Mientras el
Imperio se desintegra, se aprecian signo de reacomodamientos y ajustes a los
nuevos tiempos en prácticamente todo el planeta. Hoy miramos por un rato a la
región de los Balcanes, en el sudeste europeo. La nota que sigue es de William
Engdahl para el sitio web New Eastern Outlook:
Texto: Turkey,
Russia and Interesting New Balkan Geopolitics
Texto: The
geopolitical template of the entire European Union is undergoing one of its
most profound changes since the collapse of the Soviet Union more than twenty-five
years ago. At the June 30 meeting in Ankara of the Turkish-Hungarian Business
Forum Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán stated that Hungary “stands by its
friends” and it is on Turkey’s side in its current war of words with the
European Union. The Hungarian Prime Minister also praised Turkey’s role in
preventing a huge further refugee flow into the EU, noting that “Without Turkey
Europe would have been flooded with many millions of immigrants,” stating that
for this Turkey “deserves respect.” Behind the comments, calculated to enrage
the EU and its unelected, faceless bureaucrats, stands far more than the issue
of refugees and rights of national sovereignty.
There’s a major
tectonic shift underway not only in Hungary but also across the entire Balkans.
The shift involves Erdogan’s Turkey and also Putin’s Russia. The outlines of a
new Balkans geopolitics are emerging and it’s opening huge fault-lines within
the EU between die-hard NATO Atlanticists and pragmatic EU states more keen on
economic development and the health and safety of their countries than in
defending a bankrupt declining USA Superpower.
Hungarian Prime
Minister Orbán was in Turkey for no casual photo op. He was there to talk
business, economic business. He brought with him half of his cabinet and around
70 business leaders to discuss areas of increased bilateral economic
cooperation. Orbán also met privately with Turkish President Erdogan and Prime
Minister Binali Yildirim.
Energy Hub for
Southeast Europe
Though it was
played down in media releases, a central issue discussed in Ankara was the
prospect of Russian natural gas imports via Turkey’s Turkish Stream gas
pipeline.
With the legally
dubious new US sanctions bill targeting European companies investing in the
Russian-German Nord Stream II gas pipeline, which would bypass Ukraine, Russia
is accelerating its priority to complete construction of its Turkish Stream gas
pipeline from the already-built gas pumping station near Anapa in Southern
Russia, going beneath the Black Sea, that will pass through Turkey to the
Bulgarian and perhaps Greek borders.
The latest
incredibly foolish US Congressional sanctions, aiming as well at Iran and North
Korea, punish German and Austrian companies investing in the northern EU Nord
Stream II pipeline from near St Petersburg, claiming it’s illegal under
international law for a US President to sanction companies outside their
territorial jurisdiction, legally termed extra-territoriality.
The announcement
of new sanctions aimed at Nord Stream II has led Russia to accelerate laying of
its Black Sea Turkish Stream line, currently running ahead of plan. Gazprom
contractor Swiss Allseas has laid about 15 miles of the pipeline under the
Black Sea since May. The first of two parallel pipelines is due to open in
March 2018, the second in 1919. The annual capacity of each leg is estimated to
reach 15.75 billion cubic meters of natural gas or a total of almost 32 bcm for
both.
Here is where
things get interesting.
Balkans Joining
Turkish Stream
In early July
newly elected Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov announced that he intended
to sign an agreement on transit of gas from the Russian-Turkish Turkish Stream
pipeline. He also signed an agreement with neighbor Serbia, not an EU member– and
not likely ever to become one because of her strong ties with Russia among
other things. Under the new agreement, Serbia will ultimately receive 10
billion cubic meters of Gazprom Turkish gas.
On June 29 as
Prime Minister Aleksandar Vu?i? took the office of Serbian President, Ana
Brnabic became Prime Minister. She told Parliament that she would seek a
“balanced foreign policy” and her government would especially seek good
relations with Russia and China. Serbia’s new Defense Minister, Alexandar Vulin,
was bitterly opposed by Washington among other things for his known pro-Russian
orientation. Aleksandar Vu?i? himself met with Vladimir Putin the week before
his election as President and reaffirmed the close relations between Russia and
Serbia.
On July 5,
Hungary’s government also signed an agreement to receive gas from Turkish
stream. Earlier this year Russia’s President went to Budapest where he and
Prime Minister Orbán discussed Hungarian participation in Turkish Stream as
well as Russian construction of nuclear plants in Hungary.
At the World Oil
Congress on July 9-11 in Istanbul Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo?an made
clear that Turkey aims to become an energy hub between east and west, north and
south. In short all the elements of a major new realignment are coming together
between Balkan states, Russia and Turkey.
Turkish Stream
In December 2014
after the Brussels EU Commission, backed by Washington, pressured the Bulgarian
government to cancel the agreement to land Gazprom gas via the South Stream
pipeline to the Bulgarian port of Burgas, Russian President Putin announced
that South Stream was dead. At the same time Russia began negotiations with
Turkey on the Turkish Stream alternative.
To avoid punitive
EU laws, Gazprom’s Turkish Stream pipeline passing through Turkey will end at
the Turkish-Bulgarian border, with the second possibly ending at Lüleburgaz in
the Marmara region of Turkey, close to Turkey’s border with Greece. From there
it would be up to the purchasing countries to contract their own pipelines and
construct them for the use of the Turkish Stream. EU law forbids Gazprom from
building and operating its own gas pipelines inside the EU.
The Baltic Shift
In recent months
as Brussels EU policies become more and more onerous, the countries of eastern
Europe, especially Hungary, Czech Republic and Bulgaria have turned their
sights eastward to Eurasia and especially Russia and China and their growing
infrastructure investments in OBOR and other Eurasian infrastructure networks.
In February 2017
during a visit of Russian President Putin to Budapest, Hungary signed a $17
billion contract with the Rosatom Group, Russia’s state nuclear power company
for construction of two reactors at Paks Nuclear Power Station, the only nuclear
plant in the country. Russia also has 51% stake in a Czech project company,
Nuclear Power Alliance, together with Czech Skoda JS that will bid for several
planned Czech nuclear plants. The latest Czech national energy plan views
nuclear electricity as a safe way to meet EU CO2 emission reduction targets as
does Hungary.
The Turkish
government has also chosen Russia’s Rosatom to build its first nuclear power
plant, the Akkuyu NPP, with four reactors near the Mediterranean in southern
Turkey across from Cyprus. The first unit costing $20 billion is being built by
a Russian-Turkish consortium together with the Turkish construction group,
Cengiz-Kalyon-Kolin (CKK). It will be operational in 2023.
Today, as the USA
and most of Western Europe have frozen investment in nuclear power technology
and has lost qualified trained manpower, Russia emerges as the world leader in
export of nuclear technology with over 60% of the global market.
Areva, Europe’s
largest nuclear plant producer based in France has not won a foreign contract
since 2007. In the USA Westinghouse, the largest US nuclear plant provider
historically, has undergone troubling times to put it mildly. The Pittsburg
group’s nuclear power business was sold and today is owned by Japan’s Toshiba
group. The Westinghouse nuclear group, which recently contracted to supply four
new domestic US plants, their first in thirty years, is plagued by cost
overruns and law suits and Westinghouse Electric has been forced to declare
bankruptcy. Russia by contrast currently has contracts to build 34 reactors in
13 countries, with an estimated total value of $300 billion. ix
The significance
of these natural gas and nuclear electricity deals by Russia with Hungary, the
Czech Republic, Serbia, Bulgaria and Turkey are creating the horror of
Washington, a shift of a disillusioned Baltic region from a politically
bankrupt Brussels EU and a Germany which has lost its bearings.
Notable in this
context is the latest confirmation by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of
the $2.4 billion purchase of several units of the advanced Russia’s S-400
anti-aircraft defense systems, despite fierce efforts by the Trump
Administration and by NATO to stop it. The advanced S-400 is considered by
military experts as the most capable and lethal long-range air defense missile
system on the planet, far more formidable than the US Patriot system that
Washington wanted to have Turkey buy.
The fact that now
several nations of the Balkans are clearly upgrading their economic relations
with Russia and with Turkey underscores the reality of a European Dis-union
rather than the promised European Union. The foolish EU Commission decision to
take Hungary, the Czech Republic and Poland to EU court for rejecting mandatory
Brussels refugee quotas has also widened the divide between the EU east and the
west.
Top-down
political constructions such as today’s EU and all its anti-democratic
institutions such as the EU Commission and the European Parliament which stomp
on basic national sovereign rights, much like sado-masochistic personal
relations, are inherently unviable. As the last quarter century of experience
with Washington as the world Sole Superpower since the collapse of the Soviet
Union demonstrate, Top Dog-Under-Dog is no viable model for healthy peaceful
international relations. The hysterical sound of who is most loudly barking
says it all.
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