America
at War in Macedonia
By Michel
Chossudovsky
TFF Associate
Professor of Economics, University of
Ottawa
See map at http://www.bsrec.bg/taskforce/SYNERGY/oilprojects2.html.
Washington's covert war in Macedonia purports to
consolidate America's sphere of influence in southeastern
Europe. At stake is the strategic
Bulgaria-Macedonia-Albania transport, communications and
oil pipeline "corridor" which links the Black Sea to the
Adriatic coast. Macedonia stands at the strategic
crossroads of the oil pipeline corridor.
To protect these pipeline routes, Washington's goal
is to install a "patchwork of protectorates" along
strategic corridors in the Balkans. The promise
of "Greater Albania" used by Washington to foment
Albanian nationalism is part of the military-intelligence
ploy. Amply documented, the latter consists in
financing and equipping the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA)
and its National Liberation Army (NLA) proxy to wage the
terrorist assaults in Macedonia.
The development of America's sphere of influence in
Southeastern Europe --in complicity with Britain--
supports the interests of the oil giants including
BP-Amoco-ARCO, Chevron and Texaco. Securing control and
"protecting" the pipeline routes is paramount to the
success of these multi-billion dollar ventures:
A successful international oil regime is a combination
of economic, political, and military arrangements to
support oil production and transportation to
markets.1
The Anglo-American consortium which controls the AMBO
Trans-Balkan pipeline project linking the Bulgarian port
of Burgas to Vlore on the Albanian Adriatic coastline
largely excludes the participation of Europe's competing
oil giant Total-Fina-Elf. 2 In other words, US strategic
control over the pipeline corridor is intent upon
weakening the role of the European Union and keeping
competing European business interests at arms'
length.
WHO IS BEHIND THE
TRANS-BALKAN PIPELINE?
The US based AMBO pipeline consortium is directly
linked to the seat of political and military power in the
United States and Vice President Dick Cheney's firm
Halliburton Energy.3
The feasibility study for AMBO's Trans-Balkan Oil
Pipeline, conducted by the international engineering
company of Brown & Root Ltd. [Halliburton's
British subsidiary] has determined that this
pipeline·will become a part of the region's critical
East-West corridor infrastructure which includes highway,
railway, gas and fiber optic telecommunications
lines.4
And upon completion of the feasibility study by
Halliburton, a senior executive of Halliburton was
appointed CEO of AMBO. Halliburton was also granted
a contract to service US troops in the Balkans and build
"Bondsteel" in Kosovo, which now constitutes "the largest
American foreign military base constructed since
Vietnam".5 Coincidentally, White and Case LLT, the New
York law firm that President William J. Clinton joined
when he left the White House also has a stake in the AMBO
pipeline deal.
MILITARISATION OF THE
PIPELINE CORRIDORS
The AMBO Trans-Balkans pipeline project would link up
with the pipeline corridors between the Black Sea and the
Caspian Sea basin, which lies at the hub of the World's
largest unexplored oil reserves (See map of http://www.bsrec.bg/taskforce/SYNERGY/oilprojects2.html).
The militarisation of these various corridors is an
integral part of Washington's design.
The US policy of "protecting the pipeline
routes" out of the Caspian Sea basin (and across the
Balkans) was spelled out by Clinton's Energy Secretary
Bill Richardson barely a few months prior to the 1999
bombing of Yugoslavia:
"This is about America's energy security. It's also
about preventing strategic inroads by those who don't
share our values. We're trying to move these newly
independent countries toward the west We would like to
see them reliant on western commercial and political
interests rather than going another way. We've made a
substantial political investment in the Caspian, and it's
very important to us that both the pipeline map and the
politics come out right."6
The Anglo-American oil giants, including
BP-Amoco-Arco, Texaco and Chevron --supported by US
military might-- are competing with Europe's oil giant
Total-Fina-Elf (associated with Italy's ENI) which is a
big player in Kazakhstan's wealthy North East Caspian
Kashagan oil fields. The stakes are high: Kashagan
is reported "so large as to even surpass the size of the
North Sea oil reserves."7 The competing EU based
consortium, however, lacks a significant stake and
leverage in the main pipeline routes out of the Caspian
Sea basin and back (via the Black Sea and through the
Balkans) to Western Europe. The key pipeline corridor
projects --including the AMBO project and the
Baku-Cehyan project through Turkey to the
Mediterranean-- are largely in the hands of their
Anglo-American rivals, which rely heavily on US political
and military presence in both the Caspian basin and the
Balkans.
Washington's design is to eventually distance all
three AMBO countries, namely Bulgaria, Macedonia and
Albania from German-EU influence through the installation
of full-fledged US protectorates. In other words, US
militarisation and geopolitical control over the
projected pipeline linking Burgas in Bulgaria to the
Adriatic port of Vlore in Albania is intent upon
undermining EU influence as well as weakening competing
Franco-Belgian-Italian oil interests.
Negotiations concerning the AMBO pipeline have been
supported by US government officials through the Trade
and Development Agency's (TDA) South Balkan
Development Initiative (SBDI) "designed to help Albania,
Bulgaria and FYR Macedonia further develop and integrate
their transportation infrastructure along the east-west
corridor that connects them."8
The TDA points to the need for the three countries to
"use regional synergies to leverage new public and
private capital [from US companies]" while
underscoring the responsibility of the US
government "for implementing the initiative."
With regard to the AMBO pipeline, it would appear that
the EU has largely been excluded from the planning and
negotiations. "Memoranda of understanding" (MOU) have
already been signed with the governments of Albania,
Bulgaria and Macedonia which strip the countries'
national sovereignty over both the pipeline and the
transport corridors by providing "exclusive rights"
to the Anglo-American consortium:
"[The] MOU states that AMBO will be the only
party allowed to build the planned Burgas-Vlore oil
pipeline. More specifically, it gives AMBO the exclusive
right to negotiate with investors in and creditors of the
project. It also obligates [the governments of
Bulgaria, Macedonia and Albania] not to disclose
certain confidential information on the pipeline
project.9
"EAST-WEST CORRIDOR
8"
The AMBO pipeline project is linked up with another
strategic project entitled "Corridor 8", initially
proposed by the Clinton Administration in the context of
the "Balkans Stability Pact". Of strategic importance to
both the US and the European Union, "Corridor 8" includes
highway, railway, electricity and telecommunications
infrastructure. In turn, the existing infrastructure in
these sectors is slated for deregulation and
privatisation (at rock bottom prices) under IMF-World
Bank supervision.
Although rubber-stamped by EU transport ministers as
part of the process of European economic integration,
"Corridor 8" feasibility studies were conducted by US
companies financed directly by the TDA. In other words,
Washington seems to have set the stage for the takeover
of the countries' transport and communications
infrastructure. American corporations including Bechtel,
Enron and General Electric (with financial backing from
the US government) are competing with companies from the
European Union.
Washington's design is to open up the entire corridor
to US multinationals in a region situated in the European
Union's "economic backyard", where the power of the
Deutschmark tends to dominate over that of the US
dollar.
"EU
ENLARGEMENT"
In early 2000, the European Commission began
negotiations on EU associate membership status with
Macedonia, Bulgaria and Albania. And in April 2001, at
the height of the terrorist assaults, Macedonia became
the first country in the Balkans to sign a so-called
"stabilisation and association agreement" (SAA)
constituting an important step towards full EU
membership. The agreement provides the basis for "trade
liberalisation, political co-operation, economic and
institutional reform and transplantation of EU
legislation." Under the SAA, Macedonia would (de facto)
be integrated into the European monetary system, with
full access to the EU market.10
The terrorist assaults coincided chronologically with
the process of "EU enlargement", gaining momentum barely
a few weeks before the signing of the historic
"association agreement" with Macedonia. Amply documented,
the US has military advisers working with the
terrorists. Was this a mere coincidence?
Also, Robert Frowick, "a former US diplomat", was
appointed to head the OSCE mission in Macedonia in
mid-March, again barely a few weeks before the signing of
the "association agreement." In close liaison with
Washington and the US embassy in Skopje, Frowick
initiated a "dialogue" with NLA rebel leader Ali Ahmeti.
He was also instrumental in brokering an agreement
between Ahmeti and the leaders of the Albanian parties,
which form part of the government coalition.
This agreement negotiated by Frowick has largely
contributed to destabilising political institutions,
while at the same time jeopardising the process of EU
enlargement.11 Moreover, the deteriorating security
situation in Macedonia has provided a pretext for
increased US political, "humanitarian" and military
interference, while contributing to weakening Skopje's
economic and political ties to Germany and the EU. In
this regard, one of the "binding conditions" of the
"association agreement" is that Macedonia conform to "EU
standards on democracy".12 Needless to say, without a
"functioning government" in Macedonia, the EU association
process with Brussels cannot proceed.
The puppet governments installed in Tirana, Skopje and
Sofia, while largely responding to US diktats, are
currently being swayed in the direction of the European
Union. Washington's intent is ultimately to curb
Germany's "Lebensraum" into Southeastern Europe.
While paying lip service to "EU enlargement", the US has
consistently favoured "NATO enlargement" as a means to
pursuing its strategic interests in Eastern Europe and
the Balkans, while Germany and France have opposed
it.
While the tone of international diplomacy remains
mannerly and polite, US foreign policy under the Bush
administration has become distinctly
"anti-European". According to one observer:
"At the heart of the Bush team, Colin Powell is
[considered] the friend of the Europeans, while
the other ministers and advisers are considered arrogant,
hard and indisposed to listen or to give the Europeans a
place."13
GERMANY AND
AMERICA
Amply documented, the CIA is behind the KLA and the
NLA rebels, who are waging the terrorist assaults against
the Macedonian security forces. While the CIA's German
counterpart the Bundes Nachrichten Dienst (BND)
collaborated with the CIA in overseeing and financing the
KLA prior to the 1999 war, recent developments suggest
that the BND is not involved in Washington's
military-intelligence ploy in Macedonia.1
Barely a few weeks before the signing of the
"association agreement" with the European Union, German
troops stationed in Macedonia in the Tetovo region were
(mid March 2001) "accidentally" targeted by the
NLA. While the Western media --echoing in chorus
the official statements-- maintains that German troops
were "caught in the cross-fire", reports from Tetovo
suggest that the NLA shelling "was deliberate." In any
event, the incident would not have occurred had Germany's
BND been working with the rebel army:
"Up to 600 German troops were forced to leave Tetovo
overnight after their barracks· were caught in crossfire·
[They] were too lightly armed to defend
themselves against the Albanians. The Germans will
replace the departing troops with a Leopard tank squadron
[belonging to the Panzer-Artillerie-Batterie division
stationed in Nordrein-Westphalen]. [T]he new
[German] firepower may be used to knock out
Albanian positions now established around Tetovo," 15
In a bitter irony, two of the commanders responsible
for the terrorist assaults in the Tetovo region had been
trained by British Special Forces:
"Embarrassingly for KFOR, it emerged that two of the
Kosovo-based commanders leading the Albanian push
[into the Tetovo region] were trained by former
British SAS and Parachute Regiment officers in the days
when NATO was more comfortable with the fledgling Kosovo
Liberation Army (KLA). A former member of a
European special forces unit who accompanied the KLA
during the Kosovo conflict said that a commander with the
nom de guerre of Bilal was organising the flow of arms
and men into Macedonia, and that the veteran KLA
commander Adem Bajrami was helping to co-ordinate the
assault on Tetovo. Both were taught by British soldiers
in the secretive training camps that operated above
Bajram Curri in northern Albania during 1998 and
1999."1
These same British trained rebel commanders view
Germany as the "enemy" because Bundeswehr troops
stationed in Macedonia and Kosovo --rather than
providing "protection" to NLA "freedom fighters" in
the same way as their British and American KFOR
counterparts-- frequently detain "suspected terrorists"
at the border:
"A spokesman for the Albanians' National Liberation
Army (NLA) in Pristina warned the Bundeswehr its
involvement would constitute 'a declaration of war by the
Federal Republic of Germany'". 17
In response to NLA threats, the Bundeswehr sent in its
own Special Forces, the Fallschirmjäger
(Parachutists) to work with its
Panzer-Artillerie-Batterie squadron.18 German Defence
Minister Rudolf Scharping confirmed that "he was ready to
send more tanks and troops to bolster Bundeswehr
forces".19 Yet in recent developments, Berlin has chosen
to withdraw most of its troops from the Tetovo region and
not in any way challenge the US military-intelligence
ploy in support of the NLA rebels. Some of these
German troops are now stationed on the Kosovo side of the
border.
While the NLA received a shipment of brand new
advanced weaponry "made in America", Germany donated
(mid-June) to the Macedonian Security forces all terrain
vehicles as well as weapons "for sophisticated infrared
tracing in the battlefield." According to a report
from Macedonia, the small contingent of German troops
which still remains in the Tetovo region "was under heavy
attack from the terrorists who attacked them with mortar
from the mountains above Tetovo. That is probably the
response of yesterday's [14 June 2001] donation
to our army made by the German government".20
While divisions between "NATO allies" are never made
public, Germany's Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer --in a
strongly worded statement to the Bundestag directed
against "the Albanian extremists in Macedonia"-- has
called for "a long-term arrangement, aimed to make the
whole region closer to Europe." (i.e. free of US
encroachment). The German position is in marked contrast
to that put forth by the US, which requires the Skopje
government to grant amnesty to the terrorists, modify the
country's constitution and incorporate the NLA rebels in
civilian politics:
"The pact reportedly called for the rebels to stop
their fight in exchange for amnesty
guarantees. The rebels would also have the right to veto
future political decisions regarding ethnic Albanian
rights. The accord was reportedly mediated by Robert
Frowick, a former U.S. envoy who currently served as a
Balkan representative for the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe." 21
THE ANGLO-AMERICAN
AXIS
The clash between Germany and America in the Balkans
is part of a much broader process which affects the heart
of the Western military-industrial complex and defence
establishment.
From the early 1990s, the US and Germany have acted
jointly as NATO partners in the Balkans, coordinating
their respective military, intelligence and foreign
policy initiatives. While maintaining in their public
statements a semblance of political unity, serious
divisions started to emerge in the wake of the Dayton
Accords (1995), as German banks scrambled to impose the
Deutschmark and take over the monetary system of
Yugoslavia's successor states.
Moreover, in the wake of the 1999 war in Yugoslavia,
the US has reinforced its strategic, military and
intelligence ties with Britain, while Britain has severed
many of its ties (particularly in the area of defence and
aerospace production) with Germany and France.
Launched in early 2000, U.S. Defense Secretary William
Cohen and his British counterpart, Geoff Hoon, signed a
Declaration of Principles for Defense Equipment and
Industrial Cooperation''. 22 Washingtons objective
was to encourage the formation of a transatlantic
bridge across which the DoD [US Department of
Defense] can take its globalization policy to
Europe."23
The US defence industry --which now includes British
Aerospace Systems (BaeS)-- is clashing with the
Franco-German defence consortium EADS --a
conglomerate composed of France's Aerospatiale Matra,
Deutsche Aerospace, which is part of the powerful Daimler
group, and Spain's CASA. In other words, a major split in
the Western military-industrial complex has occurred with
the US and Britain on one side and Germany and France on
the other.
Oil, guns and the Western military alliance are
intimately related processes. Washington's design is to
eventually ensure the dominance of the US
military-industrial complex in alliance with the
Anglo-American oil giants and Britains major
defense contractors. These developments evidently
also have a bearing on the control over strategic
pipelines, transport and communications corridors in the
Balkans, Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.
In turn, this Anglo-American axis is also matched by
increased cooperation between the CIA and Britains
MI5 in the sphere of intelligence and covert operations
as evidenced by the role played by British SAS Special
Forces in training KLA rebels.
WAR, "DOLLARISATION"
AND THE NEW WORLD ORDER
"Protection" of the pipelines, covert activities and
the recycling of drug money in support of armed
insurgencies, militarisation of strategic corridors,
defence procurement to "Partnership for Peace" (PfP)
countries are all an integral part of the Anglo-American
axis and its quest to dominate oil and gas routes and
transport corridors out of the Caspian sea basin and from
the Black sea across the Balkans.
More generally, what is happening in the broader
region linking Eastern Europe and the Balkans to the
former Soviet republics is a relentless scramble for
control over national economies by competing business
conglomerates. And behind this process is the quest by
Wall Street's financial establishment --in alliance with
the defence and oil giants-- to destabilise and discredit
the Deutschmark (and the Euro) with a view to imposing
the US dollar as the sole currency for the region.
Control over "money creation" --imposing the
rule of the US Federal Reserve system throughout the
World-- has become a central feature of US expansionism.
In this regard, Washington's military-intelligence ploy
not only consists in undermining "EU enlargement", it is
also intent upon weakening and displacing the dominion of
Germany's largest banking institutions (e.g. Deutsche
Bank, Commerzbank and WestDeutsche Landesbank) throughout
the Balkans.
In other words, the New World Order is marked by the
clash between Europe and America for "colonial control"
over national currencies. And this conflict between
"competing capitalist blocks" will become increasingly
acute when several hundred million people from Eastern
Europe and the Balkans to Central Asia start using the
Euro as their "de facto" national currency on January 1st
2002.
See map at http://www.bsrec.bg/taskforce/SYNERGY/oilprojects2.html.
NOTES
1 Robert V. Baryiski, The Caspian Oil Regime: Military
Dimensions, Caspian Crossroads Magazine ,Volume 1, Issue
No. 2, Spring 1995.
2. Reference to the European Union in this article
should be interpreted as the "European Union minus
Britain".
3 See Albanian Telegraph Agency, Tirana 28 July 1998
and Milsnews, Skopje, 23 January, 1997 available at
http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a379fb721329c.htm.
4. Milsnews, op cit.
5. See Karen Talbot's incisive analysis: "Former
Yugoslavia: The Name of the Game is Oil, People's Weekly
World, May 2001 at http://www.ecadre.net/pages/news/stories/990197752.shtml,
see also Marjorie Cohn, "Pacification for a pipeline:
explaining the US Military presence in the Balkans, The
Jurist, Legal Education Network, June 2001, http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/forumnew22.htm.
6. George Monbiot, A Discreet Deal in the Pipeline,
The Guardian, 15 February 2001.
7. Richard Giragosian, "Massive Kashagan Oil Strike
Renews Geopolitical Offensive In Caspian", The Analyst,
Central Asia-Caucasus Institute, Johns Hopkins
University-Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International
Studies, 7 June, 2000, http://www.soros.org/caucasus/0059.html
8. See the Trade and Development (TDA) by Region at
http://www.tda.gov/region/sbdi.html.
9. Alexander Gas and Oil Connections, http://www.gasandoil.com/goc/news/nte04224.htm,
October 2000.
10. Under so-called "asymmetric trade
preferences" with the EU.
11. For further details on the role of Robert
Frowick, see Michel Chossudovsky, "Macedonia:
Washington's Military-Intelligence Ploy". June 2001
12. See AFP, 10 April 2001.
13. According to Pascal Boniface, director of the
Paris Institute of International and Strategic Relations,
UPI, 11 April 2001.
14. For details on CIA-BND support to the KLA see
Michel Chossudovsky, "Kosovo Freedom Fighters Financed by
Organised Crime", Covert Action Quarterly, Fall 1999 also
available at http://www.heise.de/tp/english/inhalt/co/2743/1.html),
15 Tom Walker, NATO Troops caught in a Balkan Ulster,
Sunday Times, London, 18 March 2001,
16. Ibid.
17. Ibid.
18. See Deutsche Fallschirmjäger nach Tetovo,
Spiegel Online, 24 March 2001, see also, Bundeswehr
verlegt Soldaten ins Kosovo, Spiegel Online, 23 March
2001.
19. Deutsche Press Agentur, 19 March 2001,
20. Information transmitted to the author from
Skopje, June 2001.
21. Facts on File, World News Digest, 30 May
2001.
22. Reuters, 5 February 2000.
23. The agreement was signed (according to a Pentagon
official quoted in Muradian) shortly after the creation
of British Aerospace Systems resulting from the merger of
BAe with GEC Marconi. British Aerospace (Bae) was already
firmly allied to Americas largest defense
contractors Lockheed Martin and Boeing. For further
details see Vago Muradian, Pentagon Sees Bridge to
Europe, Defense Daily, Vol. 204, No. 40 Dec. 01,
1999.
Recent articles by
the author on the Balkans:
"Washington Finances Ethnic Warfare in the Balkans",
April 2001, at http://www.emperors-clothes.com/articles/choss/fin.htm
or http://www.canadiandimension.mb.ca/extra/x0404mc.htm
"Economic Terrorism", May 2001 at
http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/choss/eco1.htm
or http://alainet.org/active/show_news.phtml?news_id=1225.
©
Copyright by Michel Chossudovsky, Ottawa, June 2001. All
rights reserved. Permission is granted to post this text
on non-commercial community internet sites, provided the
essay remains intact and the copyright note is displayed.
To publish this text in printed and/or other form,
contact the author at chossudovsky@videotron.ca, fax:
1-514-4256224.
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