Houston Chronicle

The Russian pipeline to Germany that Trump is so angry about, explained.

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BERLIN — When German officials headed to the NATO summit in Brussels this week, they were already prepared for what they considered to be an inevitable attack by President Donald Trump over their low defense spending.

But on Wednesday morning, Trump took aim at the Germans for a much different reason: an 800-mile-long, planned pipeline beneath the Baltic Sea. The German government has been pursuing its Nord Stream 2 project for years, despite criticism from the United States and some Eastern European nations.

Trump renewed the longstandi­ng U.S. criticism of the project on Wednesday and doubled down by tying it to the future of NATO.

“Germany, as far as I’m concerned, is captive to Russia because it’s getting so much of its energy from Russia,” Trump told NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g, speaking on camera. “We have to talk about the billions and billions of dollars that’s being paid to the country we’re supposed to be protecting you against.”

Germany is indeed Russia’s biggest export market in Europe for gas, with a dependency that may grow further once Nord Stream 2 is finished. The project would roughly double Russia’s export volume via the Baltic route that goes through the original Nord Stream pipeline.

Over the next few decades, Europe’s own gas resources — which accounted for about a third of its supplies in 2016 — are expected to gradually disappear. (Britain, Norway and the Netherland­s are Western and Northern Europe’s biggest producers, primarily relying on natural gas fields in the North Sea.)

As Europe’s own supplies are running out, the U.S. is hoping to gain access to a profitable market with growing demand.

But U.S. economic interests only partially explain why the pipeline conflict is now emerging as a key point of contention.

Nations such as Poland and Ukraine also fear that Russia may be diversifyi­ng its gas routes into Europe to be able to exploit its grid for political reasons. In June 2014, amid the fallout over the Russian annexation of Crimea months earlier, Russia cut off Ukraine’s gas supplies for weeks in what Kiev said was an attempt to blackmail Ukraine.

Ukraine and parts of eastern Europe fear their partners to the west may be much less vocal next time if they receive their natural gas through a different set of pipelines, allowing Russia to cut off its unruly neighbors with impunity.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has not shown any willingnes­s to halt the controvers­ial pipeline project, but at times she has indicated at least some skepticism, acknowledg­ing that the project was not an entirely economic one but also of political significan­ce. That already stood in strong contrast to her predecesso­r, Gerhard Schroeder of the Social Democrats, who long championed the gas connection.

At the time, the German government said it was pursuing the offshore pipeline to cut energy costs and establish a reliable supply route.

But in the years since, doubts have arisen whether the official arguments fully explain Berlin’s decision-making process at the time. In 2005, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s friend Schroeder hastily signed the deal just as he was departing the office from which he had been voted out days earlier. Within weeks, he started to oversee the project implementa­tion himself, leading the Nord Stream AG’s shareholde­r committee.

Schroeder went on to become a board member of several consortia in which Russian government-controlled energy company Gazprom is at least the majority shareholde­r. Most recently, he became chairman of Rosneft, which is Russia’s largest oil company.

While gas supplies are now raising concerns over the risks they may pose to internatio­nal security, they were actually seen as a way to prevent conflicts during the Cold War. “Long-term energy diplomacy became a carefully built link which guaranteed cooperatio­n even during political crises,” argued German historian Frank Bösch, who analyzed West German government records. “Natural gas pipelines implied mutual trust within a stable relationsh­ip, which led to further collaborat­ions, including cooperatio­n in nuclear power,” he explained.

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