Posted on 11/17/2001 8:15:20 AM PST by Hamiltonian
Walking a tightrope between Russia and Islam
THE US AND THE CASPIAN: INTERVIEW WITH AMBASSADOR RICHARD MORNINGSTAR
A Meeting of the Minds in Bulgaria
The Trans Balkan AMBO Pipeline, the President of Albania, and Kosovo
Feds Probe Kazakh oil Payments, Target of Probe has Interesting Akin, Gump Lawyer
November 15, 2001 |
We confirm our determination to foster a new dynamic in Russian-American economic interaction. We seek to harness the forces of global commerce in order to improve contacts between our people, increase their prosperity, and to further strengthen the integration of Russia into the world economy.
We are committed to creating conditions that will enhance our trade and investment relations and help Russia reach its economic potential as a fully integrated and leading member of the world economy. Russia has a role to play in this century as an engine of world growth and a center of innovative thinking.
We will work together to build confidence in the climate for trade and investment between our two countries. An important element of this activity is Russia's integration into the rules-based global trading system of the World Trade Organization. We confirm our commitment and place considerable priority to working together in an effort to accelerate Russia's WTO accession negotiations, based on standard conditions.
We emphasize our commitment to combating money laundering and the financing of terrorism.
In line with our desire to enhance the role of the Russian and American business communities in developing our commercial relations, we note the successful visit to Russia of an American business delegation led by United States Commerce Secretary Donald Evans. We welcome as well progress to date of the newly-established Russian-American Business Dialogue. We look forward to the presentation of its initial recommendations to our two governments early in 2002. We encourage the Dialogue to continue to identify areas where our laws and regulations impede trade and investment, to pinpoint new opportunities for business, to strengthen the rule of law, and thus to attract new entrants to the commerce between our two countries.
We note that significant progress has been made in strengthening our economic relations since we met in Genoa. The first example is the completion and operationalization of the Caspian Pipeline Consortium, the largest Russian-US joint investment to date. The second is the recent breakthrough on the Sakhalin I oil and gas project, which opens the door to the single, largest private investment project in Russia, representing $12 billion in projected capital investment in the region and creating up to 10,000 new jobs. We declare support to other Russian-US investment projects in various fields and, above all, in high-technology areas. In order to ensure the participation of American representatives in successful investment projects in the Russian Far East, the United States intends to officially present a request to open in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk a branch office of its Consulate General in Vladivostok.
We welcome the renewed efforts of the Export-Import Bank, the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, and the Trade and Development Agency of the United States to promote bilateral trade and investment opportunities through project finance, risk insurance, and project assessment, as well as their readiness to expand financing in support of our growing economic relationship.
Small and medium businesses are important to the growth of both our economies. We are mindful of the tax, legal, regulatory and finance environment necessary for these entrepreneurs to flourish. As the foundations of the rule of law and free market economy strengthen in Russia, small and medium enterprise will expand. The United States is increasing funding to a number of programs, such as the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development's Russia Small Business Fund, to provide financing and assistance to Russian entrepreneurs and to prepare Russian financial institutions to be able to carry out such financing independently through their access to such programs.
A sound, transparent and competitive banking sector is critical to sustained economic growth. To this end, we endorse the launch of a public-private dialogue among banks, businesses, financial institutions and financial authorities to identify actions that would promote the growth of the banking sector in Russia consistent with the needs of a modern free-market economy. We stand firmly in support of the principle of non-discrimination in our cooperation in the banking sector.
We reaffirm our resolve to seek practical solutions and achieve measurable results to even the most difficult issues.
_____________________________________
© Publication of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation. Reference is mandatory in case of reproduction.
bump for PETA, NOW, and Harry Potter fan clubs.
Guess I have my doubts about "turn-about's" being fair (or at all truthful) play in this instance.
Thanks for the bump ... still reading.
Must you lump my bumps with yours...?
:)
hmmm, ok, bttt.
:)
It appears that Bush was planning to take out the Taliban to open up the pipeline route U.S. Policy Towards Taliban Influenced by Oil - Say Authors!
"In a French television news programme two weeks ago, Naik said during a ''6+2'' meeting in Berlin in July, the discussions turned around ''the formation of a government of national unity. If the Taliban had accepted this coalition, they would have immediately received international economic aid.'"
'And the pipe lines from Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan would have come,'' he added.
Naik also claimed that Tom Simons, the U.S. representative at these meetings, openly threatened the Taliban and Pakistan.
''Simons said, 'either the Taliban behave as they ought to, or Pakistan convinces them to do so, or we will use another option'. The words Simons used were 'a military operation','' Naik claimed.
And at: THE NEW GREAT GAME:Oil Politics in Central Asia "As Bush would say, "make no mistake": this is about oil. It's always about oil. And to twist a late `90s cliché, it's only boring because it's true."
I agree that the Russian route appears more stable politically.
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