These
comments from Wendy Bandurski-Miller could be my own -
"Isn’t
it odd that whilst Greenpeace makes lots of noise against potential
Russian environmental damage (by the way, no oil contamination of any
sort came from the Priraslomnaja drilling rig), it never carries out
high-media profile protests by trying to storm, say, some BP, Exxon
or Chevron rig these days?
"This
is particularly suspicious considering that these Western oil giants
have a simply horrific pollution track record as BP’s “Deepwater
Horizon” rig Gulf of Mexico disaster in 2010; the “Exxon Valdez”
in Alaska in 1989; or Chevron’s three decades of mass pollution in
Ecuador have proven time and again?
"Greenpeace
also kept thunderously silent when London’s “The Guardian”
newspaper reported in December 2003 that the UK Ministry of Defence
“refused to say whether any nuclear depth charges were on board
(British war ship) HMS Sheffield, which was sunk during the
Falklands/Malvinas War” by Argentine forces during its 1982 war
against Britain."
Global
Arctic wars already started
Today’s
globalized geopolitical grand chessboard often plays out in
interestingly complex and roundabout ways. Such is the case of the
on-going tug of war between the US, UK and EU on the one hand, and
Russia and its allies on the other.
RT,
19
December, 2013
Pieces
are moved; sometimes a pawn from one square to the next, at other
times a rook or bishop straight across the chessboard; even a knight
in its more crooked way… Such is the game of the looming “Arctic
War”
which is starting to unfold, in which seemingly unconnected events
begin to make sense when we start joining the right dots correctly.
Round
one in Syria: Putin: 1 / Obama: 0
Last
September, US President Barack Obama suffered a crushing diplomatic
and political defeat at the hands of Russian President Vladimir Putin
over the Syrian crisis with its tragic civil war that is claiming
hundreds of thousands of lives.
Together
with Iraq, Libya and Iran, Syria forms part of the staunch
Anti-Zionist front of Muslim countries in the Middle East (and
further afield, if we include Malaysia).
Allowing
itself to be dragged (yet again!) by Israel’s own selfish national
interests and powerful Israeli lobbying at home led by AIPAC –
American Israeli Public Affairs Committee – the White House got
itself into a dangerous diplomatic row with Russia and its allies,
this time over Syria.
In
2013 this was reflected by Obama’s “all-options-are-on-the-table”
sabre rattling on behalf of America’s increasingly embarrassing
Israeli ally, which forced him to stick his head too far out the
window; particularly when the so-called “Syrian
Freedom Fighters”
showed their extreme brutality, mass-murder tactics, terrorist
Al-Qaeda links, and suspect use of Saudi-Israeli chemical weapons
against civilian populations in Damascus.
When
things were on the verge of getting badly out of hand during
September’s G20 meeting in Russia (of all places!), reality finally
forced the US to stand down. That was when Russia’s and Putin’s
prestige peaked and Obama dropped one further notch into becoming
another lame-duck US president.
Round
two: Setting up a trap against Russia?
So,
when right smack in the middle of the Syrian affair and with the US
declaring defeat at the G20 Summit, how timely it was for the
“environmental NGO” Greenpeace’s vessel Arctic Sunrise show to
“just happen” to take place… in Russia!
The
crew of that Greenpeace ship, led by its US-born captain Peter
Willcox, staged the irksome storming of the “Priraslomnaja” oil
and gas rig owned and operated by Russia’s giant state-controlled
Gazprom company, just off Russia’s Arctic coast inside its
exclusive economic zone.
Video
images of half a dozen of its 30-odd “environmental
warrior”
crew from 18 different nations hanging like a SWAT team from the
Russian oil rig hit the global media headlines big time.
Given
that Greenpeace is no innocent environmental organization but rather
an NGO that systematically cosies up to UK (and by extension, US)
geopolitical interests, one is tempted to insert many of its actions
into the “grand chessboard”
logic. Could its environmental zeal often play as a front for MI6,
NSA, CIA spook activities?
A
handout photo taken by Greenpeace on September 18, 2013, shows a
camouflage clad mask wearing officer of Russian Coast Guard (C)
pointing a knife at a Greenpeace International activist (L) during an
environmentalists' attempt to climb Gazprom’s ‘Prirazlomnaya’
Arctic oil platform somewhere off Russia north-eastern coast in the
Pechora Sea. (AFP Photo / Greenpeace / DenisSINYAKOV)
Isn’t
it odd that whilst Greenpeace makes lots of noise against potential
Russian environmental damage (by the way, no oil contamination of any
sort came from the Priraslomnaja drilling rig), it never carries out
high-media profile protests by trying to storm, say, some BP, Exxon
or Chevron rig these days?
This
is particularly suspicious considering that these Western oil giants
have a simply horrific pollution track record as BP’s “Deepwater
Horizon”
rig Gulf of Mexico disaster in 2010; the “Exxon
Valdez”
in Alaska in 1989; or Chevron’s three decades of mass pollution in
Ecuador have proven time and again?
Greenpeace
also kept thunderously silent when London’s “The Guardian”
newspaper reported in December 2003 that the UK Ministry of Defence
“refused
to say whether any nuclear depth charges were on board (British war
ship) HMS Sheffield, which was sunk during the Falklands/Malvinas
War”
by Argentine forces during its 1982 war against
Britain.
So
whilst suspiciously quiet regarding US and UK polluters, Greenpeace
has a history of very noisy militancy when it involves countries
whose leaders do things counter to UK/US global geopolitical
interests.
The
world remembers, for example, how the Greenpeace ship “Rainbow
Warrior”
tried to stop French nuclear tests in the Pacific Mururoa Atoll in
1985. They failed after France’s General Foreign Security
Directorate covertly sank that ship before it could interfere with
the French military. And, - oh surprise! – US Captain Peter Willcox
was also at the helm of the “Rainbow
Warrior”
as its skipper. Are we seeing a pattern here?
Russia,
however, contrary to the French in 1985, kept a very cool head last
September. Instead, they arrested the “Arctic
Sunrise”,
forcibly towed it to Murmansk Port in the Arctic, and promptly threw
its environmentally inspired crew in jail for a couple of months.
Now,
think what a media circus would have been staged by the US-UK if
Russia, following France’s bad example, had ordered the sinking of
Greenpeace’s intruder as the French did back then…
Oh,
what a hullabaloo! One can almost imagine the headlines:
“Authoritarian and
environmentally incorrect Russia ignores basic human rights of a
group of nice peaceful Greenpeace environmentalists from 18
countries”.
The
Western media would have relished in giving Putin one great big
“Zero”
to tarnish growing Russian prestige. But, no: Russia just ordered
vessel and crew arrested for piracy on the high seas. Again, US/UK: 0
/ Russia: 1.
Ever
since, Greenpeace has been licking its wounds with outright lies. For
instance, since two of the “Arctic
Sunrise”
crew were Argentine nationals – Camila Speziale and Miguel PĂ©rez
Orsi – Argentina has been simply plastered with a very costly
propaganda campaign which includes TV ads and giant posters showing
these two young adults’ faces with the legend, “Prison
for trying to avoid an oil spill? Outrageous!”.
The
truth, however, is that there was no imminent oil spill; there was no
danger of pollution. Again, shouldn’t Canadian-founded,
Holland-based. US/UK-funded Greenpeace look more at their own dirty
and filthy polluting oil companies at home rather than poking their
noses in the Arctic?
Round
Three: Run to the Pole?
No,
I’m not talking about NATO’s Anti-Russian Missile “defence”
installations authorized by the Poles in their native Poland. I mean,
the North Pole!
For
in recently months, the cat’s been scratching and biting its way
out of the proverbial bag, ever since simply huge oil and gas
resources have been discovered under the Arctic Ocean. Estimates run
as high as 90 billion barrels of oil (20% of global reserves; 13% of
world supply), 1.67 trillion cubic meters of natural gas (30% of
world reserves), plus 30% of natural gas, plus platinum, gold, tin,
plus…
One
of the most aggressive countries claiming
territorial sovereignty over all this wealth
is Canada, which more than an actual country is but an offshoot of
the British Crown and an American beachhead into the Arctic. One can
clearly sense Uncle Sam’s breathe behind Canada’s forceful
territorial claims.
A
Russian NTV channel grab taken 03 August 2007 shows a manipulator of
the Mir-1 mini-submarine as it places a Russian state flag at the
seabed of Arctic ocean at a depth of 4,261 meters (13,980 feet), 02
August 2007. (AFP Photo / NTV)
Then
there’s also NATO-ally Denmark filing its claims through Greenland
territorial projection, weak ally Norway and, of course, there’s
Superpower Russia which in 2007 actually planted its flag on the
Arctic sea bed right on the North Pole. Canada too claims that the
North Pole is hers. Alas! Poor Santa Claus, let’s just hope he’s
not evicted before Christmas…
As
history has shown time and again, the only language that the US-UK
Alliance really understands is the language of force or the threat
thereof.
So
President Putin has very prudently ordered his military starting 2014
to beef up Russia’s presence and defence over its entire huge
Arctic sphere of interest: a “top
government priority to protect its security and national interest”
in his
own words.
In
recent months, Russia has started creating new Arctic military units,
reinstating its military bases in the Novosibirsk Archipelago and
Franz Josef Land that had been abandoned after the demise of the
former Soviet Union, and began restoring key airfields in the region
including those on Kotelny Island which includes making ready the
towns of Tiksi, Naryan-Mar, and Anadyr for increased military
personnel and logistical needs.
10
Russian warships and nuclear powered icebreakers are now operative in
that region overseeing key shipping lanes joining the Atlantic and
Pacific oceans, including ports like Murmansk (where the “Arctic
Sunrise”
lies peacefully anchored).
Clearly,
the Arctic is very much on the global grand chessboard’s radar
screen. What happens there over the next few years will have immense
significance considering that the manoeuvring and relative
positioning achieved by the powers in conflict will also help to
consolidate their respective presences in the region and worldwide.
For
when it comes to oil and gas, the US and UK have clearly decided to
militarize oil exploration, exploitation and shipping lanes. Just as
they have done in the South Atlantic with the UK’s
Falkland/Malvinas nuclear military base and the US’s powerful
Fourth South Atlantic Fleet with its rosary of military bases
discretely spread into Paraguay, Argentina, Chile, Colombia and other
countries in the region.
For
there lies another even vaster and richer region: the Antarctic which
is not just a sea but an entire continent centred on the South Pole.
Indeed,
in our complex world what happens in the scorched deserts of Arabia,
Libya and Iraq; in the infinite steppes of Asia; in the steaming
jungles of Africa; or in the windswept pampas of South America has an
impact – albeit, indirect - on this new front which we could
described as the coming polar wars.
Wars
involving superpower nations, their allied countries, environmental
NGO’s fronting for the global power elites, oil, gas and mining
giants, and of course the bankers pulling the strings from above; way
above 10 Downing, way above the White House, the Palais D’Elysee
and Greenpeace’s HQ in Amsterdam.
Adrian
Salbuchi is a political analyst, author, speaker and radio/TV
commentator in Argentina. www.asalbuchi.com.ar
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