Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Reading beyond the Iranian Pakistani Pipeline


Oil & Gas Pipelines: Geopolitics in the Making 

The announcement of the construction of the 1600 Km Iranian-Pakistani gas pipeline didn’t fail to create a true sensation in the world of politics, let alone in the corridors of the White House. In my previous Blog articles, I talked endlessly about the shifting geopolitical dynamics in the Middle East and specifically in the Baluchistan Region that includes Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan, yet the theoretical rant on the rise of the rest mainly driven by Chinese geopolitical ambitions is now crystallizing with every tube that is being laid down between Iran and Pakistan. 
An unfaithful ally (Pakistan) collaborating with a declared enemy (Iran), all under the financing of the 2nd world superpower (China) will not bring much thrust to the crippled foreign policy and strategic planning that the US is conducting overseas, and is sure to reverse the balance of power in the region. The Chinese backing of the pipeline is a clear act of defiance towards Washington, because it does not only redefines the rules of the game and establishes a new standard for approval of sensitive projects in the region, but also jeopardizes the effort of the US to tear down the Iranian economy, and bring to a halt the suspected military nuclear program the mullahs in Teheran are undertaking.


Oil and gas have long been decisive assets in determining the outcome of geopolitical games and conflicts, and their grand power in forging alliances and cementing collaboration is what threatens the very strategic scheme the US has been trying to implement in AF-PAK region. Iran has not only managed to distance Afghanistan from the US through its economic and political support of Kabul, but is now more than ever closer to breaking the US Pakistani alliance via its economic support of the Pakistani economy through the establishment of the pipeline that will provision Pakistan with an additional 4000 Megawatts of electricity.  A reliant Pakistan on Iranian gas provisioning does not only ensure that Pakistan will orbit closer in the circle of Teheran, but will also kill any potential complicity of Pakistan in a future military action against Iran.

The Islamic Republic of Iran, though under severe sanctions and economic embargo, is playing geopolitics way better than what analysts in the White House would have predicted, and this reinforces the fallacy of economic sanctions on Oil economies, a fallacy that proved inefficient in Iraq and is now blatantly failing with Iran. In a region where economic models are byzantine and ailing, Iranian oil is a commodity that can ensure economic growth for its neighbors through the fueling of major projects, and the provisioning of electric coverage especially in times where social unrest is prone to benign disturbances and popular dissatisfactions with the lack of government-produced public goods. The US has challenged the sovereignty of Pakistan more than once, a challenge that couldn’t be silenced through small financial grants especially that Islamabads' cooperation with Washington on counter terrorism has long been unrewarded. With such opportunity, Iranian policy makers couldn’t miss on the chance to terminate US Pakistani relations and boost Teheran influence over its neighbor in a never-ending game of dominos. After the US in intervention in Iraq and Afghanistan, both countries ended up getting closer to the Islamic Republic, not by choice but by necessity given the lack of long-term vision on the part of US leadership. Now after the series of drone strikes in Pakistani soil, the storming of Ben Laden’s compound in Abottabad and the recurrent attacks of US media and US political sphere on the Pakistani intelligence (corruption and collaboration with hostile forces), Pakistan cannot refuse the extended hand of Iran, an extended hand that will at least prove to be an economic catalyst for growth and development in the mostly rural and tribal country.

If Iran is exploiting the US foreign policy breaches in Baluchistan, someone in the Far East is not missing on supporting the Iranian leadership in its anti imperialistic efforts to counter Uncle Sam. Beijing, keeping a low profile through the 90s and the 1st decade of the 21st century, is now moving on to upholding its imposed role of event shaper in Asia pacific, the Middle East and the Sub-Continent area, yet still without indulging in a direct confrontational policy with the US. China has been leading a new type of proxy warfare, a warfare not conducted with weapons and fighter jets, but with economic packages and financial loans. Well in line with Marxist “Economic Determinism”, Chinese officials are now realizing the true power of money in shaping global events and molding alliances, a lesson that has long been proven effective by the IMF and the World Bank loan programs. Financing the Gas pipeline between Pakistan and Iran with a 500 million $ package is not an economic signal Beijing is making, but a resonant geopolitical statement to the US that American blessing for major projects is now obsolete, and that Chinese interests in the region are as critical as those of the US.

What we are witnessing is the formation of a complex network of economic-based loyalties that China is establishing throughout South Central Asia region, with Iran as a primary broker. The IP Pipeline, if ever achieved, will initiate a spree of pipeline branching that will ultimately connect China to Iranian Gas and Oil fields, making it impossible for the US to ever consider military action against Teheran given the fact that such action will directly jeopardize Chinese interests in the country. An economic Oil hungry giant satisfied, and a US presence deterred is a dream becoming reality for both Iran and China who aspire to become key regional players in the area. Iranian oil and gas capabilities have long been undermined, and the model developing now is strikingly similar to the case of Russian geopolitical development in the last decade. The Russian gas empire has only recovered from its Soviet collapse trauma after developing an extensive network of pipelines in Easter and Western Europe with the help of business oligarchs, and what we are witnessing today in Iran is a similar scenario, with the only difference that the Russian oligarchs are now substituted with Chinese wealthy sovereign funds that are financing Iranian projects.

The years to come will witness an extensive pipeline networking throughout the South East and central Asia region, a networking that will seal forever the US leave from the region, and will anchor the establishment of a new balance of powers where China and Iran are the key decision makers, one signing events with Oil and Gas, the other with piles of dollars and financial loans. The rise of the rest is finally overcoming the initial period of economic growth and reaching out to the geopolitical aspirations for influence and control. A new world order is shaping up, and the US seems oblivious to these new geopolitical equivalents to tectonic shifts. 

Mohamed Amine Belarbi

2 comments:

  1. Very Well written. Just a few comments..

    You have mentioned the "Baluchistan area" way too many times..It would have sounded much better had you called it the South East Asia Region or the Sub-Continent or just AF-Pak region..

    Since you are talking about this region and Chinese economic interest in Balochistan.. Do also mention the establishment of Pakistan's Gwadar port, being created as an alternate to the Karachi Port (which handles the flow of goods to Afghanistan and the Central Asian region).. I know you have focused on the Oil/Gas factor but the establishment of this port is heavily coupled with US-China balance you have mentioned in your article.

    "A reliant Pakistan on Iranian gas provisioning does not only ensure that Pakistan will orbit closer in the circle of Teheran, but will also kill any potential complicity of Pakistan in a future military action against Iran"..

    It's my opinion that Pakistan is not reliant on Iranian gas at all.. Pakistan's own reserves are huge and this is just a way of conserving them. Further this will also act as a buffer to provide electricity until Pakistan finishes work on its Chashma Nuclear Reactors (2 are working, 2 are yet to be commissioned) and the Kanupp 2 (a huge 2000 MW project to be finished by 2020) all established with Chinese help. Not mentioning the Wind Power and Coal Gasification Projects in the Sindh Area.. Secondly Iran doesn't have an Orbit.. It's China that's ensuring the demise of US influence in this region.

    On the whole.. Very well researched and very well written. Loved reading it.

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  2. Just some food for thought. Pakistan isn't an unfaithful ally. On the contrary, Pakistan is a victim who has served in the American war by sacrificing tens of thousands of innocent people. Something that the critics often conveniently forget to mention. Neither is Iran an enemy. Having said that, Pakistan is looking after its regional interests like everyone else. Secondly, and more importantly, Pakistan needs the gas very badly to address the excruciating energy deficit. As a result not only the people, but also the economy has suffered enormously. What better way to address the energy shortage by importing gas from a neighbor sitting on top of the world’s second largest gas reserve. To add cherry on the cake, the pipeline is the most cost-effective and short-term option available. What’s in it for Iran? Needless to say, Iran is simply looking after its business interests. Rhetoric regarding the pipeline serving as a geopolitical tool are borne out of frustration and resentment.

    To counter Uncle Sam’s paranoia, as many as nine nations including India have been provided a waiver i.e. Uncle Sam’s official permission to import oil from Iran. The Pak Iran hysteria shown by Uncle Sam has no logic to it. Had Uncle Sam been sincere about sanctioning and isolating Iran from the rest it would never have certified waivers to other countries. Uncle Sam's concerns just don’t add up. Talk and lip service are cheap. What energy solutions provided by Uncle Sam can match up to the pipeline per MW? Answer to that question is none. Are the Pakistanis going to wait until their economy has entirely bankrupted and the people run out of of gas?

    Uncle Sam’s behavior is only inviting more trouble. Ordinary Pakistanis can perceive the double standards being applied. As the author has rightfully pointed out, the long list of blunders committed by Uncle Sam has deteriorated an already fragile relationship. The sanctions threat is going to undermine that little bit of credibility that Uncle Sam has left inside Pakistan.

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