’s oil imports last year came from the Persian Gulf, chiefly Saudi Arabia (17 per cent), Iraq (4.4 per cent) and Kuwait (4.2 per cent). The biggest share came from Canada (33 per cent). The US military is not in the Persian Gulf to protect oil destined for the US so much as to secure the oil supplies of Europe, Japan and South Korea, and to implicitly blackmail China.
One element of this post-Cold War American grand strategy has been the attempt to minimise the dependence of the European Union on Russia, which supplies about a third of Europe’s natural gas. Ever since the 1990s, the US has favoured the construction of pipelines that would transfer oil or gas from the former Soviet republics of the Caucasus and Central Asia to Europe while bypassing Russian territory. One, the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, has been operational since 2006. Another, the Nabucco pipeline, was intended to bring gas from Azerbaijan to Europe through Georgia, Turkey and Bulgaria, but it has been abandoned in favour of two pipelines with much lower capacity. Russia is proceeding with its own alternative, the South Stream gas pipeline, which would bypass Ukraine and bring gas from Russia under the Black Sea to Bulgaria, Serbia, Hungary, Slovenia and thence to Italy. It remains to be seen whether this and other projects fall victim to European sanctions against Russia arising from the Ukraine crisis.
China, too, has been involved in the pipeline wars with the US — as a consumer of oil and gas, rather than as a producer like Russia. About 80 per cent of China’s oil imports pass through the Strait of Malacca, between Malaysia and Indonesia, giving the US navy a potential chokehold. This explains Chinese support for a proposed Iran-Pakistan pipeline, which could be extended to China. Opposed by the US, the pipeline has been thwarted by Saudi financial pressure on the Pakistani government. [? US sanctions are the reason usually given for the failure to complete the Irn-Pakistan pipeline.] But China has other options for avoiding an American naval stranglehold, including a pipeline across Burma and the Chinese-subsidised port of Gwadar in Pakistan.
China’s claims to the South Sea islands, which have embroiled it in recent conflicts with Vietnam, the Philippines and Japan, are doubtless motivated in part by the desire to develop offshore oil reserves. After China deployed an oil rig in contested waters in May, nearly two dozen died in anti–Chinese riots in Vietnam.
Most consequential of all is the deal between Beijing and Moscow to transport gas to China by pipeline from fields in Siberia. The trade deal was not only the biggest in history but also a dramatic rebuke to the US attempt to encircle and weaken both powers.
China and Russia, along with India and Brazil, are challenging another basis of post-Cold War US hegemony, the ‘petrodollar’. The practice of paying for oil in dollars, even if no Americans are involved, has bolstered the dollar as the world’s reserve currency and helped the US to run large deficits since the Reagan years without too much pain. Many of post-Saddam Iraq’s oil concessions have gone to non-American firms, but the US achieved a small victory by ensuring that the transactions would use dollars.
Far from being reassured that their ‘legitimate interests’ are being protected, China and Russia have doubled down on their efforts to build up their own oil networks at America’s expense. And despite two decades of US support for non-Russian pipeline routes, Europe remains highly dependent on Russian gas. The former German chancellor Gerhard Schröder even sits on the board of a consortium building a Russo-German gas pipeline. At the same time, the American public, having turned against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, simply want less foreign policy, and attempts to cut the budget deficit have set US military spending on a downward path.
Two decades after the Gulf War, America’s commitment to secure the oil supplies of the Persian Gulf and the sea lanes needed for their transit on behalf of the other industrial powers has proven to be far more expensive than Washington expected. The stationing of US troops in Saudi Arabia and other Gulf allies enraged anti-American jihadists, Osama bin Laden among them.
The Bush administration cynically used popular panic following the 9/11 attacks and false claims about Iraqi ‘weapons of mass destruction’ to justify the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. In addition to turning oil-rich Iraq into a permanent American military base like South Korea, the invasion was intended to save money, by replacing the post-Gulf War policy of ‘dual containment’ of Iraq and Iran with containment of Iran alone. In March 2003, the undersecretary of defense for policy Paul Wolfowitz told Congress that ‘we’re really dealing with a country that could finance its own reconstruction’, and a month later the Pentagon estimated that the Iraq war would cost $4 billion. Rather than paying for itself, to date the war has cost the US $800 billion, a figure that does not include legacy costs such as a lifetime of medical treatment for wounded veterans, or the losses in life and property to Iraqi nationals.
Had George W. Bush been an Iranian mole, the clerical regime in Tehran could hardly have benefited more from the suborning of the military power of the US and its allies to remove two of Iran’s major enemies: Saddam and the Taleban government in Afghanistan. Instead of serving as an American ally against Iran, post-Saddam Iraq has been ruled by pro-Iranian Shias. The Shi’ite sectarianism of Nouri al-Maliki’s government has in turn contributed to the success of Isis.
The fracking revolution means that America will have so much oil and gas that it needn’t import any by 2035, according to the International Energy Authority. That timetable, of course, assumes America’s energetic environmentalists don’t manage to slow progress, and it still leaves the next 21 years to get through.
So if Europe wants to break its addiction to Russian energy, it will need to start doing its own fracking – rather than wait for American imports. Putin’s continued confidence over the Ukraine this week can be explained by a simple fact: winter is coming, and the countries complaining about him need his gas rather badly.
So if Europe wants to break its addiction to Russian energy, it will need to start doing its own fracking – rather than wait for American imports. Putin’s continued confidence over the Ukraine this week can be explained by a simple fact: winter is coming, and the countries complaining about him need his gas rather badly.
It is almost exactly 41 years since the Saudis and Egyptians discussed using oil as a weapon – then, to penalise America for helping Israel in the Yom Kippur war. Yet pipeline diplomacy is as relevant now as ever. Look hard enough and you can see such games still being played today in pursuit of grand political goals — whether to establish a Sunni caliphate or to preserve American hegemony over developing European countries. Once America believed it would always have to police this global struggle for resources; soon, the American electorate may decide that it’s not worth the cost.
There will be much discussion of the world’s future at next week’s Nato summit in Wales. America’s European allies have reduced their military capabilities over the years, persuaded that Uncle Sam would always protect their energy supply if things grew difficult. Such old certainties are fast disappearing. Europe may still have to learn the hard way that petropolitics still matters.
This article first appeared in the print edition of The Spectator magazine, dated 30 August 2014
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