
#5
The Globe and Mail (Canada)
April 10, 2003
Iraq puts chill on U.S.-Russia relationship
By MICHAEL DEN TANDT
Of all the geopolitical ripples that followed the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks,
few seemed more important or potentially durable than the new strategic energy
alliance between Russia and the United States. Russia is the world's largest
producer of crude oil, accounting for an estimated eight million barrels a day,
and desperately craves hard currency and technical know-how. The United States
imports more crude than any other nation on Earth, about 60 per cent of its
needs, and has money and savvy to spare.
This nexus of capacity and demand, combined with a strong political desire in
both countries to banish the last vestiges of the Cold War -- while at the same
time countering the threats of Islamic fundamentalism and nuclear proliferation
-- made the match seem heaven-sent.
But a relationship built on energy economics has foundered on the same. In
this, as in so many other things, Iraq has been the flashpoint.
Just a few months ago, the emerging Russian-American alliance seemed firm and
destined to grow stronger. Last May, U.S. President George W. Bush and his
Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, signed a joint declaration on a "new
strategic framework" for the relationship. In July, came the first-ever
delivery of Russian crude to the United States. In October, the first-ever
Russian-U.S. commercial energy summit was held in Houston.
On Oct. 26, it's worth noting, Russian troops stormed a Moscow theatre held
by Chechen guerrillas, killing at least 117 hostages and all the guerrillas,
many apparently by summary execution. The United States pointedly declined to
criticize Russian tactics.
In late November, presidents Bush and Putin met again. They trumpeted growing
co-operation between the U.S. Department of Energy, the Ministry of Energy of
Russia, the U.S. Department of Commerce and the Ministry of Economic Development
and Trade of Russia. And they hailed a proposal to build a deep-water port in
Murmansk, intended to ease the flow of Russian oil to Western markets.
But then came Iraq. In the lead up to war last month, Russia set itself
squarely in the Franco-German camp, effectively blocking a United Nations
resolution authorizing war. Mr. Putin repeatedly hammered Mr. Bush's policy of
pre-emptive invasion. In the first days of the war, the United States alleged
that Russia was selling guided missiles, jamming devices and night-vision
goggles to Iraq, which the Russians angrily denied. In the blink of an eye, it
seemed just like old times.
The first and most obvious reason is Iraq's Soviet-era debt to Russia,
estimated at $8-billion (U.S.), which the Russians fear won't be honoured by a
new government. Second, there's Lukoil, Russia's largest oil company, which has
-- or had -- a $3.5-billion deal with Saddam Hussein's regime to develop Iraq's
massive Western Kurna oil field. Although Russia is strenuously lobbying the
United States to ensure that both debt and oil contracts are honoured, the
outcome is uncertain.
But there's more to the rift than that. The nut of it is utility. With Iraq,
home to the world's second-largest reserves of easily accessible oil, in the
United States' back pocket, Russian energy exploitation suddenly becomes far
less important. And the inherent drawbacks of Russian energy, as well as a
fundamental conflict of interests over price, become impossible to ignore.
To begin with, Russia needs and wants oil prices to stay high. David Victor
and Nadejda Victor, writing in the current issue of Foreign Affairs, estimate
that each $1 decrease in the price-per-barrel translates into a billion-dollar
loss for Russia's state budget. A price collapse would devastate Russia's
fragile economy. Meantime, the United States needs crude prices to drop, and
quickly, to avert recession.
Russia's energy riches, unlike those in the Persian Gulf, are remote, the two
scholars note. The centre of the country's oil industry is in Siberia, 3,200
kilometres by pipeline from Western Europe. New pipelines to the Adriatic and
Baltic seas, as well as China and the Pacific Rim, will cost billions to
develop. Likewise, Russia's ports are badly outdated.
Furthermore, investment in Russia is still notoriously risky. British
Petroleum put half a billion dollars into Russia's Sidanco in the early 1990s,
only to lose most of it in a bankruptcy. Tax laws are byzantine and changeable.
A fledgling mechanism for so-called "production-sharing agreements,"
designed to provide stability for foreign investors, has yet to find its
footing.
Faced with a choice of investing in Russia or the new Iraq, therefore,
international energy firms will leap toward Iraq.
The goal of the new U.S.-Russian economic partnership -- to have Russia
provide 10 per cent of U.S. foreign energy needs by 2010 -- was always modest.
(Canada contributes nearly twice that now.) Today, even 10 per cent seems
hopelessly optimistic. The truth is that, on the day victory is formally
declared in Iraq, Russia's copious energy assets drop off the U.S. radar screen.
Small wonder then that Mr. Putin opposed the war. Or that he and Mr. Bush are
no longer best friends.
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