The Art of
War
Why Germany
has won and Italy has lost
Manlio
Dinucci
German Chancellor Merkel -
writes Alberto Negri (il manifesto, July 23) - has resisted the pressure of
three U.S. administrations - Obama, Trump and Biden - to cancel North Stream 2,
the pipeline that flanks the North Stream inau-grated ten years ago, doubling
the supply of Russian gas to Germany. Instead, "South Stream, the
Eni-Gazprom pipeline, failed". Negri rightly concludes that Merkel
"has won the game that we have lost". The question arises
spontaneously: why did Germany win and Italy lose?
The headline of the
Washington Post is significant: "US, Germany reach agreement on Russian
gas pipeline, ending dispute between allies". The agreement, stipulated by President Biden
with Chancellor Merkel, has been and is strongly opposed by a bipartisan group
in Congress, led by Republican Senator J. Risch who proposes a law against
"the malignant Russian project". So the agreement is actually a
"truce" (as Negri defines it).
The reason why the Biden
administration has decided to stipulate it is to put an end to the
"dispute" that was spoiling relations with Germany, an important NATO
ally. The latter, however, had to pay the "pizzo" to the U.S. boss,
committing itself - as requested by the under-Secretary of State Victoria
Nuland - to "protect Ukraine" (in fact already a member of NATO) with
an investment fund of $ 1 billion to compensate it for the decreased revenue,
since the twin North Stream gas pipelines pass through the Baltic Sea bypassing
its territory.
In return, Germany has, at
least for now, US permission to import 55 billion cubic meters of natural gas
per year from Russia. The pipeline is managed by the international consortium
Nord Stream AG, consisting of 5 companies: Russian Gazprom, German Wintershall
and Pe-gi/E.On, Dutch Nederland's Gasunie and French Engie. Germany thus
becomes the energy hub for the Russian gas supply to the European network.
The same role could have
been assumed by Italy with the South Stream pipeline. The project was born in
2006, during the Prodi Il government, with the agreement stipulated by Eni and
Gazprom. The pipeline would have crossed the Black Sea (in Russian, Bulgarian
and Turkish territorial waters) continuing overland through Bulgaria, Serbia,
Hungary, Slovenia and Italy to Tarvisio (Udine). From here the gas would be
routed into the European network.
Construction of the
pipeline had begun in 2012. In March 2014, Saipem (Eni) was awarded an initial
€2 billion contract to build the undersea section. In the meantime, however,
while the Maidan Square putsch precipitated the Ukrainian crisis, the Obama
administration, in concert with the European Commission, moved to scuttle the
South Stream. In June 2014, a delegation from the U.S. Senate, headed by John
McCain, arrived in Sofia and transmitted Washington's orders to the Bulgarian
government. Immediately this announced the blocking of the works of the South
Stream, in which Gazprom had already invested 4.5 billion dollars.
In this way, Italy lost not
only contracts worth billions of euros, but also the possibility of having on
its territory the hub for the supply of Russian gas in Europe, which would have
generated strong revenues and increased employment. Why has Italy lost all this?
Because the Renzi government (in office from 2014 to 2016) and Parliament
accepted Washington's imposition with bowed heads. Merkel's Germany, on the
contrary, opposed it. It then opened the "dispute between allies"
that forced Washington to accept the doubling of North Stream, while retaining
the U.S. claim to decide which countries Europe is allowed to import gas from
and which countries it is not allowed to import gas from.
Would an Italian government
dare to open a dispute with Washington to defend one of our national interests?
The fact is that Italy has lost not only the pipeline, but its own sovereignty.
(il manifesto, July 27, 2021)
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