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  • Will the USSR be reborn in 2008?

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say Part A (Russia)
    January 25, 2007 Thursday

    WILL THE U.S.S.R. BE REBORN IN 2008?;
    It could happen if oil prices reach $150 a barrel

    by: Artem Aniskin

    Western analysts issue another warning about Russia's imperial
    ambitions; The annual World Economic Forum opens today in Davos,
    Switzerland. In the lead-up to the forum, some experts have released
    a sensational new report. According to their forecasts, the USSR
    might reappear on the world map as soon as a year from now - and all
    because of high oil prices.


    The annual World Economic Forum (WEF) opens today in Davos,
    Switzerland. In the lead-up to the forum, some experts have released
    a sensational new report. According to their forecasts, the USSR
    might reappear on the world map as soon as a year from now - and all
    because of high oil prices.

    In the report, WEF specialists warn the world that oil prices could
    triple in 2008 - reaching $150 a barrel. This price hike would raise
    gasoline and natural gas prices as well, leading to more serious
    consequences. These experts say that in many parts of the world,
    political alliances are likely to be formed between oil exporter
    countries and consumer countries, based on the principle of cheaper
    oil within the alliance.

    Russia is allocated a leading role in this script. We are the world's
    second-largest oil producer, and among the leading oil exporters;
    consequently, we have every chance of becoming a unification center -
    within the former Soviet Union, at least - and forming the very kind
    of alliance (a second USSR, for example) which the WEF specialists
    fear. They predict that our initial allies will be Armenia,
    Uzbekistan, and (oddly enough) Georgia - although Georgia seems most
    disinclined to form an alliance with Russia at present. The experts
    maintain that these three countries are already experiencing energy
    shortages - so what would happen if energy prices rise?

    In that event, one solution would be to make a political marriage
    with an exporter country in return for lower energy prices "within
    the family." In the former Soviet Union, the range of potential
    "spouses" isn't very large. Apart from Russia, only Azerbaijan and
    Turkmenistan are major exporters. But the WEF specialists are
    convinced that the choice will be Russia - or Russia will "help"
    other countries to make that choice.

    Would former Soviet republics accept unification voluntarily? In our
    view, there are three possible scenarios for what Russia might do if
    oil prices rise drastically.

    First scenario: Revolution

    Alexander Dugin, leader of the International Eurasian Movement: "Cut
    off oil supplies, and wait until the people in the consumer country
    overthrow their head of state. Then, after the coup, install a
    pro-Russian president. And just let the West dare to say that such
    methods aren't humane. The United States stops at nothing to achieve
    its geopolitical and other purposes - even invading other countries,
    such as Iraq."

    Second scenario: Pressure

    Mikhail Delyagin, director of the Globalization Studies Institute:
    "First, organize a strong pro-Russian lobby in a neighboring country.
    Second, increase economic pressure. Look at the amount of goods from
    CIS countries in the Russian domestic market, and the number of
    migrant workers. Look at the amount of money sent from Russia to
    those countries. Most of their budget revenues come from us."

    Third scenario: Voluntary Union

    Russia is forced to raise prices for the oil and gas it supplies to
    CIS countries. Those countries ask for lower prices, since their
    economies can't cope with the price rises. We refuse. As a result,
    those countries have no choice but to accept a political alliance in
    exchange for lower energy prices. The poorest countries - Kyrgyzstan,
    for example - are the first to accept. The rest follow.

    Outcome:

    This would be "a milder form of the Soviet Union," according to
    Alexander Dugin: "It could be the Eurasian Union, as proposed since
    1996 by President Nursultan Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan. A
    confederation, with each component retaining maximal independence.
    But decisions on major political issues would be made by a single
    center: Moscow."

    Or if the dollar falls

    Now let's look at why such a drastic rise in oil prices might happen.
    The WEF experts have a somewhat unexpected theory of their own. They
    predict some major terrorist attacks at sea in early 2008 - along
    busy oil transport routes (the Persian Gulf or the Straits of
    Malacca). If terrorists blow up a few supertankers, this would cause
    panic in the oil market, a shortage of oil, and a price rise to $150
    a barrel.

    Mikhail Leontiev, prominent economist and television host, is
    skeptical about such arguments. He has little faith in WEF reports.
    Leontiev: "It's foolish to say that oil prices would skyrocket as a
    result of terrorist attacks. Even if it does happen, it wouldn't last
    long, and certainly wouldn't lead to any new union. Besides,
    Uzbekistan and Armenia are already pro-Russian, with no union
    required - in contrast to Georgia."

    Another economist - Mikhail Delyagin, director of the Globalization
    Studies Institute - notes that at last year's WEF the experts were
    also discussing the possibility of oil prices rising. They spoke of
    $120 a barrel, resulting from a possible attack on Iran by the United
    States. Thus far, however, the United States has cautiously refrained
    from a fire-and-sword assault on the nuclear and petroleum
    infrastructure of that Islamic country. America is bogged down in
    Afghanistan and Iraq; it has to sort out those situations.

    Mikhail Khazin, president of Neocon Consulting: "The only way that
    oil prices could rise to $150 would be as a result of hyperinflation
    in the United States. But there's little chance of that happening in
    the next year, at least."

    Whether it's a terrorist attack or the collapse of the dollar, the
    end result would be the same: higher oil prices and the resurgence of
    something similar to the USSR.

    Below the belt

    Russia makes no secret of the fact that yes, indeed it could become
    the center of a new Union. It's even prepared to offer certain
    economic preferences to the new members - as it demonstrated until
    the very last moment in relations with Belarus - but only if our
    allies back up their words with deeds, of course. We've been through
    this before, in the Soviet era, when even remote African countries
    received vast amounts from us in exchange for promises to build
    socialism. What use is such a Union to us? If we threw open our doors
    we would be flooded with requests from petty allies, and we'd end up
    subsidizing half the world.

    But the WEF report is a different matter. We can only be glad for
    those experts whose imaginations and educations permit them to
    predict terrorists blowing up oil tankers. For all the implausibility
    and even absurdity of such a scenario, its main purpose has been
    achieved: once again, the whole world has been reminded of Russia's
    imperial ambitions and its energy weapon - which our country
    brandishes indiscriminately, according to Western analysts.

    That point will certainly catch the attention of Western officials
    and business leaders gathered at Davos. It will linger in their
    memories. Meanwhile, a month from now no one will even remember the
    probability of a terrorist attack or the competence of this
    analytical scenario.

    Marshall Goldman, associate director of the Davis Center for Russian
    and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University:

    Of course, if such a price hike does happen, Russia - as an oil
    producer country - would find itself in a favorable position. Could a
    second USSR arise? It's hard to say. Russia is already influential -
    very influential, even. To my knowledge, its oil and gas production
    volumes are growing, and your country will gain weight in energy
    terms in the immediate future. With all this influence, it wouldn't
    really need another Soviet Union, right? And Russia is unlikely to
    unite with Ukraine as long as Yushchenko is in power there, or with
    Belarus as long as Lukashenko is in power.

    Source: Komsomolskaya Pravda, January 24, 2007, p. 9

    Translated by Elena Leonova
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