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  • An Eastern Mediterranean Oil War?

    An Eastern Mediterranean
    Oil War?
    By Colonel David Eshel


    Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's overnight visit to Turkey has focused
    attention to the strategic dialogue between the two democratic nations
    in the Eastern Mediterranean. Turkey is a powerful, pro-Western, not
    Arab but definitely Muslim country and Israelis had hoped for years
    that its expanding relations would break the impression that the
    Muslim world opposed the Jewish state.

    The Turks were initially cautious, but came round about a decade ago
    when they reassessed their policies. They felt that dangerous
    neighbors and hotspots of instability were across their borders, and
    believed that Israel's influence in the United States could help
    especially in countering Greek and Armenian lobbies in Washington.
    The Turkish army's Deputy Chief of Staff Gen. Ergin Saygun was in
    Israel late last year discussing plans and more such visits are
    expected following Olmert's visit. But there seems to be much more at
    stake than mere diplomatic photo opportunity exchanges between Turkey
    and Israel.

    Virtually unnoticed, the inauguration of the Ceyhan-Tiblisi-Baku (BTC)
    oil pipeline, which links the Caspian Sea to the Eastern Mediterranean
    took place on the 13th July 2006, at the very outset of the Second
    Lebanon War. The official reception took place in Istanbul, hosted by
    Turkey's President Ahmet Necdet Sezer in the ýraðan Palace. Many
    dignitaries among them, British Petroleum's CEO Lord Brown and BP
    leading the BTC pipeline consortium of western oil companies and
    senior government officials, top oil ministers and leaders of western
    oil companies, from Britain, the US, Israel and Turkey were all
    present at the ceremony.


    The 1,770 km Baku Tbilisi Ceyhan pipeline, simply known by the acronym
    BTC, is one of the world's longest and cost US$4 billion to build. It
    snakes its way from the Sangachal oil and gas terminal south of the
    Azeri capital of Baku on the Caspian Sea through neighboring Georgia
    and some of the most mountainous regions of the Caucasus to finally
    reach the Turkish port of Ceyhan on the Mediterranean.

    The BTC pipeline totally bypasses the territory of the Russian
    Federation.

    as it transits through the former Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and
    Georgia, both of which have become US `protectorates', firmly
    integrated into a military alliance with the US and NATO. Moreover,
    both Azerbaijan and Georgia have longstanding military cooperation
    with Israel. Israel has a stake in the Azeri oil fields, from which it
    imports some 20% of its oil.

    In April 2006, Israel and Turkey announced plans for four underwater
    pipelines, transporting water, electricity, natural gas and oil to
    Israel, by-passing Syrian and Lebanese territory. The pipeline is
    aimed bringing water to Israel, by pumping water from upstream
    resources of the Tigris and Euphrates river system in Anatoli has been
    a long-run strategic objective of Israel to the detriment of Syria and
    Iraq.

    In its context, the BTC pipeline dominated by British Petroleum and
    American interest, has dramatically changed the geopolitics of the
    Eastern Mediterranean, which is now linked , through an energy
    corridor, to the strategic Caspian sea basin. But there is more at
    stage here.

    The geographical fact is that Ceyhan and the Mediterranean port of
    Ashkelon are situated only 400 km apart. Oil can be transported to
    that port in tankers or through a specially constructed under-water
    pipeline. From Ashkelon the oil can be pumped through already existing
    pipeline to the port of Eilat at the Red Sea, which had been very
    active during betters days between the Shah's Iran and Israel during
    the Sixties. From Eilat oil it can be transported to India and Far
    Eastern countries in tankers, thus outflanking the vulnerable Hurmoz
    straits.

    Last May, the Jerusalem Post published an article that Turkey and
    Israel are negotiating the construction of a multi-million-dollar
    energy and water project that will transport water, electricity,
    natural gas and oil by pipelines to Israel, with the oil to be sent
    onward from Israel to the Far East.

    Antalya Mayor Menderes Turel mentioned this in a press conference. The
    project, which would likely receive foreign economic backing, is
    currently undergoing a feasibility study sponsored by the
    Luxembourg-based European Investment Bank.

    The United States' ultimate strategic design is intended primarily to
    weaken Russia's role in Central Asia and the Eastern Mediterranean,
    whileisolating Iran from this important energy source.

    Iran being not only a major oil producing country is also a direct
    stepping stone between the Caspian region and the Persian Gulf. As
    such, it would certainly like to see Caspian oil flowing through its
    territory rather than through Turkey. Moreover, having full control
    over the Persian Gulf shipping lanes, through its military control on
    the strategic Hormuz strait, Iran could virtually strangle, at will,
    all international oil supplies, if political pressure on its nuclear
    program intensifies.

    Iran's claim to Caspian oil dates back to the last century when the
    Russian Empire and Persia, later Iran signed agreements in 1921 and
    1940 recognizing the Caspian Sea as a lake belonging to and divided
    between them. Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Iran
    wanted this agreement to continue despite assertions of independence
    by the breakaway states of Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan.

    Five years ago, the official Iranian news agency IRNA quoted a
    statement of the Iranian Oil Ministry as saying that it protests
    prospecting by foreign companies in Iran's claimed 20 percent sector
    of the Caspian Sea. The warning came a day after Iran summoned
    Azerbaijan's charge d'affaires in Tehran to protest plans by the
    state-run oil company of Azerbaijan, Socar, to carry out oil
    exploration studies with foreign companies at the Alborz oil field "in
    Iran's sector of the Caspian Sea." Iran even threatened with military
    action if its warnings would remain unheeded and indeed, on July 23,
    2001 in blatant violation of international law, an Iranian warship and
    two fighter jets forced a research vessel working on behalf of British
    Petroleum (BP)-Amoco in the Araz-Alov-Sharg field out of that sector.

    In fact, the BTC pipeline is far from secure by itself. Western
    intelligence reports indicate that Iran republican guards (IRGC) are
    carefully expanding support for subversive elements in Armenia, a
    country which is still technically at war with Azerbaijan. It is well
    known, that in the Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh the conflict
    between Armenian and Azeris is still going on.

    Armenian nationalists might decide to attack the BTC in order to hurt
    Azerbaijan, which derives most of its income from oil sales. The
    pipeline route passes through or near seven different war-zones. Its
    route passes just 10 miles from Nagorno-Karabakh, the area of
    Azerbaijan occupied by Armenia, where a bloody conflict killed at
    least 25,000 people It passes through Georgia, which remains unstable,
    with separatist movements in Abkhazia and South Ossetia - movements
    which the Georgian government tried to violently suppress during the
    1990s. Just across the border into Russia, and still only 70 miles
    from the BTC pipeline route, the horrific conflict in Chechnya
    continues. The region also saw related conflict in neighboring
    Dagestan in 1999, and fighting between the Russian republics of North
    Ossetia and Ingushetia in 1992. In Turkey, the BTC route passes
    through the edge of the area of the conflict between the Turkish state
    and the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), now known as Kongra-Gel. And
    Russia, by all means, is unlikely to view this new American strategic
    move without adequate response.

    Moscow defense ministry sources pointed out recently, that the planned
    Russian naval base in _Tartus_
    (http://www.defense-update.com/newscast/1 206/analysis/analysis-231206.htm)
    will enable Russia to solidify its positions in the Middle East under
    the pretext to ensure security of Syria. Moscow intends to deploy an
    air defense system around the base - to provide air cover for the base
    itself and a substantial part of Syrian territory. It could also
    conduct underwater activities to sabotage submerged pipelines, or at
    least threaten to do so, if its demand will not be adhered to. A
    dangerous situation could emerge, if Israeli and Russian activities in
    the Eastern mediterranean could clash with each other on matters of
    highly strategic interests.

    Read David Eshel's past commentary
    (http://www.defense-update.com/newscast /1206/analysis/analysis-171206.htm)


    Copyright 2007, Defense Update
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