Saturday 13 June 2015

Pipe Dreams - The Struggle for Caspian Oil (1998)




Azerbaijan's Riches Alter the Chessboard
    T. Don Stacy
Amoco's T. Don Stacy educated U.S. officials on the Caspian's wealth.
First of three articles
By Dan Morgan and David B. Ottaway
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, October 4, 1998; Page A1
BAKU, Azerbaijan – The message that Amoco Corp.'s T. Don Stacy took to a small political gathering on the morning of Aug. 6, 1996, seemed hopelessly obscure compared with the usual concerns of the lobbyists and business tycoons assembled at the White House.
Stacy, who directed Eurasian operations for the Chicago-based oil company, was incensed at what he considered misguided U.S. policies toward a remote Central Asian country on the western shore of the Caspian Sea – hardly a preoccupation of, for example, New York Yankees' owner George Steinbrenner, one of those on hand.
But as Stacy pressed his points on the strategic importance of Azerbaijan's oil deposits, one listener was riveted. Without waiting for Stacy to finish, President Clinton jumped in to clarify several geopolitical points, then strode to a blackboard and drew a remarkably accurate map of the Caspian region.
Before the meeting ended, Amoco – the largest U.S. investor in Azerbaijan's oil boom – had what it wanted: a promise from Clinton to invite the Azerbaijani president to Washington. Six months later the company, which traditionally donated heavily to the Republicans, contributed $50,000 to the Democratic Party. In August 1997, Clinton received President Heydar Aliyev with full honors, witnessed the signing of a new Amoco oil exploration deal and promised to lobby Congress to lift U.S. economic sanctions on Azerbaijan.
The ties between Amoco and Azerbaijan – and Amoco's role in pushing the United States closer to this Caspian nation – reflect a complex new choreography involving oil companies, big powers and regional governments vying for influence in the strategic borderlands between Russia and the Middle East.
The key players are not only familiar companies such as Amoco, Mobil Corp. and Chevron Corp., but also senior officials of governments stretching from Washington to Moscow, and Beijing to Tehran. The stakes are enormous financially and, as Clinton's energetic intervention suggested, geopolitically. Azerbaijan, like neighboring Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan, sought to lure American oil companies and then the U.S. government to help shore up its financial and political independence.
The ultimate prize is an oil and gas patch potentially larger than those discovered three decades ago in the North Sea and Alaska's North Slope. U.S. experts estimate that the region could produce at least 3 million barrels of oil a day by 2010, worth $14 billion a year at current prices. That is far less than Saudi Arabia but more than Kuwait – although a vocal minority of analysts believes the Caspian's reserves have been substantially overestimated. The region's reserves of natural gas – a relatively clean fuel for a world fretting over pollution and global warming – are the world's third largest behind the Middle East and Russia, according to a State Department report.
The drive by U.S. companies to exploit these resources already has produced a political realignment of historic dimensions, including an unprecedented American presence in a region that had been under almost continuous Russian control since the mid-19th century.
Azeri refugees
Oil companies claim U.S. sanctions against Azerbaijan limit U.S. aid to Azeri refugees like these at Saatli.(By Dan Morgan – The Washington Post)
    
But U.S. interest in the region also poses risks and policy dilemmas for the United States that seem likely to intensify. 
Foremost is the U.S. relationship with Moscow. Both imperial Russia and the Soviet Union viewed the Caspian resources as a birthright. Now Russia accuses Washington of maneuvering to limit Moscow's control and establish a U.S. sphere of influence in the region. 
Caspian oil also is central to the Clinton administration's internal debate over U.S. relations with Tehran. Some American oil companies view Iran as the cheapest, fastest exit route for Caspian oil; that's counter to other interests – and Clinton administration policy – favoring continued U.S. government efforts to isolate the Islamic state.
American involvement is just what the leaders of the newly independent nations of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan wanted when they set about early in the decade to woo companies flying the flag of the world's only superpower.
"They recognized that with the forces they have around them – Russia and Iran – only a strong relationship with the United States provides an opportunity for stability and for not being totally dominated," said a U.S. oil executive who requested anonymity. "Since the U.S. government was slow to pick up on the importance of the region, they forged relations with U.S. business."
"We used oil for our major goal ... to become a real country," said Ilham Aliyev, vice president of Azerbaijan's state oil company and son of the country's president.
By investing more than $2 billion in the three former Soviet republics with most of the Caspian's oil and gas, American oil companies helped revive collapsed economies and end more than a century of economic dependence on Russia. But there were political and strategic gains as well.
American oil companies became advocates in Washington for the Caspian governments, calling attention to Caspian wealth, supporting Caspian political causes and putting the Caspian on the agenda of Washington's policy debates.
Representatives of American oil companies in Azerbaijan, for example, pressed administration officials "at every forum, meeting and luncheon" to become more involved in ending a bloody territorial dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia, according to one U.S. executive. Last year, with Clinton's support, they also lobbied successfully in Congress to ease U.S. economic sanctions on Azerbaijan imposed in 1992 because of its war with Armenia.
Chevron Corp., the U.S. oil company with the largest investment in Kazakhstan, has battled in Moscow and Washington on behalf of a Kazakh plan to redirect the country's oil exports from the Russian market to hard-currency Western ones – crucial to the economic independence of Kazakhstan. Mobil Corp. placed advertisements in U.S. newspapers earlier this year extolling the accomplishments of the government of Turkmenistan, led by a controversial, former Communist strongman.
These relationships are binding the U.S. government closer to a region beset by ethnic rivalries and armed separatist movements, and ruled by corrupt, autocratic regimes. The United States, in pursuing Caspian oil, risks becoming embroiled in a "zone of instability and crisis," according to Martha Brill Olcott, a Russian specialist at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
The ties that bind the United States to the Caspian region seem certain to tighten, if only because U.S. energy companies have few alternatives as attractive. They are blocked by U.S. policy from investing in Iran and Iraq, and prospects elsewhere pale compared with the Caspian.
The blunt truth, according to one American oil man, is that "there are not a lot of Caspians out there."
How the United States came to be a player so far from home is a story of post-Cold War geopolitics and old-fashioned wildcatters, of a weakened Moscow and an emboldened Washington, of oil and money and power. And it is a tale with an ending still being written. 


    Turkish workers
Turkish workers build a pipeline from Baku, Azerbaijan, on the Caspian Sea, to Supsa, Georgia, on the Black Sea.(AIOC photo)
Page TwoGrasping the Potential

By the time Don Stacy met Clinton in 1996, Amoco was the most prominent U.S. institution in Azerbaijan. From its headquarters in a handsomely restored mansion in Baku's old town, the company ran child-immunization programs, subsidized Azerbaijani musicians and sponsored student exchanges. 
But in the early years of the Baku oil rush, it was far from certain that Amoco – or any American company – would prevail over a small cast of fortune hunters, polyglot middlemen and oil company agents who were the first to sense a bonanza. Before an American company could muscle its way in, others had to be muscled out. The British in particular – albeit represented by a trio of Americans – had the early edge in Azerbaijan.
Baku was still a provincial Soviet capital in 1990, and few U.S. oil executives appreciated its potential. Azerbaijan's oil industry had fallen on hard times since the 19th century, when the Rothschilds and the brothers of dynamite inventor Alfred Nobel turned Baku into a world oil center capable of challenging John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil for control of Europe's kerosene markets.
By 1990, unbridled Soviet exploitation had left an environmental wasteland of ancient derricks and black puddles of oil. Azerbaijani production was plummeting. Yet Soviet geologists had glimpsed the future in discovering 4.7 billion barrels of premium oil in a sausage-shaped stretch of the Caspian Sea called the Absheron Sill. Fabulous as it was, the treasure lay beneath hundreds of feet of water and beyond the reach of Soviet drilling technology.
One of the first Westerners to grasp the potential of the Absheron Sill was an American-born oil entrepreneur and dealmaker named Stephen E. Remp. A lanky, restless man who rode motorcycles and restored Scottish castles for recreation, Remp had been running Ramco, a small oil-services company in Aberdeen, Scotland, since 1977. But at 41, he was tired of cleaning other companies' oil pipes. He wanted to be in exploration and production – to "play with the elephants," as he told friends.
An attraction for oil frontiers ran in Remp's blood. His great-grandfather, a West Virginia oil driller, had followed oil west to California, the United States' oil frontier of the day. Remp began traveling to Baku in 1989, arriving on white-knuckle Aeroflot flights from Moscow, hoisting vodka glasses with local officials and learning what he could about the local prospects.
Baku was not a place for the faint-hearted. Tensions between Azerbaijan and neighboring Armenia were rising. In January 1990, Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev sent his army into Baku to suppress a nationalist uprising. Nearly 200 demonstrators were killed in the capital. Tanks prowled the streets for months, and Azerbaijanis wore black to commemorate the dead.
Remp thrived on the turmoil, which, he knew, would keep the big boys away as he cultivated his connections and gathered information.
Later in 1990, after the uprising had been quelled, Remp got a big break. The Azerbaijani state oil company hired him to identify Western oil companies that could develop its principal offshore plum, soon to be named the Azeri Field. Remp contacted British Petroleum PLC, the huge British multinational. BP, he learned, had picked up its own tantalizing reports about a Caspian Kuwait and had sent two American-born executives to check them out.
BP's men in Baku were Rondo Fehlberg, a former all-American wrestler from Brigham Young University, and Thomas M. Hamilton, a veteran of oil exploration from Alaska to Burma. They initially believed BP could make its own deal in Azerbaijan, but soon thought better of trying to exclude Remp and risk having him allied with competitors.
By October 1990, a consortium of BP, Remp's Ramco and the Norwegian state oil company, a longtime BP partner, had "the keys to the kingdom," as Fehlberg put it in an interview: an informal promise to exclusively develop the Azeri Field.
That very month, however, a 30-year-old Georgetown University political science professor arrived in Baku and upset their plans.
Azeri refugees
Georgetown professor S. Rob Sobhani got American companies a shot at the Azeri Field.(By Gerald Martineau
– The Washington Post)
    
S. Rob Sobhani's Azerbaijani family had emigrated to the United States from northern Iran in 1979. An Azerbaijani-speaking American was a novelty in Baku in those days, and Sobhani was summoned for a chat in the cavernous office of Communist Party boss Ayaz Mutalibov. 
A bust of Soviet state founder Vladimir Lenin on the mantel caught Sobhani's eye as Mutalibov waxed enthusiastic about his plans for American-style democracy in post-Soviet Azerbaijan. The party boss then confided his oil deal with BP.
Sobhani eventually would work as a paid consultant for Amoco. Then, however, he was an independent professor doing what he would later describe as his patriotic duty.
"Look," Sobhani recalled saying, "you can't do this with BP. There's only one America and only one true superpower and you've got to work with it."
Sobhani cited the "heavy-handed" behavior in the Middle East of BP's ancestor, Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. Groping for an example of the "fine" American oil companies whose virtues he had extolled, Sobhani thought of one: Amoco.
The idea of inviting in the Americans seemed to hit Mutalibov as if delivered from the bust of Lenin perched behind his shoulder.
That same day, Remp was in the office of the head of the Azerbaijani state oil and gas agency when Mutalibov telephoned with a command: Cancel the exclusive BP deal and give the Americans a shot at the Azeri Field.
Jockeying for Position

The playing field had been leveled for U.S. companies, but success was not guaranteed.
In April 1991, an Amoco delegation presented the company's bid for developing the Azeri Field. Two months later the Azerbaijanis anointed Amoco and its partner, McDermott International Inc., to negotiate a binding contract.
But now it was Amoco's turn to find the treasure suddenly yanked away. Azerbaijan declared independence on Aug. 30, 1991. During the next three years, the new nation was humiliated in a bloody war with Armenia that made refugees of hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis and gave Armenia control of Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous piece of Azerbaijani territory the size of Rhode Island. Rival political groups and local militias jockeyed for power. Before a cease-fire in March 1994, Baku would witness four changes of government.
As regimes rose and fell, the foreign oil men holed up at the Hotel Intourist near the Baku waterfront and maneuvered to keep their bids alive. With neither BP nor Amoco able to close a deal, other companies – including the U.S. giants Pennzoil Co. and Unocal Corp. – dispatched agents to work the Azerbaijani bureaucracy.
Seedy as it was, the Intourist was a refuge where foreign oil men traded rumors and kept tabs on one another – a "close community that enabled you to know who was in town and who they were seeing on any given day," as an American executive put it.
Remp imported single malt Scotch and Scottish shortbreads to keep up morale. At night, the oil men repaired to the Intourist's dingy bar, the door of which was papered with oil company decals, or to Charlie's, a restaurant run by an expatriate American who immortalized regulars by putting their caricatures on the wall.
By day, when it was safe enough to venture out, the oil men pressed their causes and curried favor at the Azerbaijani ministries, where officials changed with each new government. Unocal, for example, catering to Azerbaijani desires to improve ties with Islamic countries, took in a Saudi partner. Pennzoil launched a project to capture the gas flaring off uselessly from the Azerbaijanis' decrepit oil fields.
Business in Baku invariably was conducted in an atmosphere of intrigue, in which personal relationships counted for much and public officials expected favors and gratuities. American companies, subject to criminal penalties if they violated U.S. anti-bribery statutes, often felt at a disadvantage.
"It was whimsical," said Frank A. Verrastro, then a Pennzoil representative in Baku and now a company lobbyist in Washington. "One day you were the favored and featured. Then someone could take a dislike to you and you couldn't get a meeting for a week." 
    Turkish workers
Turkish workers check a section of the pipeline.(By Dan Morgan – The Washington Post)
Page ThreeA British 'Coup' 

In September 1992, BP pulled off a coup that unnerved its competitors and appeared to put the British firm back on top. Former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher arrived in Baku and handed the Azerbaijani government two BP checks totaling $30 million. 
The money was a down payment for a proven field called Chirag and for an unproven bloc called Shak-Deniz. To Azerbaijani officials, a deal with BP was tantamount to a deal with the British government; not only did visiting British officials lobby relentlessly for the company, but for months Britain's diplomatic mission to Azerbaijan had operated out of the BP offices. 
By contrast, Azerbaijani officials didn't know what to make of the American companies, whose government seemed ignorant about – or even hostile to – their involvement in Azerbaijan. In the fall of 1992, for example, Congress – heavily lobbied by Armenian-American groups – banned most direct U.S. aid to Azerbaijan, while earmarking generous assistance to Armenia. 
For U.S. oil men in Baku, "the chill was there immediately" after the passage of Section 907, as the restrictive legislation was called, according to Tom Hamilton, who had left BP to become Pennzoil's chief of worldwide exploration. Section 907 "was always a lever, always a club, that they beat on you with when nothing else was working," Hamilton recalled. 
To Stacy, who took over Amoco's Caspian operations in mid-1993, Washington needed to be educated.
"We were the 'American Oil Company' and the Azeris felt like we had more pull with our government than we really did," Stacy later said. He began meeting with administration officials and members of Congress, offering primers on Central Asia's potential and geopolitics. Given the level of ignorance about the Caspian in Washington, he usually took along a map of the region.
The American Comeback

Heydar Aliyev took power in June 1993, after an armed insurrection ousted the country's elected president, Abulfez Elchibey. Aliyev was a 70-year-old former KGB chief who had served on the Soviet Politburo during the regime of Leonid Brezhnev. Some Azerbaijanis and Western oil men believed Moscow had engineered the coup in hopes of blocking a major oil deal by Baku with Western companies.
But Aliyev turned out to be the leader U.S. oil companies had been waiting for – a shrewd operator who understood petro-politics. After a shaky period when the Azerbaijanis put a pistol-toting Slovak businessman in charge of oil negotiations, Aliyev himself stepped in by directing his minions to pursue a deal at Amoco's office in Houston, heart of the U.S. oil industry.
Working in shirt sleeves on the fifth floor of the Amoco building and ordering pizza when talks dragged on at night, the negotiators hammered out an agreement, using Amoco computers to check their figures. On Sept. 20, 1994, Aliyev and oil executives gathered in Baku for the ceremonial signing of what the Azerbaijani president called the "deal of the century."
A consortium called the Azerbaijan International Operating Co. (AIOC) agreed to spend $7.4 billion to develop the three major fields: Azeri, Chirag and an adjacent patch, Guneshli. The avowed goal was to produce 800,000 to 1 million barrels a day by 2010.
U.S. companies – Amoco, McDermott, Unocal and Pennzoil – collectively took more than 40 percent, by far the largest bloc. Exxon Corp. would join the consortium the following year. BP was given a 17 percent share, and the rest was divided up among the Azeri oil company and a variety of smaller foreign concessionaires.
Remp was handsomely rewarded as the first foreign oil man into Baku in 1989. His Ramco got 2 percent; the little Scottish company could count on 8,000 to 12,000 barrels a day free and clear once pipelines were completed, potentially netting $30 million a year as long as the consortium stayed in business.
Pennzoil was in, but only after playing hardball. Before the final deal was announced, Azerbaijani officials summoned Hamilton and told him Pennzoil would be excluded.
"Basically the conversation started out that Pennzoil wasn't going to get any share, and at the end I had explained why we were going to get a share," Hamilton recalled. Hamilton reminded the Azerbaijanis that Pennzoil had recovered $3 billion from Texaco in a 1987 lawsuit settlement.
That, Hamilton suggested, was more money than Azerbaijan could afford to lose.
AIOC platform
The Azerbaijan International Operating Co. oil platform, off Baku.(AIOC photo)
    
The Pipeline Problem

In 1995, the AIOC consortium moved into a building in Baku once occupied by the Soviet Navy's House of Culture. The symbolism was not lost on Moscow.
Russia already had signaled its resistance to any U.S. inroads in the Caspian. Before his first trip to the region in 1994, Deputy Secretary of Energy William H. White took a phone call from Russian Energy Minister Yuri Shafranik.
"Remember," Shafranik warned, according to White, "those are Russian reserves. They will be developed by Russia."
Russia had only a modest piece of the AIOC deal – a 10 percent interest held by Russia's largest private oil company, Lukoil. But Russia possessed the leverage of geography.
The Caspian's landlocked resources could reach world markets only by crossing the territory of politically unstable neighbors or commercial competitors such as Iran and Russia. In Azerbaijan's case, all that was left of the Nobels' 19th-century pipeline from Baku to the Black Sea was "a trail of rust," as Hamilton put it. Azerbaijan's link to the world oil market consisted of a few rusty barges that could haul oil up the Volga River and a lone pipeline that ran the wrong way – from Russia into Azerbaijan – and passed through war-battered Chechnya.
The exporters also faced a unique legal conundrum: Who owned the Caspian and its resources? Earlier in the century, Iran and the Soviet Union had signed treaties designating the sea as their common lake. Now the Soviet Union was no more, but Moscow continued to assert its special treaty rights.
The situation left AIOC companies unusually dependent on international diplomacy to negotiate pipeline transit routes.
By early 1995, the U.S. oil companies operating in Azerbaijan had set up a Foreign Oil Companies group in Washington. It met with National Security Council energy expert Sheila Heslin and later with an interagency committee headed by her boss, Samuel R. "Sandy" Berger.
Government documents show that the NSC and oil companies worked together in June 1995 to forestall an attempt by Lebanese-American oil financier Roger Tamraz to promote his own pipeline from Baku to Turkey, via Armenia. Pennzoil's Hamilton alerted NSC officials of oil company opposition to the Tamraz initiative, effectively killing any White House support for the project.
The immediate issue facing the administration and the AIOC was the choice of an exit route for the initial flow of Caspian oil. A decision on a main export pipeline was deferred.
The Russian pipeline could be reversed cheaply, allowing oil to be pumped out of Azerbaijan. But that would allow Russia to dictate commercial terms for shipping AIOC oil; the pipeline also ran to the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk, closed by ice several months a year.
The Clinton administration and U.S. companies wanted other options. Ever since Chevron acquired the huge Tengiz field in Kazakhstan in 1990, Russia had imposed obstacles preventing a pipeline for Tengiz oil across its territory.
"If there wasn't an alternative [route], we'd be in the same boat as Chevron," one American oil company official later explained. "Russia had continually screwed them over. ... You really needed to have some leverage."
During the summer of 1995, Berger twice met with the AIOC companies. He worked to convince Terry Adams, a BP executive who served as AIOC president, of the need for a new $250 million pipeline west from Baku to Georgia's Black Sea port of Supsa, free of Russian control. BP favored the cheaper solution of spending $50 million to fix the pipeline through Russia.
Berger was persuasive. In September 1995, AIOC agreed to use both the Russian line and the new U.S.-backed western route. In the Clinton administration, a policy had emerged: "multiple pipelines" for Caspian oil.
Agreement at Last

The decision still had to be sold to Aliyev, whose government would negotiate the pipeline routes with neighboring countries. Given the pressures from Russia, that support was far from certain.
Soon after the AIOC decision, national security adviser Anthony Lake privately asked Zbigniew Brzezinski, his predecessor in the Carter administration, to carry a letter from Clinton to Aliyev. The letter stressed the U.S. preference for two pipelines and, as an incentive, offered Washington's help in resolving the dispute with Armenia.
Brzezinski eventually would become a paid consultant to Amoco. But as he left for Baku in September 1995, he later recalled, he was motivated by anxiety over Russian intentions in the Caucasus. The Clinton letter burned a hole in Brzezinski's pocket at a large dinner hosted by Aliyev at the presidential palace. When the Azerbaijani president invited the guests to his private "cave" in the basement, Brzezinski followed, wondering how to get Aliyev alone.
The cave was illuminated by lights resembling stalactites. Guests lounged on chairs and couches covered with sheepskin while Aliyev regaled his guests with stories from the Brezhnev days.
It was approaching midnight before Brzezinski could whisper to the president that they must talk alone. Looking regretful at having to leave the party, Aliyev led Brzezinski to his office. There Brzezinski pulled out the letter and summarized its contents.
Over the next several days, the two men held protracted talks. The Russians, Brzezinski learned, had demanded that all Azerbaijani oil go through Russia and that Russian troops be based in Azerbaijan.
On Oct. 2, Clinton called Aliyev to lobby for the double-route plan. Fortified by his new tacit alliance with Washington, Aliyev gave his approval a week later.
By early 1996, the Russians folded a weak hand, concluding that control over one of the two pipelines out of Azerbaijan was better than being excluded completely. But Russian-American frictions were only just beginning.

Gas Pipeline Bounces Between Agendas
    Niyazov and Clinton
Turkmenistan President Saparmurad Niyazov visited President Clinton in April. The prospect of much of the world's natural gas flowing through Iran thawed U.S.-Turkmen relations.(Reuters)
Second of three articles
By David B. Ottaway and Dan Morgan
Washington Post Staff Writers
Monday, October 5, 1998; Page A1
DAULETABAD GAS FIELD, Turkmenistan – Far out in a remote corner of this Central Asian desert, not a half-hour's drive from where the ancient Silk Road once crossed the tawny sand hills, a tangle of pipes rises out of nowhere. 
The 100-acre complex is the collection facility for one of the world's largest gas fields – "a jewel given to us by God," as one Turkmen gas official described it. But for more than a year Dauletabad has been as silent as the half-buried cities that lie along the abandoned caravan route between China and the Mediterranean. 
In August 1997, in a bold move that conjured up memories of 19th-century Turkmen khans staving off would-be Russian conquerors, President Saparmurad Niyazov halted gas deliveries to the Russian-controlled pipeline system that was built during the Soviet era. Niyazov said he "smelled old Soviet ambitions" in Russia's use of its pipeline monopoly to keep Turkmenistan's gas from competing with Russian gas in European markets. Soon, he hinted, Turkmen gas could be shipped south through Iran. 
For Niyazov, a product of the Soviet system, the closing of the valves was a dramatic declaration that business as usual was over. The sudden availability of 2.8 trillion cubic feet per year of gas previously committed to the Russian pipeline system propelled Niyazov from an obscure Central Asian strongman to a central figure in an intricate geopolitical drama that has drawn in Washington, Tehran, Moscow and assorted regional capitals. 
While the prize in the Caspian is an energy patch whose size is believed by many to exceed those in Alaska and the North Sea, the overarching issue is how to get the commodity out of landlocked Central Asia. The politics of pipelines seems as tangled as the routes themselves, and each route carried its own treacherous obstacles. But a simple ambition had come to unify American policy in the region: Tap the Caspian mother lodes while giving as little leverage as possible to Russia in the north and Iran in the south. 
Across the Caspian, Azerbaijan had already enlisted U.S. oil companies and pulled the Clinton administration into a crusade to build pipelines that would skirt Russia on the way to the Black Sea and the Mediterranean. In Kazakhstan, the Clinton administration was about to risk provoking Moscow again by promoting pipelines that would carry Kazakh oil to western markets without Russian interference. 
Now Turkmenistan had entered the game. By defying the Russians and hinting at a partnership with Iran, Niyazov was suddenly someone to be reckoned with. From Washington's perspective, the stakes were high enough to put this remote nation of 4 million people on the U.S. policy agenda. Niyazov was a player, and he had anted up one of the biggest gas reserves on Earth. 
Choice Fields Sold Off 

In the first years after winning independence in 1991, Turkmenistan seemed as obscure and unobtrusive as ever. Naive Turkmen officials auctioned off choice oil and gas fields for as little as $100,000 to foreign opportunity seekers. Among those who picked up cut-rate concessions were a Dubai car salesman, a Swedish real estate magnate and Roger E. Tamraz, the Lebanese American entrepreneur who subsequently became entangled in a U.S. Senate investigation of his donations to the Democratic National Committee. 
Turkmenistan's potential was enormous. Just inland from the Caspian shore were some of the world's oldest oil fields, and Soviet-era geological surveys indicated that the prospect for offshore finds was good. In the trackless Garagum Desert, away from a thin line of irrigated valleys, geologists had discovered one gas field after another beginning in the 1960s. By 1990, Dauletabad and the adjoining Sovietabad field were producing 1.6 trillion cubic feet a year, rivaling the gigantic gas fields of Siberia. 
Almost all of this gas was pumped north across Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan into a Russian pipeline and on to markets in Europe and the former Soviet republics. 
Alexander M. Haig Jr., a businessman who had served as NATO commander and secretary of state, was one of the first Westerners to propose that Niyazov end his dependence on Russian pipelines. Haig arrived in Turkmenistan in 1992 representing a U.S. investment company. The retired general stood apart from other foreign businessmen courting Niyazov's favors. As a denizen of boardrooms and executive suites, he seemed an unlikely comrade for Niyazov, a former Communist party boss partial to boisterous evenings of vodka-drinking. But Niyazov believed that in Haig he had access to the U.S. power structure, according to sources who observed the relationship. 
Haig became an unofficial Niyazov adviser and confidant, screening foreign companies and helping arrange a Niyazov visit to Washington in 1993. But the autocratic Turkmen leader was still being shunned by the new Clinton administration, and the closest Niyazov got to the White House was his room at the Madison Hotel five blocks away. 
That same year Haig formed a consortium with the idea of building a small pipeline to carry modest amounts of Turkmen gas across Iran to Turkey. But the project did not involve U.S. companies; Haig's pipeline enterprise was registered in the British Virgin Islands. 
Haig's consortium won endorsements from the energy ministers of Kazakhstan, Iran and Turkey, and the sultan of oil-rich Brunei was ready to invest, according to Charles D. Hartman, a Haig associate. But in Washington, economic initiatives involving Iran were still poison. The Clinton administration, like its predecessors, favored relentless international isolation of the Tehran regime for allegedly supporting terrorism. 
In March 1995, the White House stepped in to block a $1 billion oil deal between Conoco Inc. and Iran. Soon afterward, National Security Council officials let Haig know that the government opposed his project, too, and the idea died.
    Turkmen well
Workers inspect the shut-down gas well in eastern Turkmenistan.(By Dan Morgan – The Washington Post)
Page TwoThe Route to Pakistan 

To State Department strategists, the perfect pipeline out of Dauletabad lay in a different direction: from Turkmenistan across Afghanistan to Pakistan, connecting the gas resources of Central Asia to the surging economies of South Asia. Such a line would deprive Iran of transit fees for Turkmen gas crossing its territory while capturing the South Asian gas market coveted by Iran. 
The initial enthusiast for the Afghan route was not an American, however, but Carlos Bulgheroni, the short, workaholic chairman of the Bridas Group, an Argentine company. In 1993, a Bridas joint venture with Turkmenistan had begun laying more than 2,000 miles of seismic lines to map the geology of a potential gas field in eastern Turkmenistan. Two test wells confirmed a huge gas deposit 150 miles from the Afghan border. 
In the spring of 1995, Turkmenistan and Pakistan commissioned Bulgheroni's company to study the Afghan route. But that summer, a rival entered the game. John Imle, president of California-based Unocal Corp., wooed Niyazov and Benazir Bhutto, then prime minister of Pakistan, throughout July with a vision of a Unocal pipeline following roughly the same route as the one proposed by Bridas. 
A Unocal link had strong appeal for Niyazov. Afghanistan was in turmoil. A big American oil company could draw on the political muscle of the United States to promote Turkmenistan's energy interests. 
In October 1995, both Bulgheroni and Imle followed Niyazov to New York for the opening of the U.N. General Assembly. Each expected to be chosen to build the Afghan pipeline, according to sources close to the two men. On Oct. 21, the nod went to the Americans as Niyazov announced the selection of Unocal. Looking on at the announcement ceremony was former secretary of state Henry A. Kissinger, now a Unocal consultant. Given the uncertain political situation in Afghanistan, Kissinger said, the deal looked like "the triumph of hope over experience." 
Arrests Cloud Relationship 

The Clinton administration's relationship with Niyazov had begun sourly when the Turkmen leader jailed a group of opposition leaders just before the arrival in September 1993 of Assistant Secretary of State Strobe Talbott. A miffed Talbott canceled most of his meetings and left without even spending the night. 
But by 1996, Niyazov looked less offensive. His embrace of Unocal and his interest in a South Asian pipeline had piqued U.S. interest. That is clear from memos written in 1996 by Tsalik Nayberg, a Unocal representative in Ashgabat, the Turkmen capital. Some of Nayberg's reports to his superiors are part of the record in a civil lawsuit that Bridas filed against Unocal in Texas two years ago, charging Unocal with interfering with its business in Turkmenistan. 
Nayberg reported to Unocal on Sept. 17, 1996, that U.S. Ambassador "Michael Cotter feels President Niyazov is unhappy with us and is not entirely educated on major steps required to implement a project of such magnitude." 
Unocal was, in fact, in a difficult spot. Bridas had signed an exclusive contract in Afghanistan for pipeline transit rights, thwarting the American company. The defeat of the Kabul government by Taliban fundamentalist guerrillas in late 1996 brought Unocal new hope of cutting a deal in Afghanistan, but it proved short-lived. 
The Taliban quickly alienated U.S. public opinion by forcing women out of schools and workplaces and imposing a stringent new code of dress and behavior. While maintaining contacts with the Taliban, the Clinton administration shelved any idea of recognizing the regime. Without that U.S. imprimatur, banks and international financial institutions would not lend money to build the pipeline from Turkmenistan to Pakistan. 
The indefinite delay left Niyazov with few options at a time when he was under pressure to find new sources of gas revenue. 
Turkmenistan's gas exports had peaked in 1991 before sliding sharply. Debt-ridden customers such as Ukraine and Georgia fell behind on payments, and deliveries were reduced. Niyazov began scouting potential new customers in Pakistan, Turkey and China. 
In August 1997, the Russian gas monopoly Gazprom abruptly severed an arrangement that had allowed Turkmenistan to use Gaz prom's pipeline system to export 700 billion cubic feet of gas annually to Western Europe for payment in dollars. 
Gazprom's diminutive but volatile chief, Rem Vyakhirev, announced that Turkmenistan could keep using his pipeline network to supply customers in the former Soviet Union but not to reach European customers. Russia would keep those markets for itself. Vyakhirev sarcastically promised to do what he could to keep the Turkmen population "from starving to death." 
At an angry meeting with Vyakhirev in Moscow, Niyazov made his countermove. According to an account he later gave an American, the Turkmen leader declared, "We will cut off our gas." 
With the route to Pakistan blocked and relations with the Russians on the rocks, Niyazov was running out of options. He still had one obvious outlet, however, one certain to catch the attention of both Washington and Moscow.
Niyazov's interest in Iran as a pipeline route had not ended with the failure of the Haig proposal. In the summer of 1997, a $200 million pipeline to carry modest amounts of Turkmen gas into northern Iran was already under construction. Niyazov had also hired the British-Dutch conglomerate Royal Dutch/Shell to study various pipeline options, including one across northern Iran to Turkish power plants. 
For centuries, Turkmenistan's trade routes had run westward across northern Iran, home to at least 1 million ethnic Turkmen. Now tractor-trailers carrying goods from the Persian Gulf crossed into Turkmenistan from Iran and barreled north to old Silk Road cities such as Bukhara and Samarkand, in Uzbekistan, and Almaty, in Kazakhstan. Trains hauling Japanese and South Korean cars entered Turkmenistan from Iran at a new railroad crossing at the town of Sarakhs. 
The sudden prospect of a substantial share of the world's natural gas flowing through Iran galvanized the Clinton administration last fall into taking a harder look at its Caspian policy. Administration support for U.S. oil companies in the Caspian had been fitful at best since 1993. Many oil executives were unhappy with the Clinton team, complaining of turf battles, heavy turnover of key officials and lack of coordination. 
In Azerbaijan the main consortium of Western oil companies could detect few clear signals from Washington as it pondered a decision about the route of the principal pipeline to carry 1 million barrels a day of Azeri oil to world markets. 
The shortest and cheapest path led to a tanker port on Georgia's Black Sea coast, but the added oil cargoes would jeopardize the narrow, environmentally fragile Bosphorus Strait en route to the Mediterranean. Instead, Turkey favored a big pipeline from Baku to Ceyhan, a well-outfitted Turkish oil port in the eastern Mediterranean. 
That debate, along with Niyazov's overtures to Iran, forced an inter agency group in Washington to pull together a comprehensive Caspian policy reflecting U.S. interests. 
The result, unveiled last November by Federico Peña, then energy secretary, was a proposed Eurasian Transportation Corridor made up of gas and oil lines skirting both Russia and Iran. The plan envisioned a skein of east-west pipelines starting on the east side of the Caspian and passing under the sea before continuing to Turkey and the Mediterranean. 
The trans-Caspian oil connection fit the needs of a number of U.S. oil giants. To Chevron Corp., Mobil Corp. and Texaco Inc., which had major oil concessions east of the Caspian, it offered an alternative to Russia. Amoco Corp., Exxon Corp., Pennzoil Co. and Unocal also wanted more crude coming from east of the Caspian to help defray costs of the big pipeline planned to transport Azeri oil. 
A parallel trans-Caspian corridor for gas had a more openly geopolitical purpose. It would, according to oil analysts, reassure pro-Israeli factions and anti-Iranian hard-liners in the United States of the administration's commitment to isolate the Tehran regime. When Niyazov made his first official visit to Washington last spring, President Clinton touted the trans-Caspian gas line as an alternative to the Shell pipeline across Iran. 
Hardly had the administration unveiled its policy, however, than hints of a U.S. thaw toward Iran muddied the issue once again. In May, the White House announced it would not sanction French, Russian and Malaysian companies for developing Iran's largest offshore gas field. A month later, Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright called for the United States and Iran to develop "a road map leading to normal relations." 
The possibility of U.S.-Iranian detente undercut the argument against a gas line across northern Iran and divided the big U.S. oil companies. 
Mobil, which wanted U.S permission to deliver small amounts of oil to Iran from its concession in western Turkmenistan, urged the Clinton administration to seize "a unique opportunity to engage" Tehran. But Amoco, representing the consortium developing Azeri fields, warned State Department officials in July that an Iranian pipeline could divert the volumes needed to justify building the Azerbaijan-Turkey route. 
That high-level meeting reflected Niyazov's success in drawing the U.S. government into a search for solutions to his energy problems. Even so, it was becoming evident that the administration's ability to convert its pipeline vision into a reality was circumscribed by budgetary, ethnic and foreign policy factors. 
For example, the U.S. government could provide only limited assistance to pipeline construction across the Caspian, administration officials said, because Congress would not subsidize U.S. oil and gas companies. Barring subsidized loans, the administration was limited to offering modest loan guarantees and political risk insurance. 
Greek American and Armenian American lobbies also denounced legislation that supported the administration's east-west pipeline corridor. The ethnic lobbies contended the corridor would strengthen Turkey and Azerbaijan, enemies of their ancestral homelands. The legislation languishes. 
But those obstacles proved minor compared to the greatest risk posed by the U.S. pipeline proposal: the prospect of a conflict with Moscow. 
Morgan reported from Turkmenistan, Scotland and Texas; Ottaway reported from Moscow, Washington and Texas.

Kazakh Field Stirs U.S.-Russian Rivalry
    Matzke and Alekperov
Richard H. Matzke, left, who took Chevron into the Caspian, and Vagit Alekperov, who wanted to make Lukoil the biggest privately owned oil company in Russia. (Chevron)
Last of three articles
By Dan Morgan and David B. Ottaway
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, October 6, 1998; Page A1
TENGIZ OIL FIELD, Kazakhstan – In late January, as most of Washington fixated on bawdy revelations about a former White House intern and the president of the United States, a top Clinton administration expert on Central Asia flew to Moscow for urgent meetings with senior Russian officials. His mission: to salvage a multibillion-dollar American-Russian venture to exploit the world's biggest oil discovery in three decades – the Tengiz oil field in the former Soviet republic of Kazakhstan.
For four days, Commerce Department troubleshooter Jan H. Kalicki met repeatedly with Russian Oil Minister Sergei Kiriyenko. Kalicki sought to disabuse Kiriyenko of the belief, widely held in Moscow, that the joint project to build a 900-mile pipeline from Kazakhstan across southern Russia to the Black Sea was being sabotaged by the U.S. government and American oil companies.
A project once emblematic of U.S.-Russian cooperation in the post-Cold War era now threatened to become a geopolitical fiasco and the latest source of tension between Washington and Moscow over control of Caspian energy riches.
In one sense, the squabble over Tengiz oil fit the Caspian pattern already established in Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan. Kazakhstan, like the two other former Soviet republics, had sought to buttress its independence and counter Russian hegemony by luring U.S. oil giants with its largely untapped energy wealth. Behind the American companies loomed the U.S. government, now eager to further American commercial interests and limit the influence of Russia to the north and Iran to the south.
But Kazakhstan was different from its Caspian neighbors – bigger, richer and more intimately lashed to Russia. Sharing a 4,250-mile border with Russia, Kazakhstan also was home to 6 million ethnic Russians and beneficiary of billions of rubles in Soviet energy investments. Any American effort to woo the Kazakhs or tap their oil patch provoked suspicious resentment in Moscow.
Drawing on a soothing bedside manner and 20 years of foreign policy experience, Kalicki tried to patch things up with Kiriyenko. He knew that the Russian grievances were only the latest uproar in the star-crossed, eight-year history of the Tengiz project. In December, in a tense confrontation at Moscow's Radisson Hotel, the principal American companies in the project – led by California-based Chevron – had leveled charges of incompetence and cronyism at their partners from Lukoil, Russia's largest oil company. Chevron and its partners threatened to stop financing the entire project by the end of the month.
The Russians countered that the Americans were double-dealing, professing to want partnership with Moscow in building the pipeline from Tengiz to the Black Sea while concocting a "Eurasian Transportation Corridor" – which the Clinton administration had announced in November – that would bypass Russia altogether with a skein of oil and gas lines from the Caspian to European markets.
By the time Kalicki left Moscow on Jan. 28, he had managed to avert a complete rupture of the Russian-American partnership and to enlist then-Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin in trying to salvage the pipeline venture. But the truce was fragile, the alliance shaky, suspicions rampant. As he flew back to Washington, Kalicki knew that months if not years of intense dickering lay ahead. He also knew that the price of failure in the game of Caspian oil diplomacy would be much greater than a simple pipeline.
Tengiz's Sea of Oil

Soviet geologists had discovered the Kazakh prize in 1979 in a remote, windblown steppe on the northeast shore of the Caspian. They called it Tengiz, the Kazakh word for "sea." But Tengiz's sea of oil lay unusually deep, as much as three miles below a salt dome that itself was 900 yards thick. Soviet engineers spent more than $1 billion drilling dozens of wells before concluding that foreign technology was needed.
A Chevron vice president, Richard H. Matzke, who was responsible for his company's forays into the Caspian, first heard about Tengiz while scouting for Soviet bargains in the late 1980s. Matzke, now 61, was a hardened veteran of risky Chevron ventures in such war-torn countries as Sudan and Angola. In pressing his case for a Chevron role in developing Tengiz, he found Soviet officials ambivalent about letting in the Americans. But he persisted, and in June 1990 he negotiated an agreement giving Chevron a 50 percent interest in the huge field. Tensions, however, were never far from the surface; the night before the deal was signed during a summit meeting between President George Bush and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, Matzke and a top Soviet energy official were up until 3 a.m. in a Washington hotel room shouting at each other over contract terms.
Petroleum engineers and geologists believed the 156-square-mile patch at Tengiz potentially could yield more than 1 million barrels a day – a third more than the present output of Alaska's Prudhoe Bay. That offered a heady vision for Chevron, then the world's fifth-largest private oil company. Years later, a Chevron executive would liken Tengiz to "stumbling over the Hope Diamond."
Tengiz was indeed a jewel – one which, like the Hope Diamond, often brought trouble to its possessor. And trouble was quick in coming. A year later, on Aug. 31, 1991, as the Soviet Union was disintegrating, the government of newly independent Kazakhstan lay claim to all the country's mineral resources. Chevron's deal was in peril, but the company had taken precautions. About the time that the contract had been signed, Chevron had invited an obscure Kazakh shepherd's son to the United States and entertained him at its San Francisco corporate headquarters. Now that shepherd's son was the Kazakh president.
Nursultan Nazarbayev, who had built his career in the Kazakh Communist Party, was quick to see the value of American connections. Years earlier he had sought out the U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union, Robert S. Strauss, for discussions of American politics over Sunday morning breakfasts. Now, as president, Nazarbayev retained Strauss's Washington law firm, as well as a Manhattan merchant banker, U.S. investment and accounting firms, and other American consultants.
Given Kazakhstan's long border with Russia, it was "simple logic to have the United States as your friend because it's the most powerful country in the world," a top Kazakh official explained recently. Only the United States, he added, could provide "a counterbalance for big powers such as China and Russia."
Even so, it took Matzke until April 1993 to complete a new Tengiz deal with the Kazakh government. Chevron again got a 50 percent interest, this time in a joint venture with the Kazakh state oil company.
Chevron pledged to invest $20 billion in Tengiz over 40 years. But the contract sharply limited any initial cash outlays. For example, not until Tengiz production reached 250,000 barrels a day would the company have to pay a $420 million installment on the purchase price. The provision in effect allowed Chevron to hang on to a substantial portion of its obligated payment until a pipeline had been built to sell Tengiz oil in Western markets. 
    Tengiz refinery
Chevron's Tengiz oil field in northwestern Kazakhstan.(By David B. Ottaway – The Washington Post)
Page TwoSeeking New Pipelines 

Chevron now possessed the prize. But vast stretches of Russian territory separated landlocked Tengiz from the ports and tankers that gave access to world markets.
As in Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan, the central problem remained: how to get the energy to customers who wanted it. The Soviets had left behind only one small, functioning pipeline running from Kazakhstan to a Russian refinery. A second line, never used and in disrepair, curved around the northern Caspian into Chechnya and Azerbaijan.
One initial proposal called for Chevron to finance a line from Tengiz to the Russian Black Sea port of Novorossisk. The plan envisaged refurbishing the idle Soviet pipe around the northern Caspian and tying it to a new line 400 miles long across southern Russia.
That brainstorm went nowhere. Chevron balked at spending as much as $3 billion on a pipeline that would be controlled exclusively by the Russian and Kazakh governments.
But legitimate alternatives were hard to come by. Proposals came and went, drawing board notions were born and died. For four years all efforts to find an export route for Tengiz oil came to naught, even as Chevron went ahead pouring hundreds of million of dollars into rehabilitating old Soviet installations and building a new gas-extraction plant. Hoping that more American muscle would help break the deadlock in negotiations over a pipeline route, Nazarbayev in April 1996 brought in Mobil Corp., selling the Virginia-based giant a 25 percent interest in Tengiz for $1.1 billion.
But Moscow had little incentive to help. Many Russians had long considered Tengiz a reserve for Russia's future; tapping the field would drain that legacy while strengthening Kazakh independence. Chevron and Mobil soon concluded that without bringing in a Russian company, the Moscow government – which held the key to building a line across southern Russia to Novorossisk – would remain obstructionist.
The one Russian enterprise eager for a piece of Tengiz was Lukoil. The company was led by Vagit Alekperov, a former senior Soviet energy official with connections to President Boris Yeltsin and Chernomyrdin. In Lukoil, Alekperov was cobbling together a new corporation from bits and pieces of the dismantled Soviet oil industry.
Pragmatic, direct and ambitious, Alekperov made it his goal to build the biggest privately owned oil company in Russia and turn it into an international giant, using his Moscow connections, Wall Street capital and Washington legal talent. He had already used the Russian government to help Lukoil elbow its way into several Western-dominated consortia around the Caspian.
Getting into Tengiz was another matter. Lukoil lacked the capital needed to buy its way into the big field. But in mid-1995, Alekperov cut a deal with a U.S. oil giant, Atlantic Richfield Co., under which ARCO would pay Lukoil $340 million in cash in exchange for an 8 percent interest in the Russian company. A year later, Lukoil set up a joint venture with ARCO, called LUKARCO, with a fat line of credit financed solely by the American partner for joint Caspian investments.
Thanks to ARCO's money, Lukoil was ready to be a player in Tengiz. In April 1997, LUKARCO purchased a 5 percent interest in Tengiz from Chevron. ARCO put up most of the $200 million purchase price.
Describing the deal later, Chevron's Matzke said Russian "opinion leaders" had strongly suggested to him that "it would be a good idea to have some Russian content in Tengiz ... that it might be wise to make sure the Russian interest is somehow represented." The Americans got the message.
With a direct interest in Tengiz, Lukoil threw its weight around Moscow to help break the impasse over building the Novorossisk pipeline. The Russian and Kazakh governments finally heeded the pleas of the private companies, including Lukoil, and agreed to bargain in earnest.
The result was a restructured Caspian Pipeline Consortium, known as the CPC, officially formed in Moscow in mid-May 1997. The consortium gave the private companies a 50 percent ownership of the future pipeline and voting rights in its operation. The companies agreed to put up all the money to build it; the Russian and Kazakh governments would get taxes and tariff revenues and a cut of the profits once oil started flowing.
Chevron came away with the largest holding within the consortium, 15 percent, while Mobil got a 7.5 percent stake. Two other American companies with oil concessions elsewhere in Kazakhstan – Amoco and Oryx – took smaller shares.
The Lukoil-ARCO joint venture came away with the second-largest holding, 12.5 percent. Lukoil was put in charge of constructing the pipeline and appointing the Caspian Pipeline Consortium's general director. No one realized it at the time, but therein lay trouble. 
Page ThreeU.S.-Russian Discord 

Trouble also was brewing between Washington and Moscow. Through the first half of the decade, U.S. oil companies had grown increasingly restive at what they considered insufficient White House attention to Caspian issues. The Clinton administration – belatedly in the minds of some oil people – had formed an interagency group in 1995 and gradually began to treat the remote, arcane pipeline conundrum as a national interest.
The unveiling of the administration's Eurasian Transportation Corridor last November reflected a policy decision to encourage multiple pipelines out of Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan to Turkey – without crossing Iran and without giving Russia undue sway over the routes. Federico Pen~a, then energy secretary, traveled to Baku and other Caspian capitals, as well as to Istanbul, mustering support for the plan.
This sat badly in Moscow. Russian nationalists had warned of an expanding American presence in Central Asia. Now Russian newspapers denounced "American imperialism" and Yeltsin decried U.S. "penetration" in the region. Russian oil executives viewed the Eurasian corridor as an American plot to thwart the trans-Russian pipeline out of Tengiz.
When Commerce Department troubleshooter Jan Kalicki arrived in Moscow Jan. 25 he murmured the same message over and over: The corridor to Turkey and the trans-Russian proposals were complementary, not competing options. The trans-Russian pipeline, with its anticipated capacity of 1.5 million barrels a day, was crucial to the U.S. strategy for Caspian energy development, Kalicki insisted.
The Russians were civil, but unconvinced. Throughout the first half of this year, the issue festered. When Vice President Gore met Chernomyrdin in mid-March, the Eurasian corridor proposal prevented broader agreement on U.S.-Russian cooperation in exploiting the Caspian, according to officials from both governments. Russian officials launched a counteroffensive, pressuring Nazarbayev and other Caspian leaders to oppose the corridor route.
As the two governments sparred, the commercial partners developing Tengiz tried to resolve the issues still preventing construction on the trans-Russian line. Notwithstanding the consortium agreement in May, not a foot of pipe had been laid. Vladimir Stanev, who had been appointed by Lukoil as manager of the Caspian Pipeline Consortium, was slow to obtain construction permits from local and regional governments. Chevron and the other American firms also decried what they saw as Stanev's autocratic style and empire building. Stanev declined to be interviewed for this article.
From mid-January to late March, Chevron's Matzke met four times with Lukoil's Alekperov about the construction glitches and Stanev's alleged shortcomings. (One lunch at Dupont Circle was arranged by legendary fixer Strauss, whose law firm was representing Lukoil as well as the Kazakh government.)
Matzke summed up the Russian attitude as: "Your company ought to do it our way if you want to get it done." While he and Alekperov had been friendly enough to discuss taking an excursion with their wives to a mountain dacha, this was business. The American firms, Matzke told Alekperov, were about to yank their financing from the pipeline project unless changes were made and Stanev was fired. Chevron's investment alone had now topped $1 billion.
By June 1, a deal was struck. Stanev was out, but so too were his top two American deputies. New procedures would allow the consortium's non-Russian deputy directors greater decision-making authority. A new deadline of Oct. 1 was set for the Russians to obtain local construction permits and rights of way for the pipeline.
In late June, Matzke toured the future trans-Russian pipeline route for the first time, accompanied by Alekperov. The two got a warm welcome from mayors and other local officials. There were vodka toasts and plenty of caviar. In Novorossisk and Astrakhan, the regional governors presented Matzke with documents assuring pipeline rights through their territories.
Back home in San Francisco, Matzke was elated. "I've been messing around with this [pipeline] thing since its inception," he said. "When you get the chairman of Lukoil out there for three days beating the bush and talking about why things need to go forward ... you can't help but feel we're going to get it done this time." A Boon for U.S. Firms 

In the seven years since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the United States has evolved from a bit actor into a major player in the Caspian. American involvement – a goal vigorously pursued by the Caspian governments – has brought a heightened U.S. awareness of the region, billions of dollars in new investments and less dependence on Russia.
Big American oil is benefiting, too.
Last November, American oil executives flew with Azerbaijan's President Heydar Aliyev to a drilling rig in the Caspian and lathered their faces with the first new oil pumped by a Western consortium off Baku. Today, the consortium exports 60,000 barrels a day via a pipeline through war-ravaged Chechnya, a route once regarded as impossibly risky. The consortium also is laying a new pipeline between the Caspian Sea and the Georgian port of Supsa on the Black Sea – a route Russia once vigorously opposed.
"We never dreamed of this in 1989," said Hoshbacht Yusufzade, a senior official of the Azerbaijan state oil company. "I did not think that I would live to see it."
In June, Chevron and Mobil were pumping 200,000 barrels a day from Kazakhstan's Tengiz field, and pioneering their own "trans-Caspian" oil-ferry system, using small tankers to carry 35,000-barrel loads to a new port in Azerbaijan, then via rail to Georgia's Black Sea city of Batumi – the oil port developed by the Rothschilds more than a century ago.
But weighed against the potential benefits of deepening U.S. engagement are risks and uncertainties, including Russian instability.
A recent Rice University analysis warned against exaggerated expectations of the Caspian as an alternative to the Persian Gulf, and advised against "too close [U.S.] association with the regimes of the Caspian basin." The study cited corruption, human rights abuses and ancient ethnic rivalries that could entangle Washington.
Even as the magnitude of the Caspian lode remains uncertain, pipeline costs are soaring. Building the first from Baku to Supsa on the Black Sea has cost nearly $600 million, twice the original estimate. The latest Russian projections for a Tengiz-to-Novorossisk line have jumped from $2.1 billion to $3.7 billion. The main pipeline from Baku to Ceyhan is now expected to cost $4 billion.
Given the risks, costs and uncertainties, Geoffrey Kemp of the Nixon Center in Washington scoffs at comparing today's oil scramble and the "great game," the 19th century maneuvering between imperial Russia and Britain for domination of Central Asia and the Caucasus.
"This is not a great game," Kemp said. "This is a great gamble."
Morgan reported from New York and Washington, Ottaway from Kazakhstan and Russia. 

Yemen


Analysis by Jeff Smith who is a nuclear physicist and former IAEA inspector:

A video received from Yemen, believed to be taken May 20, 2015, of an explosion, when analyzed by nuclear weapons experts is, by very high probability, a neutron bomb that could only have been an Israeli attack.

The analysis:

A. Its not a conventional 2k lb bomb. It’s much bigger.

B. Its either a very large MOAB bigger than 4,000 lbs. or; ???? Max weight for an F-15 / 16 is about 2,000 lb payload per bomb rack making the deployment of a MOAB impossible.

Lightning effect and duration of the fire ball being suspended in mid air and the very large mushroom cloud is the main give away, that is because it is being hit by neutrons from the nuclear fireball blast. It overloads the ccd’s electronic circuit producing white flashes. If the radiation is too high it will burn out the chip. They had big problems with this in Japan with the Fukushima robots cameras failing due to very high radiation counts.

D. Delivery is most likely by an IDF F-16 with a Saudi paint job on the plane. They are not even hiding their use anymore, they just don’t publicly admit it and the IAEA does nothing or says nothing. That is the true war crime. The UN just ignores it unless the US, France or GB complain…

Russia and China say nothing.

Post Script:
A. The range of the camera is calculated to be about 4 to 5 miles from ground zero based on shock wave timing.

B. Saudi has no F-16’s. The aircraft reported to be used to droop the bomb in Yemen were F-16’s. Photos and acoustic signature confirms that the jet engines noise is from a single engine jet fighter of the F-16 type.




"Behind and around Aden lay deserts of thousands of square miles inhabited by scattered Arab tribes. To the east lay Yemen, a former Turkish territory which had won independence in the war. The Imam of Yemen, an ambitious and cruel despot, claimed the whole of southern Arabia as his, including Aden itself. He and the British competed for suzerainty over the tribes of the interior and there were many minor wars. 

During the 1920s and 1930s the British pushed inland from Aden to establish protectorates over about 25 tribal sheikhdoms occupying a total of some 112,000 square miles of land. The population totalled something in the region of half a million. 

These baking stretches of desert were the last new acquisition the British Empire ever made."

The Fall of the British Empire (1968)
Colin Cross
Pp.115



Possible Tactical Nuclear Strike (Neutron Bomb) in Yemen?

GR Editor’s note
The report below is unconfirmed. The evidence is scanty. The analysis of this event requires further examination. There is no proof that it was an Israeli IDF undertaking  (M. Ch, GR Editor)
*      *      *
Analysis by Jeff Smith who is a nuclear physicist and former IAEA inspector:
A video received from Yemen, believed to be taken May 20, 2015, of an explosion, when analyzed by nuclear weapons experts is, by very high probability, a neutron bomb that could only have been an Israeli attack.
The analysis:
A. Its not a conventional 2k lb bomb. It’s much bigger.
B. Its either a very large MOAB bigger than 4,000 lbs. or; ???? Max weight for an F-15 / 16 is about 2,000 lb payload per bomb rack making the deployment of a MOAB impossible.
Lightning effect and duration of the fire ball being suspended in mid air and the very large mushroom cloud is the main give away, that is because it is being hit by neutrons from the nuclear fireball blast. It overloads the ccd’s electronic circuit producing white flashes. If the radiation is too high it will burn out the chip. They had big problems with this in Japan with the Fukushima robots cameras failing due to very high radiation counts.
D. Delivery is most likely by an IDF F-16 with a Saudi paint job on the plane. They are not even hiding their use anymore, they just don’t publicly admit it and the IAEA does nothing or says nothing. That is the true war crime. The UN just ignores it unless the US, France or GB complain…
Russia and China say nothing.
Post Script:
A. The range of the camera is calculated to be about 4 to 5 miles from ground zero based on shock wave timing.
B. Saudi has no F-16’s. The aircraft reported to be used to droop the bomb in Yemen were F-16’s. Photos and acoustic signature confirms that the jet engines noise is from a single engine jet fighter of the F-16 type.

A Note on the Mother of All Bombs (MOAB) and Tactical Nuclear Weapons
by Michel Chossudovsky 
The MOAB or MOP GBU-57A would be delivered with either a B-52 or a B-2 bomber due to its weight. The decision to undertake a MOP strike would emanate from the “Global Strike Command”.
In the image below a B52 bomber releases a MOP, escorted by a F-16.  The MOP is a tele-guided missile.
The B-2 bomber operates out US Air force base in Missouri. With refuelling it can be deployed Worldwide. The launching of a Mass Ordnance Penetrator (MOP) (MOAB) does not need to be undertaken over Yemeni territory.
The Mass Ordnance Penetrator (MOP) explosion is similar to that recorded in the Yemen video. Moreover, according to unconfirmed reports, the MOP was used during the war on Iraq.
The explosion of the MOP and that of  the tactical nuclear weapon (B61-11) are similar although in the case of mini-nukes, they tend to reveal more distinctly a mushroom cloud explosion.
Both the MOP and the mini nukes are bunker buster earth penetrating bombs. The MOP however is a conventional weapon. it does have a nuclear warhead.
B-52 dropping a MOP escorted by an F-16 during a test trail.
archive photo of MOAB explosion
 
“Mother of All Bombs” (MOAB)
GBU-57A/B Mass Ordnance Penetrator (MOP)
It is worth noting that according to Air Force Magazine (quoted by Wikipedia), USAF Lt. Gen. Phillip Breedlove (currently Commander in Chief of NATO) stated in June 2010 that “the Next-generation Penetrator Munition should be about a third the size of the Massive Ordnance Penetrator so it could be carried by affordable aircraft”.
The Tactical Nuclear Bomb (Mini Nuke)
The image below is a B61-11 tactical nuclear bomb, which can be launched either from a B-2 bomber or an F-16
The US military contend that “mini-nukes” are “humanitarian bombs” which minimize “collateral damage”. According to scientific opinion on contract to the Pentagon, they are “harmless to the surrounding civilian population because the explosion is underground”,
The B61-11 is a bon fide thermonuclear nuclear bomb, a Weapon of Mass Destruction (WMD) in the real sense of the word.
Military documents distinguish between the Nuclear Earth Penetrator (NEP) and the “mini-nuke” which are nuclear weapons with a yield of less than 10 kilotons (two thirds of a Hiroshima bomb).
The NEP can have a yield of up to a 1000 kilotons, or seventy times a Hiroshima bomb.
This distinction between mini-nukes and the NEP is in many regards misleading. In practice there is no dividing line. We are broadly dealing with the same type of weaponry: the B61-11 has several “available yields”, ranging from “low yields” of less than one kiloton, to mid-range and up to the 1000 kiloton bomb.
In all cases, the radioactive fallout is devastating.
Moreover, the B61 series of thermonuclear weapons includes several models with distinct specifications:
  • B61-11
  • B61-3
  • B61- 4
  • B61-7
  • B61-10
Each of these bombs has several “available yields”.
What is contemplated for theater use is the “low yield” 10 kt bomb, two thirds of a Hiroshima bomb. (quoted from Michel Chossudovsky, America’s Planned Nuclear Attack on Libya, Global Research, April 2011)
The B61-11 tactical nuclear weapon is deployed by several European countries including five non-nuclear states (Belgium, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Turkey).
GR will be following this story.
Michel Chossudovsky, May 2015 


The Covert War in Yemen – 1962-70

In September 1962, the Imam of North Yemen was overthrown in a popular coup. Imam al-Badr had been in power for only a week having succeeded his father who had presided over a feudal kingdom where 80 per cent of the population lived as peasants and which was controlled through bribery, an arbitrary and coercive tax system and a policy of divide and rule. The coup was led by Colonel Abdullah al-Sallal and a pro-Nasser, Arab nationalist group within the Yemeni military, which proclaimed the Yemen Arab Republic. The Royalist forces supporting the Imam took to the hills and began an insurgency, supported by Saudi Arabia and Jordan, against the new Republican regime, while Nasser’s Egypt deployed troops in North Yemen to shore up the new Republican government.
Britain soon resorted to covert action to undermine the new Republican regime, in alliance with the Saudis and Jordanis. The declassified files are interesting in showing that British officials were completely aware that they were – by any standards of moral behaviour, which were irrelevant to British planners in this case as in others – supporting the ‘wrong’ side. For example, Christopher Gandy, who was Britain’s top official in Taiz in North Yemen and Britain’s top official there, noted shortly after the revolution that the rule of the previous Imam ‘has made the Imamate unpopular with large elements and those in many ways the best’. The ‘monopoly of power’ was ‘much resented’ and was exploited by the new, Republican government by appointing into office people from ‘classes, regions and sects previously neglected in the distribution of power’. Gandy described the Imam’s rule as ‘an arbitrary autocracy’ while the Republicans were acting collectively through a new government, and were ‘much more open to contact and reasoned argument’. Gandy actually recommended recognition of the new Yemeni regime, saying that it was interested in friendly relations with Britain and that this was ‘the best way to prevent an increase’ in Egyptian influence. But he was overruled both by his political masters in London and by officials in neighbouring Aden, Britain’s then colony. One of Gandy’s arguments was that if the Royalists were to restore themselves in power they would now have to make themselves popular, which would ‘in its turn embarrass us in Aden and the Protectorate’ – where Britain was supporting similarly feudal elements against strong popular, nationalist feeling.
After Britain’s covert campaign in Yemen was well under way, an official in the Prime Minister’s office noted that Egyptian President Nasser had been:
‘… able to capture most of the dynamic and modern forces in the area while we have been left, by our own choice, backing the forces which are not merely reactionary (that would not matter so much) but shifty, unreliable and treacherous’.
Prime Minister Harold Macmillan himself admitted that it was:
‘repugnant to political equity and prudence alike that we should so often appear to be supporting out-of-date and despotic regimes and to be opposing the growth of modern and more democratic forms of government’.
The Foreign Secretary, Alec Douglas-Home, also conceded that
w
... the Republicans’ ‘attraction for the average Yemeni will be greater’ than the Imams’, and this would ’cause us a great deal of trouble’.
Against the irrelevances of popular, more democratic elements were set the important virtues of British Interests, in fact imperial policy. The big issue was retaining the military base at Aden. This was the cornerstone of British military policy in the Gulf region, in which Britain was then the major power, directly controlling the sheikhdoms of the Persian Gulf and with huge oil interests in Kuwait and elsewhere. The coastal city of Aden was surrounded by what Britain had forged into a ‘protectorate’ of the Federation of South Arabia, a set of feudal fiefdoms presided over by autocratic leaders similar to that just overthrown in Yemen, and kept sweet by British bribes.
It was feared that a progressive, republican, Arab nationalist Yemen would serve as an example to the feudal sheikhdoms throughout the Gulf and the wider Middle East as well as in Aden itself. Foreign Secretary Douglas-Home stated shortly after the Republican coup that Aden could not be secure from ‘a firmly established republican regime in Yemen’. A ministerial meeting similarly concluded that if Britain were forced out of Aden it would be ‘a devastating blow to our prestige and authority’ in the region. Even to recognise the new Yemeni regime might lead to ‘a collapse in the morale of the pro-British rulers of the protectorate’, putting ‘the whole British position in the area… in jeopardy’.
The threat, as outlined by Sir Kennedy Trevaskis, the High Commissioner in Aden, was that the Yemeni republicans ‘could expect to win massive support in both’ Aden and the federation where ‘pro-Republican feeling is strong’. The Republican regime was likely to encourage ‘some of our own friends among the rulers’ in the protectorate to ‘defect and come to terms with the Yemen government’. ‘Many would be attracted by’ the regime, Trevaskis noted.
These concerns were shared by the arch-mediaeval kingdom in the region, Saudi Arabia, which feared the spread of the overthrow of monarchies by Arab nationalist forces. It was recognised by British planners that after the Saudis had begun arming the Royalists in Yemen they ‘were not greatly concerned about the form of government to be established in the Yemen, provided that it was not under the control of’ Egypt – any other government would do.
This threat heightened as Nasser and new Yemeni leader al-Sallal gave diplomatic and material support to anti-British republican forces in Aden and the federation and conducted a public campaign urging the British to withdraw from their imperial possessions. One reason for this was that Britain was conspiring from the federation to undermine the new Yemeni government. Interestingly, Trevaskis also noted that if the Yemenis were to secure control of Aden ‘it would for the first time provide the Yemen with a large modern town and a port of international consequence’. Most importantly, ‘economically, it would offer the greatest advantages to so poor and ill developed a country’ – a consideration, though, which was again an irrelevance in planning.
So Britain decided to engage in a covert campaign to promote those forces recognised as ‘shifty’, ‘treacherous’ and ‘despotic’ to undermine those recognised as ‘popular’ and ‘more democratic’ in order to ensure that the threat of the former did not spread. Crucially, they did so in the knowledge that their clients did not stand a chance of winning. The campaign was undertaken simply to cause trouble for the Republicans, and the Egyptians, in Yemen, while they were known to hold the overwhelming majority of the country and the centres of population.
The Yemenis were simply unpeople, a tool to be used in British strategy – similar, therefore, to the Kurds of Iraq used to pressure regimes in Baghdad and the dissident colonels in Indonesia secretly supported by Britain in the 1950s to destabilise the government in Jakarta. The files are crystal clear on this point. Harold Macmillan noted in February 1963 that ‘in the longer term a republican victory was inevitable’. He told President Kennedy that:
‘I quite realise that the Loyalists [sic] will probably not win in Yemen in the end but it would not suit us too badly if the new Yemeni regime were occupied with their own internal affairs during the next few years’.
What Britain wanted, therefore, was ‘a weak government in Yemen not able to make trouble’. A note to the Prime Minister similarly states that:
‘All departments appear to be agreed that the present stalemate in the Yemen, with the Republicans and Royalists fighting each other and therefore having no time or energy left over to make trouble for us in Aden, suits our own interests very well’.
The Prime Minister’s foreign policy adviser, Philip de Zulueta, noted that ‘our interest is surely to have the maximum confusion in the tribal areas on the Aden frontier’ with Yemen.

The covert campaign

Piecing together a brief chronology of British covert action is difficult in light of the wide censorship of the files. But the task is aided by MI6 expert, Stephen Dorril’s analysis in his comprehensive book, MI6, produced mainly from secondary sources and interviews, an analysis that provides an excellent antidote to the silence of the academics.
Shortly after the September 1962 coup Jordan’s King Hussein visited London where he met Air Minister Julian Amery and urged the British government not to recognise the new Yemeni regime. They both agreed that MI6 asset Neil ‘Billy’ McLean, a serving Conservative MP, tour the area and report back to the Prime Minister. MI6's former vice chief, George Young, now a banker with Kleinwort Benson, was approached by Mossad to find a Briton acceptable to the Saudis to run a guerilla war against the republicans. Young then introduced McLean to Dan Hiram, the Israeli defence attache who promised to supply arms, money and training, which the Saudis eagerly grasped.
Two days after the coup Price Hassan, uncle of Iman al-Badr, who had been in New York for the past several years, called on Douglas-Home for help to get him to the Yemeni frontier where he would make a bid for power. The files indicate that British officials could not provide any overt help but by mid-October Hassan is reported to have ‘plenty of money and arms’.
In October Britain also considered direct military intervention in Yemen when Prime Minister Macmillan called on the Chiefs of Staff ‘to consider our military resources should we be driven to adopt an overt policy’. Covert operations were decided on instead, perhaps for the reason later given by Foreign Secretary Rab Butler, who wrote that ‘if this had happened a generation ago’, we should have used ‘North-West frontier’ tactics ‘which would probably have been effective’. Unfortunately, ‘there are severe limitations on the use of such methods in the world as it is today, and we trust that any repetition can be avoided’.
In October McLean visited Saudi Arabia as a personal guest of the King, who called on Britain to provide aid to the Royalists, especially ‘air support… if possible openly, but if this is not possible, then clandestinely’. McLean also visited Yemen to meet with the Royalists, including Prince Hassan at his headquarters, to assess the situation and delivered a report of his visit to Defence Minister Peter Thorneycroft. By early November, Saudi arms and money were flowing to the Royalists and by mid-November the Foreign Office had produced a policy paper outlining the options open to the government, including covert aid.
In early December, McLean again visited Yemen and the Imam’s forces who informed him of the need for arms and ammunition. On returning to London, McLean met the Foreign Secretary, urged British aid and began canvassing the Cabinet for support. McLean was carrying a letter from al-Badr to the Prime Minister asking for support to the Royalists who were disappointed with the lack of aid so far forthcoming from Britain. At the same time, the High Commissioner in Aden said that ‘we ought now to be considering definite steps to reinsure ourselves with’ the Royalists.
When the British ambassador to Egypt, Sir Harold Beeley, met Egyptian President Nasser’s personal adviser, Mohammed Heikal, the latter accused Britain of several aspects of involvement in the fighting in Yemen, notably supplying fighter aircraft to Jordan after the outbreak of the fighting for use in Yemen. Heikal told Beeley that McLean was advising the Royalists, that he had visited the Kings of Saudi Arabia and Jordan, both of whom were now intervening in Yemen. He also said that the Jordanian Air Force Commander who had defected to Egypt ‘asserted that his orders, which involved attacking targets in the Yemen, had been given to him personally by King Hussein in the presence of a British Air Advisor’.
Foreign Secretary Douglas-Home was initially against backing the Royalists. On 7 January 1963, McLean’s intelligence report was assessed by the Cabinet’s Overseas and Defence Committee, which advised the Cabinet not to recognise the new regime, and arguing that Britain could not give direct support to the Royalists and that any operation had to be at arms length.
In late February British positions in the Federation of South Arabia were attacked by Yemeni tribesmen and at the same time Egyptian troops began an offensive into the royalist-held mountains in Yemen. Colonial Secretary Duncan Sandys and Julian Amery urged retaliation and Macmillan appointed Amery his Minister for Aden with a remit to covertly organise British support for the Royalists, working from his office at the Ministry of Aviation.
McLean visited Yemen for a third time on 1 March 1963. Shortly afterwards a royalist delegation visited Israel, following which unmarked Israeli planes made flights from Djibouti to drop arms over royalist areas. By early March, the files confirm that Britain was already involved in supplying arms to the Royalists, via Sherif bin Hussein, the tribal leader in Beihan in the federation.
On 1 March the Governor in Aden, Sir Charles Johnstone, had proposed withholding arms supplies for two to three weeks since there was now the danger that any arms supplied would fall into Republican hands and could be ‘attributed to British support’. He also berated his political masters in London for having refused repeated requests for ‘additional supplies to Royalists made by me’ in November, December and February. If these supplies had been granted, he added, ‘the Royalists would never have got to their present low ebb’ in the fighting.
In mid-April 1963, McLean asked the Foreign Secretary for immediate support, and the Saudis stepped in with a small supply of arms and ammunition. According to Dorril, several million pounds worth of light weapons, including 50,000 rifles, were secretly flown out from an RAF station in Wiltshire. To mask their true origin, they were landed in Jordan for onward transportation via Beihan. By the end of the month, the Royalists had regained some of their lost territory.
At a meeting in late April 1963 – involving MI6 chief Dick White, McLean, SAS founder David Stirling, ex-SAS officer Brian Franks, Douglas-Home and Amery – Stirling and Franks were told there could be no official SAS involvement and were asked to recommend someone who could organise a mercenary operation. According to Dorril, they approached Jim Johnson, recently retired commander of 21 SAS, and Lt Col John Woodhouse, commander of 22 SAS. McLean, Johnson and Stirling were introduced by Amery to the royalist Foreign Minister, Ahmed al-Shami, who wrote out a cheque for the operation for £5,000. The SAS men operated through Stirling’s Television International Enterprises company, which set up a cover organisation, Rally Films. The Saudi prince Sultan financed the project with gold bullion. French mercenaries were also recruited along with SAS volunteers given temporary leave from official SAS duties.
The office of the adjutant of 21 SAS volunteers (TA) in London was used as a clearing ground for the British mercenaries, who, according to the organiser, were paid £150 a month by the Foreign Office and the MoD. In Aden, Tony Boyle, the aide-de-camp to the Aden Governor, evolved a system for passing mercenaries through Customs while Sherif Hussein organised a network of safe houses in Beihan from which operations into the Yemen could be launched. As the traffic increased, officers were seconded to the staff of the Federal Regular Army.
The proposed Yemen operation was the subject of fierce debate in Whitehall but the Prime Minister was eventually persuaded to support the operation and instructed MI6 to aid the Royalists. An MI6 task force was set up which then coordinated the supply of weapons and personnel. This was organised by John da Silva, formerly head of MI6’s station in Bahrain.
In October Macmillan resigned to be replaced by Douglas-Home as Prime Minister, which temporarily put plans on hold since the new Foreign Secretary, Rab Butler, was opposed to covert support for the Royalists. By December 1963, the new Prime Minister that Egypt had so far suffered 10,000-12,000 casualties in Yemen.
British actions continued as SAS officer Jonny Cooper engaged in intelligence activities against Egyptian forces and his team trained the Royalist army. In February 1964 Cooper and his men prepared for their first clandestine night air-drop of supplies, codenamed MANGO, with the discreet backing of MI6 and the CIA. Arms and ammunition were parachuted into drop zones manned by Cooper’s team, who guided the planes in by radio.
In a memo to the Prime Minister in March 1964 Butler noted that the Egyptian and Yemeni:
‘… assertion that supplies for the Royalists are being introduced from the Beihan area [in the federation] has been mentioned in the latest report to the Security Council by U Thant and we have not been able to give an effective reply since we know that this is in fact true’.
Butler drew the distinction between aiding the Royalists in Yemen on the one hand – which Britain should not support, in his view – and, on the other hand, aiding activities in the federation and ‘across the Yemen border’ to prevent subversion in the federation. He supported the High Commissioner in Aden’s calls for ‘a selective system of unattributable retaliation in the Yemeni frontier area for sabotage, mine-laying and so on in the federation’.
Defence Secretary Thorneycroft called for Britain to organise ‘tribal revolts’ in the frontier areas, ‘deniable action… to sabotage intelligence centres and kill personnel engaged in anti-British activities’, including the Egyptian Intelligence HQ at Taiz, and ‘covert anti-Egyptian propaganda activities in the Yemen’. He also argued for ‘further assistance’ to the Royalists including ‘either money, or arms or both’.
By April 1964 the British had already authorised mine-laying (called Operation Eggshell), issuing arms and ammunition to tribesmen in the frontier area (Operation Stirrup) and sabotage in the frontier area (Operation Bangle). A plan ‘for the instigation of a revolt in the Beidha area’, just inside the Yemen border, had been approved at least by July, the files show. Three hundred thousand pounds was released for this purpose but by July it had not got off the ground owing to Egyptian counter action.
Acts of ‘subversion in Yemeni territory against individual targets’ were being carried out, however, ‘under the control of British officers within the federation’, according to an MoD memo. These officers ‘can hand out arms and money in installments according to the local situation and in proportion to the successes achieved’. Operation Rancour was the codeword given to ‘current covert operations to exploit [sic] dissident tribes up to 20 miles into Yemen to neutralise Egyptian subversive action against Aden’.
An extraordinary top secret document in the government files went even further in considering the options open to Britain. Entitled ‘Yemen: The range of possible courses of action open to us’, it considers ‘assassination or other action against key personnel’ involved in subversion in the federation, ‘especially Egyptian Intelligence Service officers’. It also outlines ‘action to stimulate a guerilla campaign’ in the frontier area by supplies of arms and money and ‘non-retaliatory sabotage’ including in Sana’a. It suggests ‘closing our eyes’ to Saudi arms supplies to the Royalists and undertaking ‘”black” pamphleteering’ in Republican-controlled areas of Yemen and ‘”black” radio broadcasts’ from the federation.
Foreign Secretary Butler gave this paper to the Prime Minister, commenting that ‘I should perhaps say’ that some of the options ‘may involve more political risk’ than others:
‘For instance, the assassination of Egyptian intelligence officers would no doubt involve a greater chance of discovery and retaliation than supplying the Royalists with money’.
As these options were being debated in private, on 14 May 1964 Prime Minister Douglas-Home lied to Parliament that:
‘Our policy towards the Yemen is one of non-intervention in the affairs of that country. It is not therefore our policy to supply arms to the Royalists in the Yemen’.
In July Thorneycroft recommended that Britain should, together with Saudi Arabia, be ‘sustaining the Royalists during the coming months’ by providing arms and money to the ‘Royalist tribes’. At the time, the Saudis were asking Britain for £2 million over one year, a quarter of which was for arms. The files also refer to the need for a British decision on whether to agree ‘to another proposal to supply rifles’ to two tribes for attacks inside Yemen. A detailed plan was submitted to the British in July by Sherif Hussein and Royalists in Yemen calling on Britain to supply 11,000 rifles and £600,000.
At the end of July Ministers took the decision to promote ‘further measures’ to support the Royalists, meaning to ‘give all necessary facilities’ to the Saudis to secure arms from Britain. Britain’s ambassador to Saudi Arabia then met Prince Feisal and told him of Britain’s willingness to provide arms to Saudi Arabia for use in Yemen but said London could not provide overt aid directly to the Royalists.
In the summer of 1964, Prime Minister Douglas-Home was faced with opposition from his Foreign Secretary to direct aid to the Royalists, while the Defence Secretary and others argued for precisely that. According to Dorril, Dick White, the head of MI6, won over the new Prime Minister to supporting a ‘clandestine mercenary operation’ and the go-ahead for full support for the Royalists was sanctioned in the summer of 1964.
In 1964, 48 ex-servicemen were being employed as mercenaries, including a dozen former SAS men. MI6 officers provided intelligence and logistical support, while GCHQ pinpointed the location of republican units. MI6 operatives also coordinated the crossing of tribesmen over the border from the federation into Yemen where they tracked Egyptian army officers. ‘In what turned out to be a dirty war, MI6 officers “manipulated” the tribesmen and helped “direct the planting of bombs” at Egyptian military outposts along the frontier, while garrison towns were “shot up” and political figures “murdered”‘, Dorril notes.
One letter in the government files was written in August 1964 by a mercenary, Colonel Michael Webb, who says he recently retired from the army, to Julian Amery. Webb says that he has been fighting with the Imam’s forces for the past few weeks and his cover was as a freelance journalist. He had kept the British embassy ‘fully informed of my movements and given them all the information I have obtained’.
The following month a note to the Prime Minister recommended the supply of bazookas and ammunition to the Sherif of Beihan ‘for use by a dissident group in Taiz’, ie Yemen. At the same time, Stirling, Boyle and royalist Foreign Minister al-Shami met in Aden where they were joined by an MI6 officer and drew up plans for establishing a regular supply of arms and ammunition to the Royalist forces which would be undertaken either by parachute or overland from Saudi Arabia and Beihan, or via the Yemen coast.
In October 1964, the election of the Labour government of Harold Wilson does not seem to have noticeably upset the covert operation. Dorril notes secret RAF bombing in retaliation for Egyptian attacks on camel trains supplying weapons to French and British mercenaries. As part of an arms deal with Saudi Arabia, Britain agreed a contract worth £26 million with a private company, Airwork services, to provide personnel for the training of Saudi pilots and ground crew. Airwork also recruited former RAF pilots as mercenaries to fly operational missions against Egyptian and Republican targets along the Yemeni border.
By 1965 MI6 was chartering aircraft with discreet pilots and had obtained the agreement of Israel to use its territory for mounting operations. These operations continued into 1967, according to the files. A Foreign Office note of March 1967 states that the British pilots were recruited by Airwork to fly the five Lightnings and five Hunters already supplied by Britain and that ‘we have raised no objection to their being employed in operations, though we made it clear to the Saudis that we could not publicly acquiesce in any such arrangements’.
Following a ceasefire declared in August 1965 the British-backed mercenaries reverted to supplying medical aid and maintaining communications. By late 1966 the war had restarted and the fighting had reached a stalemate ‘but the British were still running an extensive mercenary operation in Yemen with those recruited said to be paid £10,000 per annum’ by a mysterious centre in London run by Stirling.
After Egypt’s defeat by Israel in the 1967 war, Nasser decided to pull troops out of Yemen, and in November Britain withdrew from Aden. Yet files of March 1967 refer to ongoing ‘covert operations in South Arabia’ and to ‘Rancour II operations’ – although most files related to this have been censored. One exception is a June 1967 paper saying that ‘Rancour operations in the Yemen have been extremely successful’ in driving the Egyptians back from parts of the frontier and tying them down. It then recommends that these operations should continue after the independence of South Arabia. These could be undertaken ‘using as a cover the military mission’ for South Arabia, or ‘alternatively the new embassy could provide the cover’.
Despite the Egyptian withdrawal the civil war in Yemen continued. In 1969, two mercenaries from the private firm, Watchguard, were killed while leading a band of royalist guerillas in the North. Al-Badr had fled to England where he died and in March 1969 the Saudis cut off their supplies to the Royalists, following which a treaty was signed ending hostilities with the country reborn as North Yemen. 200,000 had died.

Soaked in Bleach


SOAKED IN BLEACH reveals the events behind Kurt Cobain's death as seen through the eyes of Tom Grant, the private investigator that was hired by Courtney Love in 1994 to track down her missing husband (Kurt Cobain) only days before his deceased body was found at their Seattle home. Cobain's death was ruled a suicide by the police (a reported self-inflicted gunshot wound), but doubts have circulated for twenty years as to the legitimacy of this ruling, especially due to the work of Mr. Grant, a former L.A. County Sheriff's detective, who did his own investigation and determined there was significant empirical and circumstantial evidence to conclude that foul play could very well have occurred. The film develops as a narrative mystery with cinematic re-creations, interviews with key experts and witnesses and the examination of official artifacts from the 1994 case.
Director: Benjamin Statler
Producers: Benjamin Statler, Richard Middelton, Donnie Eichar
Writers: Benjamin Statler, Richard Middelton, Donnie Eichar



Kurt Cobain : The Last Photoshoot

Bad case of Suicide : Two Guns.

(And an absolutely incapacitating quantity of Heroin)



"Pop eats it's young, that's for sure..." 
-- MICHAEL HUTCHENCE ON KURT COBAIN








To Boddah

Speaking from the tongue of an experienced simpleton who obviously would rather be an emasculated, infantile complain-ee. This note should be pretty easy to understand.

All the warnings from the punk rock 101 courses over the years, since my first introduction to the, shall we say, ethics involved with independence and the embracement of your community has proven to be very true. I haven't felt the excitement of listening to as well as creating music along with reading and writing for too many years now. I feel guity beyond words about these things.

For example when we're back stage and the lights go out and the manic roar of the crowds begins., it doesn't affect me the way in which it did for Freddie Mercury, who seemed to love, relish in the the love and adoration from the crowd which is something I totally admire and envy. The fact is, I can't fool you, any one of you. It simply isn't fair to you or me. The worst crime I can think of would be to rip people off by faking it and pretending as if I'm having 100% fun. Sometimes I feel as if I should have a punch-in time clock before I walk out on stage. I've tried everything within my power to appreciate it (and I do,God, believe me I do, but it's not enough). I appreciate the fact that I and we have affected and entertained a lot of people. It must be one of those narcissists who only appreciate things when they're gone. I'm too sensitive. I need to be slightly numb in order to regain the enthusiasms I once had as a child.

On our last 3 tours, I've had a much better appreciation for all the people I've known personally, and as fans of our music, but I still can't get over the frustration, the guilt and empathy I have for everyone. There's good in all of us and I think I simply love people too much, so much that it makes me feel too fucking sad. The sad little, sensitive, unappreciative, Pisces, Jesus man. Why don't you just enjoy it? I don't know!

I have a goddess of a wife who sweats ambition and empathy and a daughter who reminds me too much of what i used to be, full of love and joy, kissing every person she meets because everyone is good and will do her no harm. And that terrifies me to the point to where I can barely function. I can't stand the thought of Frances becoming the miserable, self-destructive, death rocker that I've become.

I have it good, very good, and I'm grateful, but since the age of seven, I've become hateful towards all humans in general. Only because it seems so easy for people to get along that have empathy. Only because I love and feel sorry for people too much I guess.

Thank you all from the pit of my burning, nauseous stomach for your letters and concern during the past years. I'm too much of an erratic, moody baby! I don't have the passion anymore, and so remember, it's better to burn out than to fade away.

Peace, love, empathy.
Kurt Cobain

Frances and Courtney, I'll be at your alter.
Please keep going Courtney, for Frances.
For her life, which will be so much happier without me.

I LOVE YOU, I LOVE YOU!