
#5
BBC Monitoring
BP's deal with Russian oil firms "down
payment" for compliance on Iraq - paper
Source: Kommersant, Moscow, in Russian 13 Feb 03
BP's decision to invest a huge sum of money in Russian oil firms is a
political decision not an economic one, the Russian business daily, Kommersant,
says. This investment is a down payment for Russia's compliance on a war against
Iraq. There will be more, thanks to Iraq, the daily claims. The following is an
excerpt from report by Kommersant on 13 February:
What are people in America, Europe, Israel, Saudi Arabia and at the United
Nations and NATO talking about now? About the forthcoming war in Iraq. What are
people in Russia talking about now? About the deal between Russia's Tyumen Oil
Company and the Anglo-US company BP. But it only seems that people there are
talking about war and that people here are talking about peace. In fact they are
talking about one and the same thing.
A few days ago, I was talking in London with Andrew Wood, former British
ambassador to Russia and now a BP consultant who, moreover, is also a member of
the Russian company Renaissance Capital's supervisory council. I asked whether
it does not seem to him that Russia will only lose from the war in Iraq whereas
the United States will be able to control the oil market and, together with
Europe, receive an economic injection in the form of a fall in oil prices. He
answered that it is necessary to be realistic and pragmatic. The realist has to
understand that war is virtually inevitable and the pragmatist has to operate on
the premise that if it does entail any economic loss it is necessary to shape
policy in such a way that there is also economic gain.
The same thing has probably been said to other people as well and not only in
London. And it seems that the lesson has been learned. This column is entitled
"The Bottom Line", which means that the deal between Tyumen Oil and BP
is the bottom line in the Iraqi war for Russia.
Officially, of course, hardly anyone is going to say that. Certainly not:
Over there, it is a question of politics: Russia's standing as a UN Security
Council permanent member and as a country which "historically has its own
interests and allies in the Near East"; generally speaking, "peace to
the world", all the rest is "counterproductive", but what you
have here is just a deal between "economic entities", even if it is an
extremely productive deal...
There is also direct evidence that the BP deal with Tyumen Oil can be
regarded as payment to Russia for not opposing the war with Iraq. This evidence
is to be found in the reply to a fairly simple question. If it is taken as a
given that war will bring oil prices crashing down the question is this: When is
it more advantageous to invest in the Tyumen Oil Company's shares - when oil
prices are at a record high or when prices are falling and along with them the
company's assets? The decision to buy at a time of speculatively high prices is
illogical from an economic viewpoint and therefore it is necessary to look for
the politics.
The deal with BP is only a down payment. This is how the investment community
operates: Everyone in it keeps a watchful eye on everyone else and if a big and
powerful player makes a sudden movement - like the multi-billion deal between BP
and Tyumen Oil - a waiting line forms to fill the gap that has been opened up.
Therefore, the long-awaited time of the strategic investors is beginning in
Russia. Thanks to Iraq.
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