Don't Mess with Unocal
The war against terrorism may really be a battle over oil
by Craig Rosebraugh
Toward Freedom magazine, January 2002
As the number of civilian casualties in Afghanistan rose due to
US-led bombing, evidence emerged that the
alleged war on terrorism may be yet another war for oil and political
power in the Middle East and Central
Asia. It wouldn't be the first time that the US went to war for oil,
as George Bush the senior proved in Iraq.
In 1995, the US-based Unocal oil company signed a tentative agreement
with the Turkmenistan government
to research the possibilities of constructing an oil pipeline to
Pakistan by way of Afghanistan. As the project
developed, Unocal began to seek the agreement of the Taliban, who
had recently risen to power. On two
separate occasions, in February and December 1997, Taliban officials
were flown to the US to meet with,
and be wined and dined by, Unocal executives.
The Taliban was simultaneously pressured by Argentinean
oil company Birdas for control of the proposed
pipeline.
Taliban officials issued two demands to both companies
before any agreement could be reached. They wanted Unocal and
Birdas to construct
an open pipeline, one that could be tapped into from Afghanistan
for local consumption. Second, they wanted the companies to get
involved in building roads, water supplies, telephone lines,
and electrical
power lines. While Birdas agreed to meet the demands and build
an open pipeline, Unocal refused, preferring a closed pipeline
for export
only. Birdas and the Taliban initially reached an agreement,
but the deal later fell through due to lack of financing.
During the mid-1990s, the Unocal project received
strong support from the US government. From 1995-98,
especially after the Taliban seized control of Kabul in September
1996, Clinton administration officials
actively lobbied Taliban officials on behalf of Unocal. At
the time, the US expressed little, if any, concern
about the mounting evidence of abuses of women's rights.
Despite an increasing lack of cooperation from
the Taliban, Unocal continued to push the project. Testifying
before the
House US
Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific on February 12, 1998,
Unocal representative
John Maresca discussed the importance of the pipeline project-and
the increasing difficulties in dealing with the Taliban. "The
region's total oil reserves may well reach more than 60 billion
barrels of oil. Some estimates are as high as 200 billion
barrels .... From
the outset, we have made it clear that construction of the
pipeline we have proposed across Afghanistan could not begin
until a recognized
government is in place that has the confidence of governments,
leaders, and our company."
A second pipeline was proposed in 1997, this time
by the Central Asia Gas Pipeline Consortium, or CentGas, in which
Unocal held
the major interest. The proposed line would run from Turkmenistan
through
Afghanistanto markets in Pakistan and India. Conflicts
emerged again, as Maresca testified to Congress.
" As with the proposed Central Asia oil pipeline, CentGas can not begin
construction until an internationally recognized Afghanistan Government
is in place."
Even after the 1998 US embassy bombings and Al
Qaeda's declaration to "kill the Americans and their
allies-civilian and military," Unocal still hoped to see through
the pipeline projects. In an August 30,1998,
interview with the BBC, Unocal spokeswoman Terry Covington
stated that Unocal "believes the project is
both economically and technically feasible and can
still be carried out once a stable government is in
place in
Kabul."
Due to the rising concerns of financial backers
about the instability of Afghanistan, Unocal pulled out
of
CentGas in December 1998. On its Website (www.unocal.com),
Unocal claims to have completely dropped
the oil pipeline projects between Turkmenistan and
Pakistan. But the projects weren't altogether abandoned.
An article
in the March
23, 2000, Business Recorder, titled "Unocal trying to re-enter
Turkmen gas pipeline project," stated that "the US company
is in dialogue with the Afghan authorities seeking guaranteed protection
for its personnel while working on the Afghani terrain."
Enron, another US-based oil company, also has a
strong presence in the region through its involvement
in a pipeline project
from Turkmenistan
to Turkey by way of Azerbaijan and Georgia. Headquartered
in Houston, TX, it was the largest contributor
to George Bush
the junior's
presidential campaign, giving at least $550,000
to Bush himself and an estimated
$1.8 million to the Republican Party during the
2000 election. As its stock plummeted in October 2001,
after an admission
that half
a billion in debt had been hidden, the company
was swallowed by Dynergy, Inc., which is controlled by
Chevron-Texaco.
To the US government, the financial interests and
political power to be gained within the Middle
East and Central
Asia regions
are extremely important. By ousting the Taliban,
which put up so much
resistance to US economic interests, it may succeed
in installing a puppet regime in Afghanistan,
thereby gaining
control of
oil resources sure to produce billions in revenues.
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