El Imperio del
Caos renueva sus planes para los Balcanes, otra vez. ¿Por qué? Porque por los Balcanes están proyectados dos de los megaproyectos multipolares que amenazan su hegemonía global: el proyecto gasífero ruso-europeo Balkan Stream y el proyecto de infraestructura comunicacional terrestre, de origen chino, Balkan Silk Road. Pasa algo parecido a lo de Siria, país que está siendo prolijamente demolido. Andrew Korybko cuenta esta historia para el portal Oriental Review:
Título:
Washington’s “Destabilization Agenda”: A Hybrid War to Break the Balkans?
Texto: In the
spirit of the New Cold War and following on its success in snuffing out South
Stream, the US has prioritized its efforts in obstructing Russia’s Balkan
Stream pipeline, and for the most part, they’ve regretfully succeeded for the
time being. The first challenge came from the May 2015 Color Revolution attempt
in Macedonia, which thankfully was repulsed by the country’s patriotic
citizenry.
Next up on the
destabilization agenda was the political turmoil that threatened to take hold
of Greece in the run-up and aftermath of the austerity referendum, the idea
being that if Tsipras were deposed, then Balkan Stream would be replaced with
the US-friendly Eastring project. Once more, the Balkans proved resilient and
the American plot was defeated, but it was the third and most directly
antagonist maneuver that snipped the project in the bud and placed it on
indefinite standby.
‘Lucky’ Number
Three:
The climactic
action happened on 24 November when Turkey shot down a Russian anti-terrorist
bomber operating over the Syrian skies, and the nascent project became a victim
of the predictable chain reaction of political deterioration between both
sides. Given how obvious it was that energy cooperation would be one of the
casualties of simmering Russian-Turkish tensions, it stands to reason that the
US purposely egged Turkey on in order to provoke this domino reaction and
scuttle Balkan Stream. Be that as it may (and it surely looks convincing enough
to be the case), it doesn’t mean that the project is truly canceled, as it’s
more strategically accurate to describe it as temporarily shelved. Russia
understandably doesn’t want to enhance the position of a state that’s proven
itself to be so blatantly aggressive against it, but this feeling extends only
towards the present government and in the current context. It’s certainly
conceivable that a fundamental shift in Turkey’s position (however unlikely
that may appear in the short-term) could lead to a détente of sorts that
resurrects the Balkan Stream, but a more probable scenario would be if the
disaffected masses and/or distraught military representatives overthrew the
government.
Turkish
Reversal?
Both of these
possibilities aren’t that improbable when one takes note of the growing
resentment to Erdogan’s rule and the precarious position he’s placed the armed
forces in. It’s well-known how dissatisfied a significantly growing mass of
Turks have become (especially amidst an ever-growing Kurdish Insurgency), but
what’s less discussed is the strategically disadvantageous situation facing the
military right now. As the author wrote about in October, the Turkish forces
are spread thin between their anti-Kurdish operations in the broad southeast,
securing the heartland from ISIL and extreme left-wing terrorist attacks,
occasional interventions in Northern Iraq, and remaining on alert along the
Syrian border. This state of affairs is already almost too much for any
military to handle, and one of the last things that its responsible leaders
need right now is to balance against an imaginary and completely unnecessary
Russian ‘threat’ cooked up by Erdogan. This pressure might prove to be too much
for them, and in the interests of national security and properly fulfilling
their constitutional role in safeguarding the territorial integrity of the
state, they might band together in overthrowing him in spite of the systemic
changes he’s enacted in the past decade to defend against such an event.
The Path Forward
There’s a very
real chance that Balkan Stream will be unfrozen and the project allowed to move
forward one day, as it’s too strategically important for Russia, and even
Turkey, to be kept on the backburner indefinitely. It’s entirely possible that
an internal political change will take place in Turkey, be it in the mindset of
the current leadership or more likely with the installment of a new
revolutionary/coup government, meaning that it’s much too premature for Russia
or the US to give up on their respective policies towards Balkan Stream.
Therefore, both Great Powers are proceeding forward with a sort of geopolitical
insurance strategy, and in each case, it’s centered on China’s Balkan Silk
Road.
From the American
perspective, the US needs to continue unabated with the destabilization of the
Balkans, since even if the Russian project is successfully stopped, then it
still needs to do the same thing to China’s. So long as the Balkan Silk Road
continues to be built, then Russia will retain a multipolar magnet through its
premier strategic partner on which it can concentrate the influence that it’s
cultivated thus far. In the event that Balkan Stream is unfrozen, then Russia
can immediately jump back into the mix as if it never left and rejoin strategic
forces with its Chinese ally like it originally planned, and this nightmare
scenario is why the US is resorting to Hybrid War in its desperate bid to
destroy the Balkan Silk Road.
As has already
been similarly mentioned, the Russian approach is to focus more on the
economic, military, and political diversifications that were supposed to
accompany the energy-based physical infrastructure it was planning to build.
Instead of the gas pipeline forming the spine of a New Balkans, it looks as
though the Balkan Silk Road high-speed rail will take this role instead, but
either way, there’s a multipolar megaproject that acts as a magnet for Russian
influence. In the present configuration, Russia has relatively less influence
in directly deciding the course of the infrastructure’s construction, but at
the same time, it becomes indispensable to China.
Beijing has close
to no preexisting ties with the Balkans outside of purely economic relations
(and even those are relatively new), so Russia’s privileged involvement in
supporting the project and investing along the Balkan Silk Road route (which
was supposed to run parallel with the Balkan Stream and bring in the said
investment anyhow) helps to reinforce regional and local support for it by
presenting a friendly and familiar face that decision makers are already
accustomed to working with. It’s not to suggest that China can’t build the
project on its own or that there isn’t legitimate support in the Balkans for
such an initiative, but that Russia’s front-row participation in it reassures
the local elite that a civilizationally similar and ultra-influential partner
is there alongside them and is also placing visibly high stakes in the process
out of a show of confidence in its hopeful success.
Beijing Is The
Balkans’ Last Hope
It’s thus far
been established that the Russian-Chinese Strategic Partnership intended to revolutionize
the European continent with an infusion of multipolar influence along the
Balkan Corridor, which was supposed to support Balkan Stream and the Balkan
Silk Road. Regretfully, however, the US has temporarily succeeded in putting
the brakes on Balkan Stream, thus meaning that the Balkan Silk Road is the only
presently viable multipolar megaproject envisioned to run through the region.
On that account, it’s China, not Russia, which is carrying the torch of
multipolarity through the Balkans, although Beijing is of course partially
depending on Russia’s established influence there to help secure their shared
geostrategic objective and assist in making it a reality. At any rate, the
Balkan Silk Road is arguably more important than the Balkan Stream for the time
being, and as such, it’s worthy to pay extra attention to its strategic details
in order to better grasp why it represents the Balkans’ last multipolar hope.
Institutional
Foundation
The concept for
the Balkan Silk Road was a couple of years in the making, and it owes its
genesis to China’s One Belt One Road (“New Silk Road”) policy of constructing
worldwide connective infrastructure. This endeavor was thought up in order to
solve the dual problems of creating opportunities for Chinese outbound
investment and complementarily assisting geostrategic regions in their
liberating quest to achieve multipolarity. Relating to the area under study,
the Balkan Silk Road is the regional manifestation of this ideal, and it’s
actually part of China’s broader engagement with the Central and Eastern
European countries.
The format for
their multilateral interaction was formalized in 2012 under the first-ever
China and Central and Eastern European Countries (China-CEEC) Summit in Warsaw,
and the event two years later in Belgrade produced the idea for a
Budapest-Belgrade-Skopje-Athens high-speed rail project (the author’s
colloquial description of which is the Balkan Silk Road) aimed at deepening
both sides’ economic interconnection. The 2015 Summit in Suzhou produced a
medium-term agenda for 2015-2020, which among other things, proposes the
creation of a joint financing firm to supply credit and investment funds for
this and other projects. It also officially described the Balkan Silk Road as
being the “China-Eurasia Land-Sea Express Line” and suggested that it be
integrated into the New Eurasian Land Bridge Economic Corridor sometime in the
future, implying that Beijing would like to see the countries cooperative more
pragmatically with Russia (first and foremost in this case, Poland).
Importantly, Xinhua reported that the participants agreed to complete the
Budapest-Belgrade stage of the project by 2017.
Strategic
Context
What all of this
means is that China has accelerated its diplomatic, economic, and institutional
relations with Central and Eastern Europe in the space of only a couple of
years, astoundingly becoming a premier player in a region located almost half
the world away from it and partially a formal component of the unipolar bloc. This
can be explained solely by China’s attractive economic appeal to the CEEC that
transcends all sorts of political boundaries, as well as to the complementary
ambition that the East Asian supergiant has in deepening its presence
worldwide.
Together, these
two factors combine into a formidable component of China’s grand strategy,
which strives to use inescapable economic lures in leading its partners
(especially those representing the unipolar world) along the path of tangible
geopolitical change over a generational period. To refer back to the Balkan
Silk Road, this represents Beijing’s primary vehicle in achieving its long-term
strategy, and the geo-economic rationale for how this is anticipated to
function will be explained in the below section. Before proceeding however,
it’s relevant to recall what was referenced earlier about the US’ hegemonic
imperatives, since this explains why the US is so fearful of China’s economic
engagement with Europe that it plans to go as far as concocting destructive
Hybrid Wars to stop it.
Geo-Economic
Underpinnings
The geo-economic
justification for the Balkan Silk Road is evident, and it can be easily
explained by examining the larger Central and Eastern European area that it’s
envisioned to connect. The Southeastern European peninsula directly segues into
each of these two regions, and the Hungarian hub of Budapest is geographically
located in the center of this broad space. As it presently stands, there’s no
reliable north-south corridor linking Hungary and the markets around it (namely
Germany and Poland) to the Greek Mediterranean ports, thus meaning that Chinese
maritime trade with these leading economies must physically circumnavigate the
breadth of the entire European peninsula. The Balkan Silk Road changes all of
that and cuts out days of unnecessary shipping time by bringing Central and
Eastern European goods to the Greek port of Piraeus and within convenient reach
of Suez-crossing Chinese vessels. This saves on time and money, thus making the
route more profitable and efficient for all parties involved.
In the future,
the Central and Eastern European economies could ship their goods through
Russia en route to China via the Eurasian Land Bridge, but while that might be
beneficial from the perspective of producer-to-consumer relations, it’s hardly
advantageous for resellers who plan on re-exporting the said goods elsewhere in
the world. To take advantage of the dynamic economic developments currently
underway in East Africa and South Asia (be it in selling to those markets or in
physically building up a presence there), it’s best for either party’s
entrepreneurial actors to connect with one another at a maritime node that
enables them to efficiently and quickly load or offload their predetermined
transshipped goods. Geo-economically speaking, there’s no better place for this
than Piraeus, as it’s the closest European mainland port to the Suez Canal
which needs to be traversed in order to access the aforementioned destinations,
with or without any transshipping involved (i.e. if EU entrepreneurs decide to
directly export their goods there and not use a Chinese middleman).
In order to
connect to Piraeus, the high-speed rail corridor known as the Balkan Silk Road
is an infrastructural prerequisite, and its successful completion would lead to
a significant sum of European trade being profitably redirected towards China
and other booming non-Western locations like India and Ethiopia. The US fears
losing its position as the EU’s top trading partner, knowing that the slippery
strategic slope that could soon follow might lead to the rapid unraveling of
its hegemonic control.
Viewed from the
reverse perspective, the Balkan Silk Road is the EU’s last hope for ever having
a multipolar future independent of total American control, which is why it’s so
geopolitically necessary for Russia and China to see the project completed. The
inevitable New Cold War clash that this represents and the extraordinarily high
stakes that are involved mean that the Balkans will remain one of the main
flashpoints in this dangerous proxy struggle, despite the hierarchical switch
of its multipolar protagonists.
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