El mapa de arriba
resume brillantemente buena parte de lo que hay que saber sobre energía y sus derivaciones estratégicas
en Eurasia: quién produce, quién consume y por dónde van a venir, o ya están ocurriendo, los conflictos. Al respecto, la siguiente nota de Bruno Maçães, publicada
originalmente en The Cairo Review y reproducida hoy en el sitio web Russia
Insider, comenta un interesante libro de Dmitri trenin, ex militar ruso que
trabajara posteriormente para la NATO. El mapa de arriba fue tomado de dicho libro, que podríamos traducir (libremente) como: “A qué juega
Rusia en Medio Oriente?”. Acá va la nota (los subrayados son nuestros):
Título: Russia's
Bold New Energy Gamble: Organize Eurasia's Energy-Producing Core Into a United
Whole
Epígrafe: Russia
aims to position itself as a leader among energy-producing equals in Eurasia.
Since 2015, Russia has sought to play a more active role in the Middle East,
setting its sights on the region’s energy resources to achieve this strategic
goal
Texto: Having
abandoned any attempt to join the Western global political order, Russia seems
to have quickly found a new self-image: as the center and core of the Eurasian
supercontinent, it can reach in all directions and provide a bridge between
Europe and China on both ends. In this context, the Middle East has emerged as
a central axis of Russia’s strategic concerns, perhaps for the first time in
the country’s history.
In his recent
book What Is Russia Up To in the Middle East?, Dmitri Trenin shows how the
Middle East was always marginal to Russian geopolitical interests. When
progressing south, Russian military expansion had its eyes on the Balkans or
Istanbul, in some periods extending to British India, Afghanistan or northern
Iran, but a serious push beyond those areas was never considered. Against
Ottoman Turkey, Russia waged twelve wars. It took the czarist army half a century
to prevail over the mountaineers of the North Caucasus. Russia also conquered
Central Asia and invaded Afghanistan, a military adventure that left little
appetite for a return to the heart of the Muslim world. But neither the Russian
Empire nor the Soviet Union had ever fought directly in Arab lands. In 2015,
something genuinely new and unexpected took place. Russia stepped into the
Syrian conflict.
Any exercise
considering what the Kremlin’s intentions and goals might have been has to
start by noting how Syria offered a unique opportunity for promoting Russian
strategic interests. By 2015 the United States had exhausted all choices there
and showed signs of disinterest and disengagement. A Russian military
intervention would constitute something of a revolution in global affairs. For
the first time since the end of the Cold War, a country other than the United
States would be projecting military force far away from its borders without
consulting or involving Washington in the decision.
Syria had never
been considered important for Russian national interests, but in the new global
landscape that would quickly change. After all, Syria was a critical issue for
Turkey and Iran. The refugee crisis was affecting the European Union in
powerful ways and China saw the Syrian corridor linking West and Central Asia
to the Mediterranean as potentially decisive for the “Belt and Road”
initiative, its project of trade and infrastructure development across the
Eurasian supercontinent.
With every other
major actor reluctant to get involved in the Syrian civil war, Russia had an
opening—not to solve the political and humanitarian crisis but to become the
most important factor in any future solution.
Once these
initial elements were considered, more interesting possibilities started to
appear. Between 2013 and 2015, the Russian economy had been under extreme
pressure, not so much because of the sanctions imposed after the Ukraine crisis
but as a result of the precipitous fall in energy prices. As a major oil and gas
producer, Russia had neglected to prioritize energy geopolitics, paying a steep
price for that. While China, highly dependent on inward energy flows, had spent
decades extending its influence and leverage in Central Asia, Africa, and South
America—preparing for all possibilities and diversifying energy supply
routes—Russia knew it had more energy resources within its borders than it
could ever need and customers were forever assured a more or less mechanical
result of a growing and more balanced global economy. But that set of
assumptions neglected how other producers can hit your interests by
manipulating market prices.
By 2015 the
Kremlin was certain that the United States and Saudi Arabia were deliberately
lowering oil market prices to squeeze Russia and Iran. With their budgets so
highly dependent on oil revenues, Iran and Russia could be effectively
pressured into limiting their expansionist agendas. One could even hope that
they would become more inclined to abandon their nuclear ambitions, in the case
of Iran, and aggressions against Ukraine, in the case of Russia.
At the end of
2015, a 10 percent cut in public spending in Russia was the best evidence of
the growing stress from the pincer movement of international sanctions and low
energy prices in an economy that depends on crude at $100 a barrel. Faced with
a direct challenge, Russia decided that the Middle East was now the arena where
its future would be decided.
One Map, Three
Regions
In October 2017,
Rosneft Chief Executive Officer Igor Sechin took the unusual step of presenting
a geopolitical report on the “ideals of Eurasian integration” to an audience in
Verona, Italy. One of the maps projected on the screen during the presentation
showed the supercontinent—what Russian circles call “Greater Eurasia”—as
divided between three main regions. For Sechin, the crucial division is not
between Europe and Asia, but between regions of energy consumption and regions
of energy production. The former are organized on the western and eastern edges
of the supercontinent: Europe, including Turkey, and the Asia Pacific,
including India.
Between them we
find three regions of energy production: Russia and the Arctic, the Caspian,
and the Middle East. Interestingly, the map does not break these three regions
apart, preferring to draw a delimitation line around all three. They are
contiguous, thus forming a single bloc, at least from a purely geographic
perspective.
Sechin’s map has
a number of other interesting elements. As noted already, Turkey is left on the
European side of the line delimiting the energy production core in the west.
The same is true for Ukraine, which although unavoidable in this context is
still an unusual inclusion in a map sanctioned by the highest echelons of
Russian state power. If one looks at the world through the prism of energy
geopolitics, then Ukraine is a European country—a consumer, not a producer.
Some of the most
persistent foci of conflict in the contemporary world are located on the
delimitation line between regions of energy production and energy consumption:
eastern Ukraine, northern Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, and North Korea. The fact
may not be entirely coincidental. Many of these transition zones have become
valuable prizes in the global fight for energy resources, with major powers
often supporting rival internal factions in their bids for influence and
control.
In other cases,
the “foci of conflict” are transit hubs for energy flows, determining who has
control over them in case of future conflict. More interestingly, transition
zones are often fault lines between different political and economic models. It
seems to be the case, for example, that the attempt to create a form of
personal rule in Syria in the absence of oil wealth created the need for sectarian
politics.
Sectarianism—the
persistent promotion of mistrust and conflict between different ethnic or
religious groups—functions as an alternative to oil, a form of compensation for
the lack of oil resources such as those at the disposal of royal families of
the Arab Gulf. It provides the ruling elite with a third method of obtaining
consent from the governed, distinct from both oil patronage and the social
rights of a developed democracy. Lost between two competing models, Syria has
been unable to develop a genuinely stable variety of consensual politics.
The map
illustrates an important point about Russia’s new self-image. From the point of
view of energy geopolitics, Europe and the Asia Pacific are perfectly
equivalent, providing alternative sources of demand for energy resources.
Russia has been struggling to abandon its traditional orientation toward
Europe, hoping to benefit from the flexibility of being able to look both east
and west to promote its interests. It seems that Sechin and Rosneft can place
themselves in that position much more effortlessly.
Sechin’s map
subtly makes one final—and decisive—point. As you consider the three areas it
delimits, it becomes apparent that two of them are already led and organized by
a leading actor: Germany in the case of Europe and China for the Asia Pacific.
Production chains within these highly industrial regions are increasingly
managed by German or Chinese companies, which tend to reserve the higher value
segments for themselves. Their spheres of influence extend to all important
inputs, with one glaring exception: energy. In order to address this
vulnerability, the two regions of energy consumption will be attracted to the
core region, where they need to ensure ready and secure access to energy resources.
And their efforts may well be made easier by the fact that the core region of
energy production lacks a hegemon capable of ensuring its survival as an
autonomous unit in the Eurasian system.
One further and
decisive factor must be mentioned here. As the United States drastically
increased its oil and gas production over the last ten years—a result of the
shale gas revolution—its role in global energy geopolitics started to shift.
Two trends have become dominant. First, Washington no longer sees the Middle
East as critically important for its safety and prosperity. What was a constant
of American foreign policy for almost a century now seems open to revision. If
domestic supply can now take the place of imports, the United States is less
pressured to invest in peace and stability in the Middle East. It is not
difficult to speculate that its response to the Syrian civil war would have
been different—much more active and resolute—before the shale gas revolution.
This fact naturally opened opportunities for Russia, already discussed above.
Second, the new
energy abundance in the United States might justify using energy as a
geopolitical tool—steering energy flows and influencing market prices so as to
reward friendly states and punish others. As we have seen, the Kremlin grew
convinced that the United States was doing just that with regards to Russia and
Iran. Attempts to use energy markets to drive geopolitical outcomes reinforced
Russia’s conviction that it needed to acquire higher levels of dominance in
global energy markets, pushing it to intervene more actively in the Middle
East.
It is from this
perspective that Russia’s renewed interest in the region must be understood. By
consolidating all three energy-producing regions under its leadership, Russia
can take the decisive step in shaping the new Eurasian system. Its interests
lie more decisively in organizing a common political will for the core region
than in recovering the old dreams of integration with Europe.
That the Syria
military intervention is now regarded as a success—while the intervention in
Ukraine led nowhere—may point to the fact that the former, but not the latter,
took into account the facts of geopolitics.
On the one hand,
Russia feels at home in the Middle East. The pursuit of shifting goals against
a background of persistent chaos or state disorder appeals to Russian strategic
culture and its early success in Syria was quickly put to use. Suddenly Russia
became an important interlocutor for every country in the region. Turkey, Iran,
Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Israel all have significant interests in Syria, so they
all need Russia, the new effective overlord above Bashar Al-Assad. On the other
hand, Russian leverage in Europe and China depends on the extent to which Moscow
is able to increase its control over energy production. Efforts after 2013 to
engage China as a growing destination for its energy exports suffered from the
obvious difficulty that China had already developed a diversified pool of
suppliers and was therefore in a position to dictate purchasing terms that
Russia found unattractive.
That a deal was
finally reached with Saudi Arabia at the end of 2016 to collectively reduce oil
production and give a boost to global oil prices is a direct result of Russia’s
ability to influence decisions in the Middle East. Less than a year later, the
agreement achieved its objective of raising oil prices to a level of $60 per
barrel. King Salman’s visit to Russia in October 2017 was the first ever by a
Saudi monarch. With Russia facing a new set of sanctions, Moscow now appears
interested in exploring new sources of investment and capital. They may well
include Saudi Arabia, following the announcement of more than $3 billion in
potential investment deals upon the king’s visit.
Energy Diplomacy
In two other
maps, Sechin proceeded to show how energy projects offer the best example of
Eurasian integration. Major companies from Europe, Russia, China and elsewhere
typically pool capital and expertise, investing in exploration and refining
projects from Scotland and Egypt to Vietnam and Indonesia. Eurasian integration
implies the participation of energy consumers in energy production through
investments in the shareholder capital of producers. Rosneft is a good example,
with 50 percent of shares owned by the Russian state and stakes from BP, Qatar
Investment Authority, Glencore, and CEFC China Energy.
Moscow’s attempts
to spread itself across the Middle East can be understood through a series of
deals signed in the last two years. The oil and gas giant LUKOIL, the second
largest company in Russia after Gazprom, is in negotiations to start production
at the newly discovered Eridu field in Iraq. Gazprom Neft, Gazprom’s oil arm,
has taken exploration blocks in Iraqi Kurdistan while also operating the Badra
field in southern Iraq. Rosneft has signed cooperation agreements in Kurdistan
and Libya and has bought a 30 percent stake in Egypt’s giant Zohr offshore gas
field.
The very same day
he delivered his speech on Eurasian geopolitics, Sechin announced that Rosneft
would take control of Iraqi Kurdistan’s main oil pipeline, boosting its
investment in the autonomous region to $3.5 billion, despite Baghdad’s military
action sparked by a Kurdish vote for independence. The move helped shield
Kurdistan from increasing pressure from Baghdad.
Two weeks later,
Sechin went on to sign a preliminary pact with the National Iranian Oil
Company, the first step before a binding deal to participate in Iran’s oil and
gas projects over the next few years, with investments totaling up to $30
billion and a production plateau of 55 million tons of oil per year.
Four Russian oil
companies have even begun negotiating for opportunities in Syria, a venture
driven as much by politics as by commercial interest. The aim is not to explore
and extract Syria’s modest petroleum reserves, of course. By actively
participating in rebuilding and operating Syrian oil and gas infrastructure,
Russian energy companies will be in control of a critical transit route for
Iranian and Qatari oil and gas heading to Europe, bringing two rival producers
closer to its orbit and tightening its stranglehold on the European gas supply.
In 2009, Qatar proposed to run a natural gas pipeline through Syria and Turkey
to Europe. Instead, Al-Assad forged a pact with Iran to build a pipeline from
the Persian Gulf and then through Iraq and Syria and under the Mediterranean.
This project had to be postponed because of the war. When it is resumed, Russia
will be in control.
It is in the very
nature of the Eurasian system described by Sechin that the core energy
production region—provided it is sufficiently united and organized—will benefit
from its central position, being able to pick and choose between east and west
in order to obtain the most favorable terms. Russia and the Middle East are now
part of the same geopolitical unit. It took the Russian military intervention
in Syria for the world to start to come to terms with this reality.
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