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By  F. William  Engdahl | |
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Global Research, March 5, 2012 | |
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The
 discovery in late 2010 of the huge natural gas bonanza off Israel’s 
Mediterranean shores triggered other neighboring countries to look more 
closely at their own waters. The results revealed that the entire 
eastern Mediterranean is swimming in huge untapped oil and gas reserves.
 That discovery is having enormous political, geopolitical as well as 
economic consequences. It well may have potential military consequences 
too. 
Preliminary
 exploration has confirmed similarly impressive reserves of gas and oil 
in the waters off Greece, Turkey, Cyprus and potentially, Syria.  
Greek ‘energy Sirtaki’  
Not
 surprisingly, amid its disastrous financial crisis the Greek government
 began serious exploration for oil and gas. Since then the country has 
been in a curious kind of a dance with the IMF and EU governments, a 
kind of “energy Sirtaki” over who will control and ultimately benefit 
from the huge resource discoveries there.   
In
 December 2010, as it seemed the Greek crisis might still be resolved 
without the by-now huge bailouts or privatizations, Greece’s Energy 
Ministry formed a special group of experts to research the prospects for
 oil and gas in Greek waters. Greece’s Energean Oil & Gas began 
increased investment into drilling in the offshore waters after a 
successful smaller oil discovery in 2009. Major geological surveys were 
made. Preliminary estimates now are that total offshore oil in Greek 
waters exceeds 22 billion barrels in the Ionian Sea off western Greece 
and some 4 billion barrels in the northern Aegean Sea. [1]  
The
 southern Aegean Sea and Cretan Sea are yet to be explored, so the 
numbers could be significantly higher. An earlier Greek National Council
 for Energy Policy report stated that “Greece is one of the least 
explored countries in Europe regarding hydrocarbon (oil and gas-w.e.) 
potentials.” [2] According to one Greek analyst, Aristotle Vassilakis, 
“surveys already done that have measured the amount of natural gas 
estimate it to reach some nine trillion dollars.” [3]  Even if only a fraction of that is available, it would transform the finances of Greece and the entire region. 
Tulane
 University oil expert David Hynes told an audience in Athens recently 
that Greece could potentially solve its entire public debt crisis 
through development of its new-found gas and oil. He conservatively 
estimates that exploitation of the reserves already discovered could 
bring the country more than €302 billion over 25 years. The Greek 
government instead has just been forced to agree to huge government 
layoffs, wage cuts and pension cuts to get access to a second EU and IMF
 loan that will only drive the country deeper into an economic decline. 
[4]  
Notably,
 the IMF and EU governments, among them Germany, demand instead that 
Greece sell off its valuable ports and public companies, among them of 
course, Greek state oil companies, to reduce state debt. Under the best 
of conditions the asset selloffs would bring the country perhaps €50 
billion. [5] Plans call for the Greek state-owned natural gas company, 
DEPA, to privatize 65% of its shares to reduce debt. [6] Buyers would 
likely come from outside the country, as few Greek companies are in a 
position in the crisis to take it. 
One
 significant problem, aside from the fact the IMF demands Greece selloff
 its public oil interests, is the fact that Greece has not declared a 
deeper exclusive economic zone like most other countries which drill for
 oil. There was seen little need until now. An Exclusive Economic Zone 
(EEZ) gives a state special mineral rights in its declared waters under 
the Third United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), 
which came into force in November 1994. Under UNCLOS III, a nation can 
claim an EEZ of 200 nautical miles from its coastline. [7] 
Turkey
 has previously stated it would consider it an act of war if Greece 
drilled further into the Aegean. [8] Until now that did not seem to have
 serious economic consequences, as no oil or gas reserves were known. 
Now it’s an entirely different ballgame.   
Evangelos
 Kouloumbis, former Greek Industry Minister recently stated that Greece 
could cover “50% its needs with the oil to be found in offshore fields 
in the Aegean Sea, and the only obstacle to that is the Turkish 
opposition for an eventual Greek exploitation.” [9] 
Hillary dances the Sirtaki too… 
In
 July 2011 Washington joined the Greek energy Sirtaki. Secretary of 
State Hillary Clinton flew to Athens with energy on her mind. That was 
clear by the fact she brought with her her Special Envoy for Eurasian 
Energy, Richard Morningstar. Morningstar was husband Bill Clinton’s 
Special Advisor to the President on Caspian Basin Energy Diplomacy, and 
one of the Washington strategic operatives in the geopolitical battles 
to dismember the Soviet Union and surround a chaos-ridden Russia with 
hostile pro-NATO former states of the USSR. Morningstar, along with his 
controversial aide, Matthew Bryza, have been the key Washington 
architects of Washington’s geopolitically-motivated oil and gas pipeline
 projects that would isolate Russia and its Gazprom gas resources from 
the EU. Bryza is an open opponent of Russian Gazprom’s South Stream gas 
pipeline that would transit the eastern Mediterranean states. [10] 
Clearly the Obama Administration is not at all neutral about the new 
Greek oil and gas discoveries. Three days after Hillary left Athens the 
Greek government proposed creation of a new government agency to run 
tenders for oil and gas surveys and ultimate drilling bids. 
Morningstar
 is the US specialist in economic warfare against Russian energy 
diplomacy. He was instrumental in backing the controversial B-T-C oil 
pipeline from Baku through Tbilisi in Georgia across to the Turkish 
Mediterranean port of Ceyhan, a costly enterprise designed solely to 
bypass Russian oil pipeline transit. He has openly proposed that Greece 
and Turkey drop all historic differences over Cyprus, over numerous 
other historic issues and agree to jointly pool all their oil and gas 
reserves in the Aegean Sea. He also has told the Greek government it 
should forget cooperation with Moscow on the South Stream and 
Bourgas-Alexandroupolis gas pipeline projects. [11] 
According
 to a report from Greek political analyst Aristotle Vassilakis published
 in July 2011, Washington’s motive for pushing Greece to join forces 
with Turkey on oil and gas is to force a formula to divide resulting oil
 and gas revenues. According to his report, Washington proposes that 
Greece get 20% of revenues, Turkey another 20% and the US-backed Noble 
Energy Company of Houston Texas, the company successfully drilling in 
the Israeli and Greek offshore waters, would get the lion’s share of 
60%. [12] 
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s  husband, Bill, is a Washington lobbyist for Noble Energy. [13] And some Cyprus complications… 
As
 if these geopolitical complications were not enough, Noble Energy, has 
also discovered huge volumes of gas off the waters of the Republic of 
Cyprus. In December 2011 Noble announced a successful well offshore 
Cyprus in a field estimated to hold at least 7 trillion cubic feet of 
natural gas. Noble’s CEO, Charles Davidson remarked to the press, “This 
latest discovery in Cyprus further highlights the quality and 
significance of this world-class basin.” [14] 
Cyprus
 is a complicated piece of real estate. In the 1970’s as declassified US
 Government documents recently revealed, then-US Secretary of State 
Henry Kissinger actively encouraged and facilitated arms to the Turkish 
regime of Kissinger’s former Harvard student and then- Prime Minister 
Bulent Ecevit, to stage a military invasion of Cyprus in 1974, in effect
 partitioning the island between an ethnically Turkish north and an 
ethnically Greek Republic of Cyprus in the south, a division which 
remains.  The Kissinger strategy,
 backed by the British was believed intended to create a pretext for a 
permanent US and British military listening post in the eastern 
Mediterranean during the Cold War. [15] 
Today
 the ethnically Greek south, where Noble has discovered large gas 
deposits, is a member of the EU. Its President, Demetris Christofias, is
 the only national leader in the European Union who is a communist. He 
is also a close friend of Israel, and of Russia. In addition, he is a 
major critic of American foreign policy, as well as of Turkey. [16] 
Now
 Israel is planning to build an underwater gas pipeline from the Israeli
 Levantine fields across Cyprus waters onto the Greek mainland where it 
would be sold on the EU market. The Cyprus and Israel governments have 
mutually agreed on delimitation of their respective economic zones, 
leaving Turkey in the cold. Turkey openly threatened Cyprus for signing 
the agreement with Noble Energy. That led to a Russian statement that it
 would not tolerate Turkish threats against Cyprus, further complicating
 Turkish-Russian relations. [17] 
Turkish-Israeli
 relations, once quite friendly, have become increasingly strained in 
recent years under the Erdogan foreign policies. Ankara has expressed 
concern about Israel's recent ties with its historic antagonists, Greece
 and the Greek side of Cyprus. Turkey's ally the Turkish Republic of 
Northern Cyprus, fears it could miss out on its fair share of the gas 
after Israel and Nicosia signed an agreement to divide the 250 
kilometers of sea that separate them. [18] 
It
 becomes evident, especially when we glance at a map of the eastern 
Mediterranean, that the oil and gas prospective bonanza there is a 
rapidly unfolding conflict zone of tectonic magnitude involving 
strategic US, Russian, EU, Israeli and Turkish, Syrian and Lebanese 
interests.  F. William Engdahl is the author of A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World Order 
Notes 
1. Ioannis Michaletos, Greek Companies Step Up Offshore Oil Exploration—Large Reserves Possible, December 8, 2010, accessed in http://www.balkanalysis.com/greece/2010/12/08/greek-companies-step-up-offshore-oil-exploration-large-reserves-possible/.  
2. Ibid. 
3. Hellas Frappe, Hillary came to Greece to seal oil exploration deals!, July 21, 2011, accessed in http://hellasfrappe.blogspot.com/2011/07/special-report-hillary-came-to-greece.html.  
4. Chris Blake, Drilling for oil in the Aegean nay help ease Greece’s debt crisis, July 7, 2011, accessed in https://www.hellenext.org/reinventing-greece/2011/07/drilling-for-oil-in-the-aegean-may-help-ease-greeces-debt-crisis/  
5. Ibid. 
6. John Daly, Greece Considering Plugging Aegean Islands into Turkish Energy Grid, 22 November 2011, accessed in http://www.businessinsider.com/greece-considering-plugging-aegean-islands-into-turkish-energy-grid-2011-11.  
7.
 United Nations, United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea of 10 
December 1982: PART VI: CONTINENTAL SHELF, Article76, Definition of the 
continental shelf, accessed in http://www.un.org/depts/los/convention_agreements/texts/unclos/part6.htm.  
8. Chris Blake, op. cit. 
9. Ioannis Michaletos, op. cit. 
10. Hellas Frappe, op. cit. 
11. Ibid. 
12. Ibid. 
13. Hugh Naylor, Vast gas fields found off Israel’s shores cause trouble at home and abroad, January 24, 2011, accessed in http://www.thenational.ae/news/world/middle-east/vast-gas-fields-found-off-israels-shores-cause-trouble-at-home-and-abroad#full.  
14. Noble Energy Press Release, Significant Natural Gas Discovery Offshore Republic of Cyprus, December 28, 2011, accessed in http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/significant-natural-gas-discovery-offshore-republic-of-cyprus.  
15. Larisa Alexandrovna and Muriel Kane, New documents link Kissinger to two 1970s coups, June 26, 2007, accessed in http://rawstory.com/news/2007/Intelligence_officers_confirm_Kissinger_role_in_0626.html.  
16. Yilan, Cyprus conflict defies ready solution, May 30, 2011, accessed in http://turkeymacedonia.wordpress.com/2011/05/30/cyprus-conflict-defies-ready-solution/.  
17.
 Stephen Blank, Turkey and Cyprus Gas: More Troubles Ahead in 2012, 
Turkey Analyst, vol. 5 no. 1, 9 January 2011, accessed in http://www.silkroadstudies.org/new/inside/turkey/2012/120109B.html.  
18. Hugh Naylor, op. cit. | |
 
 
 
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