Petrodollar
Alert: Putin Prepares To Announce "Holy Grail" Gas Deal
With China
21
March, 2014
If
it was the intent of the West to bring Russia and China together -
one a natural resource (if "somewhat" corrupt) superpower
and the other a fixed capital / labor output (if "somewhat"
capital misallocating and credit bubbleicious) powerhouse - in the
process marginalizing the dollar and encouraging Ruble and Renminbi
bilateral trade, then things are surely "going according to
plan."
For
now there have been no major developments as a result of the shift in
the geopolitical axis that has seen global US influence, away from
the Group of 7 (most insolvent nations) of course, decline
precipitously in the aftermath of the bungled Syrian intervention
attempt and the bloodless Russian annexation of Crimea, but that will
soon change. Because while the west is focused on day to day
developments in Ukraine, and how to halt Russian expansion through
appeasement (hardly a winning tactic as events in the 1930s
demonstrated), Russia is once again thinking 3 steps ahead... and
quite a few steps east.
While
Europe is furiously scrambling to find alternative sources of energy
should Gazprom pull the plug on natgas exports to Germany and Europe
(the imminent surge in Ukraine gas prices by 40% is probably the best
indication of what the outcome would be), Russia
is preparing the announcement of the "Holy Grail" energy
deal with none other than China, a move which would send geopolitical
shockwaves around the world and bind the two nations in a
commodity-backed axis.
One which, as some especially on these pages, have suggested would
lay the groundwork for a new joint, commodity-backed reserve currency
that bypasses the dollar, something which Russia implied moments ago
when its finance minister Siluanov said that Russia may refrain from
foreign borrowing this year. Translated: bypass western purchases of
Russian debt, funded by Chinese purchases of US Treasurys, and go
straight to the source.
Igor Sechin gathered media in Tokyo the next day to warn Western governments that more sanctions over Moscow's seizure of the Black Sea peninsula from Ukraine would be counter-productive.
The underlying message from the head of Russia's biggest oil company, Rosneft, was clear: If Europe and the United States isolate Russia, Moscow will look East for new business, energy deals, military contracts and political alliances.
The Holy Grail for Moscow is a natural gas supply deal with China that is apparently now close after years of negotiations. If it can be signed when Putin visits China in May, he will be able to hold it up to show that global power has shifted eastwards and he does not need the West.
More
details on the revelation of said "Holy Grail":
State-owned Russian gas firm Gazprom hopes to pump 38 billion cubic meters (bcm) of natural gas per year to China from 2018 via the first pipeline between the world's largest producer of conventional gas to the largest consumer.
"May is in our plans," a Gazprom spokesman said, when asked about the timing of an agreement. A company source said: "It would be logical to expect the deal during Putin's visit to China."
Summarizing
what should be and is painfully obvious to all, but apparently to the
White House, which keeps prodding at Russia, is the following:
"The worse Russia's relations are with the West, the closer Russia will want to be to China. If China supports you, no one can say you're isolated," said Vasily Kashin, a China expert at the Analysis of Strategies and Technologies (CAST) think thank.
Bingo.
And now add bilateral trade denominated in either Rubles or Renminbi
(or gold),
add Iran, Iraq, India, and soon the Saudis (China's largest foreign
source of crude, whose crown prince also happened
to meet president Xi Jinping last week to
expand trade further) and wave goodbye to the petrodollar.
As
reported previoisly, China has already implicitly backed Putin
without risking it relations with the West. "Last Saturday China
abstained in a U.N. Security Council vote on a draft resolution
declaring invalid the referendum in which Crimea went on to back
union with Russia. Although China is nervous about referendums in
restive regions of other countries which might serve as a precedent
for Tibet and Taiwan, it
has refused to criticize Moscow.
The support of Beijing is vital for Putin. Not only is China a fellow
permanent member of the U.N. Security Council with whom Russia thinks
alike, it is also the world's second biggest economy and it opposes
the spread of Western-style democracy."
This
culminated yesterday, when as we reported
last night,
Putin thanked China for its "understanding over Ukraine."
China hasn't exactly kept its feelings about closer relations with
Russia under wraps either:
Chinese President Xi Jinping showed how much he values ties with Moscow, and Putin in particular, by making Russia his first foreign visit as China's leader last year and attending the opening of the Winter Olympics in Sochi last month.
Many Western leaders did not go to the Games after criticism of Russia's record on human rights. By contrast, when Putin and Xi discussed Ukraine by telephone on March 4, the Kremlin said their positions were "close".
The
punchline: "A
strong alliance would suit both countries as a counterbalance to the
United States."
An alliance that would merely be an extension of current trends in
close bilateral relations, including not only infrastructure
investment but also military supplies:
However, China overtook Germany as Russia's biggest buyer of crude oil this year thanks to Rosneft securing deals to boost eastward oil supplies via the East Siberia-Pacific Ocean pipeline and another crossing Kazakhstan.
If Russia is isolated by a new round of Western sanctions - those so far affect only a few officials' assets abroad and have not been aimed at companies - Russia and China could also step up cooperation in areas apart from energy. CAST's Kashin said the prospects of Russia delivering Sukhoi SU-35 fighter jets to China, which has been under discussion since 2010, would grow.
China is very interested in investing in infrastructure, energy and commodities in Russia, and a decline in business with the West could force Moscow to drop some of its reservations about Chinese investment in strategic industries. "With Western sanctions, the atmosphere could change quickly in favor of China," said Brian Zimbler Managing Partner of Morgan Lewis international law firm's Moscow office.
Russia-China trade turnover grew by 8.2 percent in 2013 to $8.1 billion but Russia was still only China's seventh largest export partner in 2013, and was not in the top 10 countries for imported goods. The EU is Russia's biggest trade partner, accounting for almost half of all its trade turnover.
And
as if pushing Russia into the warm embrace of the world's most
populous nation was not enough, there is also the second most
populated country in the world, India.
Putin did take time, however, to thank one other country apart from China for its understanding over Ukraine and Crimea - saying India had shown "restraint and objectivity".
He also called Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to discuss the crisis on Tuesday, suggesting there is room for Russia's ties with traditionally non-aligned India to flourish.
Although India has become the largest export market for U.S. arms, Russia remains a key defense supplier and relations are friendly, even if lacking a strong business and trade dimension, due to a strategic partnership dating to the Soviet era.
Putin's moves to assert Russian control over Crimea were seen very favorably in the Indian establishment, N. Ram, publisher of The Hindu newspaper, told Reuters. "Russia has legitimate interests," he added.
To
summarize: while the biggest geopolitical tectonic shift since the
cold war accelerates with the inevitable firming of the "Asian
axis", the west monetizes its debt, revels in the paper wealth
created from an all time high manipulated stock market while at the
same time trying to explain why 6.5% unemployment is really
indicative of a weak economy, blames the weather for every
disappointing economic data point, and every single person is
transfixed with finding a missing airplane.
Gas Talks Between Ukraine And Gazprom Cancelled, Naftogaz Chairman Detained On Corruption Probe
21
March, 2014
Yesterday we
warned that the honeymoon is over as
Ukraine expects gas prices to rise 40% as Russian discounts fade.
Today it appears the situation is even worse:
- *NAFTOGAZ, GAZPROM TALKS FOR MARCH 20-21 CANCELLED: INTERFAX
- *UKRAINE POLICE DETAINS NAFTOGAZ CHAIRMAN BAKULIN: AVAKOV
- *UKRAINE NAFTOGAZ RAID PART OF CORRUPTION PROBE, AVAKOV SAYS
The
issues up for debate, of course, are supply and pricing of gas from
Russia and the payment for over $2bn of existing debt owed.
While Interfax
reports that
this was because the Ukraine gas company executive was unable to
leave the country, which now appears due to corruption
allegations ("there's
corruption going on here?") but
merely exacerbates any Russian gas retaliation concerns.
Talks originally planned to take place on March 20 and March 21 between Ukraine's national oil and gas company Naftogaz Ukrainy and Russian gas giant OJSC Gazprom (MOEX: GAZP) have fallen through at the last minute, a source from the Ukrainian government told Interfax.
"The Naftogaz Ukrainy delegation was prepared to fly out [for the meeting], but the head of the company [Naftogaz Ukrainy] was not allowed to leave the country at the last minute," the source said.
The main issues to be discussed were supposed to be the purchase and transit of natural gas, as well as the payment schedule for existing debt.
The source said this concerned a personal ban on leaving the country for Naftogaz's CEO Yevgeny Bakulin.
What is certain, is that the struggling population, most of whom never wanted the recent political overhaul and were quite happy with life as it was, will suddenly demand a return to the living standards under the old, if "horrible" regime, and demand an even quicker overhaul of the current administration.
Something Putin knows all too well.
Why does he know it? Because current events are a carbon copy of what happened in 2007 that led to the infamous 2008 Ukrainian political crisis.
European Union prepares for trade war with Russia over Crimea
Brussels drafts tougher sanctions for new battle plan against Moscow should Putin expand territorial claims in Ukraine
21
March, 2014
Europe
began to prepare for a possible trade war with Russia over Ukraine on
Friday, with the EU executive in Brussels ordered to draft plans for
much more substantive sanctions against Moscow if Vladimir Putin
presses ahead with Russian territorial expansion.
But
the bigger EU countries – Germany, France and Britain, all with
major but very different interests at stake in Russia – split over
the tactics of a new campaign with fears that a trade war would be
highly risky and potentially ruinous.
A
two-day summit of EU leaders dominated by the Crimea crisis ended
with 12 Russian politicians and military figures being added to a
list of 21 so far subjected to travel bans and asset freezes.
Unlike
Washington, which on Thursday blacklisted senior Kremlin figures and
oligarchs, the EU list avoided Putin's immediate entourage, instead
targeting figures such as Sergei Glazyev, an economic adviser to
Putin, Dmitry Rogozin, a deputy prime minister, and the heads of both
houses of parliament. "The persons are not so important,"
said a senior EU official. "It's the climate we're creating."
He denied any differences with the Americans. "It's not a beauty
contest."
The
summit debate, participants and witnesses said, focused on what is
known as "stage 3" of a sanctions regime, meaning broader
trade and economic sanctions against Russia if the Kremlin escalates
operations to seize more territory in Ukraine beyond the Black Sea
peninsula of Crimea, whose annexation was formally concluded on
Friday in Moscow.
David
Cameron reserved strong language for the Kremlin move. "A sham
and illegal referendum has taken place at the barrel of a
Kalashnikov," he said. "Russia has sought to annex Crimea,
a flagrant breach of international law and something we will never
recognise."
Moscow
criticised the Foreign Office for its choice of rhetoric on the
Ukraine crisis. "We are being reassured that the British
government wants to maintain normal diplomatic relations with the
Russian Federation. If that is the wish of our British partners, then
this relationship has got to be normal and diplomatic including at
the level of rhetoric. Good relations ought to be valued. The British
side should mind its language. Unfortunately, that's not the case
with the British Embassy in Moscow," said the Russian foreign
ministry. "It seems that the harsh rhetoric, quite beyond the
pale, is meant to cover up the gross inaptitude of the Brussels
bureaucracy and its zero-sum motive to engineer a cold war-type
geopolitical grab on Russia's borders."
Cameron
pointed out that while the EU depended on Russia for a quarter of its
gas supplies, the Russian gas monopoly Gazprom relied on Europe for
half of its exports. "Russia needs Europe more than Europe needs
Russia," he said.
The
European commission in Brussels was told to draw up plans for
sanctions "in a broad range of economic areas".
Such
language masked differences between Britain and France on the one
hand and Germany on the other. Following the summit, Germany's
chancellor, Angela Merkel, failed to mention the next phase of much
more serious penalties, while Cameron emphasised them.
On
Thursday, the White House named metallurgy, energy, trade and other
areas as possible targets for action. London and Paris wanted to echo
this. "The Russians have to see where they will hurt," said
one diplomat. Germany, by far Russia's biggest trade partner in the
EU and the biggest buyer of Russian gas, has resisted attempts to
specify what the sanctions targets might be.
Apart
from its energy dependency, the Germans say they have more than 6,000
firms operating in Russia and that 300,000 jobs in Germany depend on
trade with Russia.
Cameron
was much more explicit on the issue and British officials admitted
there were divisions. He mentioned "finance, military, energy"
as areas being considered. "There's nothing left out."
That
suggested equal pain for the three big countries since Britain has
most to lose from financial sanctions, France has billion of euros at
stake in defence contracts with Russia, while Germany suffers most
from sanctions in the energy sector.
It
is not clear when the European commission will deliver its battle
plan for expanded sanctions but there is an acute feeling among
commission officials that Brussels has been handed a poison chalice.
They said as soon as the plans are published or leaked, the Russians
will know what to expect or fear and will get their retaliation in
pre-emptively, triggering a much bigger crisis between Europe and
Russia.
The
senior EU official, though, said it would be "really stupid"
for the EU to reveal its hand. "The commission is keeping its
cards close to its chest. We will not do this in full transparency.
It will not be transparent at all."
While
the Americans have been much more open in spelling out their plans,
the Europeans complain that it is easier for Washington because it
has much less to lose, with US-Russian trade volumes barely
one-twelfth of that between the EU and Russia.
The
senior official said the blacklist was not coordinated with
Washington. "We are following our own course. The US is far
away."
The
EU and the interim Ukrainian government have now signed part of a
political and trade pact, the issue that led to the crisis last
November that ultimately triggered a revolution in Kiev and Russian
intervention in Crimea.
The
EU summit agreed to race ahead with similar pacts with Moldova and
Georgia, concluding them by June.
Putin mocks US sanctions, vows not to strike back
Vladimir
Putin has mocked US sanctions imposed on Russia, saying he will open
an account at US-sanctioned Rossiya Bank. During a meeting with the
country's senior security officials he added that he won't introduce
a visa regime with Ukraine -
READ
MORE http://on.rt.com/x16ya5
Leaning East: Russia moves towards China as West pushes sanctions
Amid
the possibility of further sanctions from Brussels and Washington
over Crimea - Vladimir Putin is set to address the annual session of
Russia's Union of Industrials and Entrepreneurs. Live now to RT's
Katie Pilbeam. Well the West may be threatening sanctions - but
Russia's eastern relations are unaffected. Moscow's trade with China
is on the rise - the turnover reaching 89 billion dollars last year.
Most of that is made up of oil supplies being sent to Beijing, which
is the world's fastest growing energy market. Let's get some analysis
from Thorsten Pattberg, a writer and author of the book "The
East-West Dichotomy".
American corporate media version
Russian
Stocks Hit As Sanctions Affect Banks
US
to hold major war games in Poland – ambassador
The
US military are planning large scale war games in Poland, which would
involve troops from several eastern European states, the American
ambassador to the country, Stephen Mull, said.
RT,
21
Marach, 2014
Poland,
the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Romania and the
Baltic states (Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia) will be participating
in drills, together with the Americans, Mull told Radio ZET.
Lask airbase in central Poland has been selected as the venue for the military exercise, the ambassador said, refraining from saying when it was scheduled for.
Mull’s announcement comes just three days after US Vice President Joe Biden’s visit to the Polish capital of Warsaw.
Biden’s trip was aimed at reassuring that America remains a “steadfast ally” to Poland and the Baltic States after they expressed anxiety over the events in the Crimea, which signed a treaty of accession to the Russian Federation on Tuesday.
The vice president promised an additional 12 F-16 fighter jets for Poland and 10 more US F-15’s, instead of a planned four, to be assigned to NATO operations in the skies over the Baltics.
He also spoke of rotating more American ground and naval forces through the Baltic States for training exercises.
Biden once again stressed that there’ll be no changes to the US missile defense plans in Poland and Romania, with the controversial system to be operational by 2018.
Lask airbase in central Poland has been selected as the venue for the military exercise, the ambassador said, refraining from saying when it was scheduled for.
Mull’s announcement comes just three days after US Vice President Joe Biden’s visit to the Polish capital of Warsaw.
Biden’s trip was aimed at reassuring that America remains a “steadfast ally” to Poland and the Baltic States after they expressed anxiety over the events in the Crimea, which signed a treaty of accession to the Russian Federation on Tuesday.
The vice president promised an additional 12 F-16 fighter jets for Poland and 10 more US F-15’s, instead of a planned four, to be assigned to NATO operations in the skies over the Baltics.
He also spoke of rotating more American ground and naval forces through the Baltic States for training exercises.
Biden once again stressed that there’ll be no changes to the US missile defense plans in Poland and Romania, with the controversial system to be operational by 2018.
Meanwhile,
an unnamed US military official told Reuters that Polish radio has
misrepresented the ambassador’s remarks in their report.
Mull was only talking about the discussion between Warsaw and Washington of the “possibility of expanding aviation activities at Lask to potentially include other NATO partners, and then he mentioned those nations.”
Mull was only talking about the discussion between Warsaw and Washington of the “possibility of expanding aviation activities at Lask to potentially include other NATO partners, and then he mentioned those nations.”
A detachment of 10 US airmen opens
America's first permanent military mission in Poland at the air base
in Lask, central Poland, on November 9, 2012.(AFP Photo / Janek
Skarzynski)
Stephen Mull.(Reuters / Kacper Pempel)
Poland’s geographical position has made it a strategically important NATO member as the country borders the crisis-torn Ukraine as well as Russia’s western enclave in the Kaliningrad region.
On Friday, the Ukrainian military joined two weeks of multinational military exercises that involve troops from 12 NATO members and partner nations, Reuters reports.
The Saber Guardian war games will be staged at the Novo Selo training facility in eastern Bulgaria and will include some 700 troops from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belgium, Bulgaria, Georgia, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Turkey, Ukraine and the US, as well as NATO representatives.
On Thursday, the US and NATO also announced that the annual Rapid Trident war games won’t be rescheduled and will take place in Ukraine this summer.
In addition to US and British soldiers, they’ll include units from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Canada, Georgia, Germany, Moldova, Poland, Romania and Ukraine.
Rapid Trident 2014 is designed to promote regional stability and improve interoperability between NATO and Ukraine, which isn’t a member of the North Atlantic Alliance.
On
Friday, the Crimea and Sevastopol, which used to be part of Ukraine,
officially joined Russia,
with President Putin signing the finalizing decree.
Previously, Russian lawmakers ratified both the amendment and an international treaty with the Crimea and the city of Sevastopol, which the sides signed in the Kremlin on March 18.
Previously, Russian lawmakers ratified both the amendment and an international treaty with the Crimea and the city of Sevastopol, which the sides signed in the Kremlin on March 18.
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