Showing posts with label Cyprus bailout.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cyprus bailout.. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Cyprus: Where Big Oil, Big Money and Geopolitics Collide




The island nation of Cyprus is garnering big global headlines as the government seems determined to plunder the bank accounts of its citizens to guarantee debt service payments on a $13 billion Troika loan to bailout bankster.  To understand Cyprus, you have to start with having a grasp of geo-politics and the history of Cyprus.  The sordid and lurid details of Russian oligarchs using Cyprus banks for laundering money from their nefarious activities is indeed firing up imaginations because the Cypriot people, and people everywhere, are suddenly shocked and appalled that ordinary people are now forcibly being required to bailout Russian mobsters.  Forget that the entire global financial system is itself a well organized crime syndicate.

Cyprus is an island nation and the 3rd largest Mediterranean island after Sicily and Sardinia (both under Italian sovereignty) and according to the CIA Factbook is .6 the size of Connecticut.  With 1.1 million folks occupying the island, Cyprus has a long and fascinating history of being a pawn on the Muslim-Christian chessboard as battles waged for theocratic and empirical control of the Mediterranean.

Somebody made the astute observation:  If goods don't cross borders then armies definitely will.  It's always been true, though rarely practiced in human history.  The Venetians acquired vast wealth and prosperity through trade and they even traded significantly with the Muslim world.  Consequently, the Venetians were wisely obsessed with trade, protecting their trade routes, avoiding war and negotiating peace with anybody to preserve trade.

Cyprus has always been a Greek majority, Greek speaking island and became part of the Orthodox Byzantine Empire in the 4th century.  It's close proximity to Turkey (less than 50 miles from the Turkish mainland) made it an attractive conquest for the now defunct Ottoman Empire.  Cyprus was deemed critical to Venetian trade and the Venetian Republic, here, and the Venetians invaded Cyprus in 1489.  Relations between east and western Christianity were never good as Roman Catholics under the rule of Rome locked horns with Orthodox Christians under the rule of Constantinople.  Constantinople fell to the Muslim Turks in 1453 under the Ottomans who embarked on a massive geographic military expansion of conquest and plunder.

In 1570, the Ottomans invaded Cyprus, quickly conquered most of the island, including the capitol city of Nicosia, but the heavily fortified city of Famagusta was held by the Venetians and only fell after a long seige.   The heroic defender of Famagusta was Marco Antonio Bragadin, here.  When Bragadin surrendered after being promised safe passage out of Cyprus, the Muslim Turks literally flayed him alive and carted the spectacle of a human being being skinned alive through the streets as a warning that such was the fate of anybody who defied the Muslims.

The horror of Bragadin's fate spread rapidly throughout a shocked Christian world.  That's when the Christian West decided to stop the Ottomans.  The Venetians had been paying the Ottomans a huge amount of money in annual tribute.  They were furious at the betrayal and conquest of Cyprus.  Several Italian states and other western Christian nations quickly assembled a navy which was not a problem for the seafaring Venetians.  The goal was to wipe out the Ottoman navy which it accomplished at the legendary sea battle of Lepanto, here and here.

The 1570 defeat of the Ottoman Navy was largely symbolic.  However, it did slow down Ottoman expansion but the Ottomans managed to keep Cyprus until 1878 when it ceded control of Cyprus to the British.  Ottoman power was approaching its zenith but that changed in 1683 when Ottoman armies were decisively defeated at the gates of Vienna.   After Lepanto (1570) and the Christian defeat of Islamic expansion at Vienna (1683), the Christian world ceased to fear the Ottomans who had so terrified the western Christian world for hundreds of years, starting with the defeat of the Serbs in 1389 and the Muslim conquest of Constantinople in 1453.  Revolts against Islamic rule started to accelerate and they accelerated on two fronts, from the Orthodox east and the Papal west.

1736 Russo/Austrian-Turkish War
1768 Russo-Turkish War
1770 Revolt in Peloponnese
1787 Russo/Austrian-Turkish War
1804 First Serbian uprising
1815 Second Serbian uprising
1821 Greek War of Independence
1877 Russo-Turkish War
1912 First Balkan War
1913 First Second Balkan War

By 1878, 300 hundred years of Ottoman rule over Cyprus was ending.  The Suez Canal opened in 1869, the Ottoman Empire was literally in shambles and the Ottomans ceded control of Cyprus to the British.

The Greek Cypriots welcomes British rule over Ottoman rule but there was always a Greek Cypriot movement called 'enosis' that yearned to unite with Greece under the Greek flag.  It wasn't long before the Greek Cypriots started revolting against the British.  After significant agitation for sovereignty, Cyprus finally shed British rule in 1960 and became the Cyprus Republic.  That resulted in a low level civil war between the minority Muslim Cypriots and the majority Greek Cypriots who were further conspiring to unite under the Greek flag.  The Muslim Turks and the Greek Christians may have shared an island but they really didn't co-exist together.  The Muslims occupied the northern part of the island while the Greek Christians occupied the larger southern portion.  Greece itself was internally a mess as various players sought power and Greece was politically unstable while waging various revolutions that included a military dictatorship.

The president of Cyprus post 1960 independence was Archbishop Makarios, a firebrand cleric, a communist sympathizer and a hardliner Greek unity advocate.  Makarios did wage a successful guerilla war against the British.  By 1964, not only was the Cold War in full bloom, the world had just survived the Cuban Missile Crisis.  Britain and the US used Cyprus as a military base for spying on the Soviets and other communist nations.  In fact, Cyprus was strategically very significant to the US and Britain as a military base.  Although Greece and Turkey are mortal enemies, they both joined NATO in 1952.  Orthodox Christians are always on the side of Orthodox Russia, the Orthodox Balkans and Orthodox Greece.  Makarios refused to be a puppet of the US and Britain and he was convinced that the US and Britain favored Turkey over Greece.  A BBC timeline on Greece from 1924-2012 is here.

In 1964 the US and Britain got the UN to send 'peacekeeping' troops to Cyprus.  They've been there nearly 50 year.  As Cyprus continued to heat up, The Turkish military invaded Cyprus in 1974 and some even believe that the CIA engineered a coup to kill Makarios who managed to escape.  Makarios died in 1977, he left no memoirs and all that is left is an interview he granted to Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci who died in 2006; the 1974 interview is here.

In 1983, the Turkish Cypriots declared their independence from Cyprus and named itself the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.  However, only Turkey has recognized the sovereignty of the TRNC.   While it is indeed a tragedy that the Muslim Turks and Christian Greeks can't live together in peace and prosperity, it's not an unusual situation when you are dealing with folks with festering wounds spanning hundreds of years.  Cyprus remains a divided nation - 2 languages (Turkish and Greek), 2 religions (Islam and Christianity) and two entirely different cultures.

Although many view Archbishop Makarios as a radical Greek nationalist, he was very much a product of the times.  As it turns out, Makarios wasn't so crazy in his assertion that the US and Britain were backing Turkey.  The Raw Story published a piece on 2007 based on the disclosure of 700 pages of highly classified CIA documents known as the 'Family Jewels'.

New documents link Kissinger to two 1970s coups
Release of CIA's Family Jewels provides insight into political juggernaut and Bush Administration adviser

Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger pushed for the 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus and allowed arms to be moved to Ankara for an attack on that island in reaction to a coup sponsored by the Greek junta, according to documents and intelligence officers with close knowledge of the event.

Nearly 700 pages of highly classified Central Intelligence Agency reports from the 1970's, known collectively as the "Family Jewels," are slated for public release today.....

Some Greek Cypriots believed then, and still believe, that the invasion was a deliberate plot on the part of Britain and the US to maintain their influence on the island, which was particularly important as a listening post in the Eastern Mediterranean in the wake of the October 1973 War between Israel, Egypt, Jordan and Syria.

According to columnist Christopher Hitchens, author of the book The Trial of Henry Kissinger, "At the time, many Greeks believed that the significant thing was that [Prime Minister Bulent] Ecevit had been a pupil of Kissinger's at Harvard."

Several intelligence sources, who wished to remain anonymous to maintain the security of their identity, confirmed to RAW STORY that Kissinger both pushed for the Turkish invasion of Cyprus and allowed arms to be moved to Ankara.
Cyprus was admitted to the EU in 2004 and adopted the Euro as its currency in 2008.

Fast forward to today as the Cyprus banking crisis explodes and the Troika (EC, ECB and the IMF) demand that the Cyprus government literally steal bank deposits to guarantee a $13 billion bankster bailout loan.  It's no secret that Cyprus banks have been the choice of Russian oligarchs and their nefarious money laundering schemes.  So who is being bailed out and why?  It's clear that a bailout of bondholders is the motivating factor behind the Troika bailout but the greater question is this:  WHY would the Troika be so foolishly suicidal as to risk banks runs and accelerate spreading economic calamity for a puny nation like Cyprus that only comprises .2% of the EU's GDP?

That the Cyprus depositors are being plundered is clear.  The WHY is not so clear.  Although the financial pundits are yapping endlessly about the situation in Cyprus, most are stuck on 'yap' with very little substance, except for Reggie Middleton who runs the Boombustblog.com and is published at Zero Hedge.

What Is The Value Of The Gas Assets That Cyprus Pledged To It's Bank Depositors?

Following yesterday'shighly analytical rant on Cypriotic bank nonsense, I present an interesting analysis on the value of the gas assets pledged to those who's bank accounts may be clipped by the Cypriotic government/ECB. For those who don't know, the proposal was to compensate those who were subject to the tax/levy on their bank accounts with bonds linked to the output of Cyprus natural gas mines. Of course, the first question anyone should ask is "Why not simply pledge the gas assets directly to the ECB vs stealing from the bank depositors?" I think we can all ascertain the answer to that question. I was tweeted an analyst by Anthony Alfidi wherein he delved into the fundamental value of the exchange. I would like to reproduce a portion of it here. The balance can be found on his site.

Cyprus Bank Deposit Levy and Natural Gas Bonds
Cyprus' president has pledged to cover the value of its imminent savings deposit levy with an equivalent value of natural gas bonds. It's hard to say whether Cypriot savers should take this promise seriously without some analysis of its viability.
Let's use the European bailout sum for Cyprus of US$13B as a proxy for the amount of savings about to be confiscated from Cyprus' resident depositors. I need a proxy because I have no idea how much the government of Cyprus will actually collect from this levy. The natural gas revenue needed to back the bonds that would make savers whole would likely come from the Aphrodite field. Title to this field is unclear; Turkey has made a competing claim for the sovereign right to control drilling.
This is the likely answer to the quetion above. If the ownership and rights to the mine are in question, then it is essentially an encumbered asset. As such, how is it Cyprus's to pledge to anybody? May I add that Turkey actually has a functional military, and Cyprus has???
There is currently no pipeline from Cyprus to either Turkey or Crete which could deliver the gas to market; that would cost US$1B to build and Cyprus has no money. Building a $10B LNG terminal is ten times as unlikely, because Cyprus is still broke. The energy supermajor that ends up building it will get the lion's share of the revenue from the gas field as compensation for its costs and will have to deal with the likelihood of being shut out of other projects in Turkey.

Again, exactly how will this gas asset be monetized? I have not verified the facts and calculations behind this article, but if they ring true, then it appears that Cyprus is pledging the option of future development to a gas asset that it MIGHT own in exchange for actual cash in terms of what is being offered to bank depositors. So, the most valuable asset possible (actual cash denominated in a major currency) is being exchanged for an option on an undeveloped asset whose ownership and right to pledge/transfer is undetermined. Does this sound like a good deal to you? And we haven't even started to glean the actual fundamental value yet?
The lack of drilling and delivery infrastructure means that no Aphrodite gas will go to Europe until 2018 at the earliest. A lot can happen with the price of natural gas in five years. The wide availability of shale gas in the U.S. will keep the price down in North America. Europe's need for gas is met mainly by Russia, and Gazprom can adjust its rates at will to pressure Russia's neighbors.

And such pressure is guaranteed if Russian citizens are to lose the 2 billion or so euros to the Cyprus bailout levy that is being bandied around.
Apparently, the Aphrodite gas field is loaded with gas and oil as Turkey makes a probably futile attempt to claim those resources, here.
'Noble Energy received the concession to explore block 12 in October 2008.[6] In August 2011, Noble entered into a production-sharing agreement with the Cypriot government regarding the block's commercial development.[7] Sources in Cyprus indicated in mid-September that Noble had commenced exploratory drilling of the block.[8]
Cyprus demarcated its maritime border with Egypt in 2003, and with Lebanon in 2007.[9] Cyprus and Israel demarcated their maritime border in 2010.[10] Turkey, which does not recognize the border agreements of Cyprus with its neighbors,[11] threatened to mobilize its naval forces in the event that Cyprus would proceed with plans to begin drilling at Block 12.[12] Cyprus' drilling efforts have the support of the United States, European Union and United Nations, and on September 19, 2011 drilling in Block 12 began without any incidents being reported.[13] The development of oil and gas resources in the Cypriot Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) abide to the UN Convention of the Law of the Seas (UNCLOS) which the Republic of Cyprus ratified in 1988.[14]
According to Noble Energy, a total gross unrisked deep oil potential is 3.7 billion barrels (590×106 m3). The field has a gross mean average of 7 trillion cubic feet (200 billion cubic metres) of natural gas with an estimated gross resource range of 5–8 trillion cubic feet...
Who is Noble Energy?  It's headquartered in Houston, TX and its Wikipedia history is here.  The Board of Directors, here, includes alumni of Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch and energy executives.

Meanwhile, the giant state owned Russian oil company, Gazprom, has offered to bailout the Cyprus banks in exchange for exclusive exploration rights.

Gazprom’s audacious offer to bail out Cyprus in return for its natural gas
Talk about buying low and selling high. Gazprom, Russia’s state-owned oil company, reportedly offered to bail out Cyprus’s troubled financial sector in exchange for exploration rights to the country’s natural gas.

Cyprus is holding a bank holiday until Thursday as it works to finalize a deal with European leaders that would rescue the country, but the tentative agreement includes a controversial provision taxing bank depositors, one that even conservative German newspapers think is a bad idea.

Hence Gazprom sweeping in with its “friendlier” rescue offer. It’s not clear if they wanted to take over the entire bailout, which would cost roughly €16 billion, or merely the depositor bail-in of €5.8 billion, but either way they’d be getting a pretty rock-solid deal: The gas reserves could be worth as much as €300 billion, though it would likely take about seven years of development to start exporting gas and collecting revenue, not to mention fears of competing claims on the reserves from Turkey.

Cyprus rejected the offer, preferring to refine the fiscal program it is negotiating with the European Central Bank, European finance ministers, and the International Monetary Fund, which will likely include some concessions from the Russian government, which made an emergency loan to the country last year.

The irony here is that one of the reasons Cyprus’ bailout is so unpleasant is that it acts as an off-shore financial center for Russia, whose residents and corporations have as much as US$19 billion in the country’s banks and stand to lose about US$2 billion if the depositor tax goes through. A significant motivation for the deposit tax was to make sure that foreigners taking advantage of Cyprus’ bank secrecy laws and low taxes would take part of the hit. A partnership with Gazprom, in exchange for exploration rights, would have further solidified the island’s status as a Russian client.

The Cyprus government is trying to use its gas reserves to keep people from pulling their money out of the country, offering to compensate depositors with securities linked to the reserves. While the long time-horizon on returns from those securities might be scant comfort to private investors who fear losing money they keep on the island nation, the ability of the Cypriot public sector to manage those reserves in the long-term is one the country’s bigger advantages in digging itself out of its fiscal hole.
A Texas oil company, a Russian oil company, Russian oligarchs, banksters, big oil, and Turkish claims to the oil/gas patch all combine for very intriguing geopolitics. All of which makes what is happening in Cyprus even more repugnant - with so much BIG money vested in Cyprus energy resources, why stiff the ordinary Cypriot depositors?

Is the Cold War about to reappear and heat up into a HOT war as US/EU interests clash with Russian and Turkish interests?  The Turks and the Russians hate each other but the US has always been committed to advancing the US/British Empire and that almost always requires squashing Russia.  But Russia isn't broke and bankrupt like the US and the EU.  It's rolling in energy wealth as well as other natural resource wealth.  Russia has been stockpiling gold for years.

Currency Wars Escalate: Russia Stockpiling Gold

Of course, all the vultures are circling the fiat monetary corpses and even before they keeled over and officially croaked but croak they will.   The smart money recognizes a walking corpse when it sees one.  How long can the EU and the Euro last before the whole failed experiment in fiat money propelled statism finally implodes?  How long can the US continue to spend, print and borrow?

Meanwhile, the world is waiting and watching......

Cyprus?  They've got something that the stooges who lord over the planet want very badly.  At the end of the day, it's always about money and resources.

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