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#8
CDI Weekly Defense Monitor
Volume 6, Issue #18 June 13, 2002
Terror and Oil in Central Asia
Tomas Valasek, Senior Analyst, tvalasek@cdi.org
Is the United States fighting for oil or combating terrorism in Central Asia?
A number of recent articles raise questions about the true goals behind the U.S.
military campaign in Afghanistan. "Bush’s concealed agenda is to exploit
the oil and gas reserves in the Caspian basin," charged the British tabloid
The Mirror. Other writers point out that Zalmay Khalizad, a member of President
Bush’s National Security Council and current U.S. envoy to Afghanistan, used
to work on behalf of Unocal, a U.S. oil company, which in 1998 tried to build a
pipeline exporting Turkmen gas through Afghanistan. Back then Khalizad advocated
engagement of the ruling Taliban regime, over whose destruction he later
presided as one of the architects of the U.S. military campaign in Afghanistan.
The real story is, as usual, more prosaic. The actual or potential importance
of oil in Central Asia is shrouded in myths and misconceptions. First of all,
the Caspian is not the next Middle East, nor will the oil there significantly
affect the U.S. supply/demand problem in the long run. (Caspian Sea natural gas
reserves are much more promising but the exports will primarily go to Turkey,
Western Europe and possibly to Asia). The Caspian countries simply do not have
enough oil to seriously add to the world’s reserves in the long run, and their
impact on oil prices is also limited (the one exception is Iran, but the bulk of
its reserves are far from the Caspian shores). The potential contribution of the
former Soviet republics to U.S. energy needs is minimal. The United States still
produces about half the oil it consumes, and of the other -- imported -- half,
most comes from sources in the Americas, especially from Venezuela and Canada.
The gap between what the United States produces and what it consumes is
expected to grow – oil reserves on U.S. territory are increasingly scarce
while consumption is expected to grow by as much as 25% over the next 20 years,
necessitating the search for more foreign sources of oil. However, much of the
increase in imports will come from the Middle East, which is home to a lion’s
share of the world’s proven oil reserves. The Caspian, with oil reserves
roughly equivalent to those of the North Sea, is simply not in a position to
help make up the expected shortfall in U.S. oil needs. None of the states of the
region are anywhere near the top of the list of countries holding large proven
oil reserves. Saudi Arabia leads with 25 percent of the world’s proven
reserves, followed by Iraq with 11 percent, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and
Iran each with 9 percent, and Venezuela at 7 percent.
Nevertheless, it is the policy of the United States to diversify world
sources of oil, not only for itself but also for other oil importers. The idea
is the reduce dependency on any particular region, and thus reduce the
possibility that a political upheaval in one country/region will significantly
affect oil supplies and possibly bring about a global economic crisis. The
switch to new exporters outside the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC) also helps keep global oil prices down: "The addition of
Caspian oil could weaken the OPEC monopoly, providing greater leverage over the
pricing policies of Saudi Arabia and other OPEC countries, ultimately
contributing to lower world oil prices," one American expert told the U.S.
House of Representatives. Moreover, American firms are among the world’s
largest oil producers, and their interests in developing and exporting Caspian
energy resources neatly coincide with the U.S. desire to add to the world’s
sources of oil.
The task of developing Azeri or Kazakh mineral riches, however, requires a
lot more than simply opening doors for U.S. oil companies to the producer
countries. The Caspian is a treacherous territory for doing oil business. Most
of its oil deposits are under water, and the actual legal status of the Caspian
Sea has yet to be defined eleven years after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
In fact, the Caspian is considered a sea by some countries and a lake by others.
An April 2002 conference of the presidents of the five littoral states, which
was meant to divide up the sea’s surface and bed, ended in acrimony. Ownership
of a number of oil fields is being disputed -- Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan went
to court over one such field, and in summer of 2001 the Iranian Navy forced a
British Petroleum exploration vessel from a disputed area near the Azeri-Iranian
border. Producers are understandably shy about investing millions of dollars
into wells that could be expropriated or destroyed in an attack.
Exporting the region’s oil is also proving a challenge. The shortest route
connecting the Caspian oil to the world’s shipping routes leads across Iran.
But the U.S. embargo on trade with and investment in Iran has ruled out this
option for the foreseeable future. The straight line west -- through Armenia --
is also out of the question because of Azerbaijan’s and Turkey’s blockade
which dates back to the 1994 Nagorno Karabakh war. A new pipeline is scheduled
to connect Azeri (and possibly Kazakh) oil fields to Turkey via Georgia but the
companies have yet to break ground on this expensive and somewhat controversial
project. Pipelines across Russia are frowned upon by producer states, but for
the time being remain the only alternative, together with a smaller pipeline
running through Georgia. While potentially immensely important to Turkmenistan
-- and beneficial to the companies that would build it -- the trans-Afghan gas
pipeline that Unocal advocated in 1998 is just a small piece of the overall
export route jumble. It was effectively abandoned in favor of another route,
across the Caspian Sea, long before Sept. 11. Neither pipeline was ultimately
built, not because of the Taliban or geopolitics but because of hesitation by
the Turkmen government and lukewarm interest among energy companies. The interim
Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, renewed calls for the trans-Afghan pipeline in
May 2002.
The attraction of Caspian oil to the United States clearly has its limits.
Unlike, for example, Saudi Arabia, the southern region of the former Soviet
Union doesn’t hold enough mineral reserves to be considered strategic and
indispensable to the United States. Other interests argue against too much
involvement. Washington has long been reluctant to offer substantive military
aid or to deploy troops in the Caucasus and Central Asia for fear of alienating
Moscow, and it was the terrorist threat, not oil, changed that mindset after
Sept. 11. Nor were the countries of the Caspian brought into NATO, despite
repeated requests by Georgia and Azerbaijan for inclusion in the alliance. As
the RAND Corporation concluded (before Sept. 11), "NATO and the West do not
have vital interests at stake in the Caspian region … NATO’s engagement in
the Caspian should not command a high priority in terms of resources, planning,
or attention."
It would be wrong to view the limited U.S. involvement in the Caspian
exclusively through the prism of oil and gas. Military assistance and joint
training serve a number of other useful purposes. Prevention of future conflicts
in the Caucasus is a goal in its own right, regardless of the region’s mineral
reserves. Increasingly, U.S. policy toward the former Soviet South -- and U.S.
foreign policy in general -- is dominated by a single-minded determination to
prevent future terrorist attacks against the United States. Oil is no doubt a
part of the puzzle that is the U.S. policy toward Central Asia -- but by no
means the only, or even the most important part.
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