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Inquieta a Brasil la presencia militar de EE.UU. en la región
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<blockquote data-quote="Brunner" data-source="post: 199810" data-attributes="member: 70"><p>Miras a la luna y no te das cuenta que tiene sos zapatos en un charco:recuerda a Martin Fierro cuando consideres a los brasileros" Pa un lado ponen los huevos, pal otro pegan los gritos!" el Braisl hace exactamente lo que refieres respecto de la Argentina-ha bloqueado intentos argentinos de adquirir mineral d eherro delos yacimientos del Mutun en Bolivia,y ha echo su propio juego con el gas boliviano y nos deja en la estacada-y squi hablamos no solo del pasado sino del futuro.En el caso de Afganistan, no son los EEUU quien estan interesados en ese gas, sino sus cecinos, y Ryusia, por supuesto, demas del valor estrategico que tiene ese pais para Rusia y sus vecinos comouna especie de corredor para oleoductos y gasoductos a traves de la region...Por cierto, no veo que protestes por eso..Dime, hubieras protestado por la invasion d la URSS Afgahnistan en 1979, o la invasion d ela URSS a Polonia en la decada del 80?<img src="/foros/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/biggrin.png" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":D" title="Big Grin :D" data-shortname=":D" /> <img src="/foros/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/biggrin.png" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":D" title="Big Grin :D" data-shortname=":D" /> Ese te pasa por sentarte siempre en la mesa de la izquierda de la pizzeria "Oro di Napoli"<img src="/foros/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/biggrin.png" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":D" title="Big Grin :D" data-shortname=":D" /> <img src="/foros/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/biggrin.png" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":D" title="Big Grin :D" data-shortname=":D" /> </p><p></p><p><em>Afghanistan's best chance for attracting foreign capital rests with its strategic location as a potential major transit route for Siberian and Central Asian oil and natural gas exports to South and East Asia. Energy demand there will grow rapidly over coming years and alternative supply sources to Middle East production will be welcomed from India and Pakistan to Taiwan, South Korea and Japan. </em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>Major oil and gas supply routes from western Siberia, the southern and northern Caspian regions, and Uzbekistan conjunct in Turkmenistan and from there supplies can pass through Afghanistan to Pakistan, India and beyond. In 1997, six international energy companies - with America's Unocal Corporation in the lead - and the government of Turkmenistan formed Central Asia Gas Pipeline, Ltd (CentGas) to build a 790 mile (1,271 kilometer) pipeline to link Turkmenistan (which has its own abundant proven natural gas reserves) with Pakistan. The group also considered an extension of the line to the New Delhi area in India. </em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>Unocal said at the time that the project could be the foundation for a new commerce corridor for the region - the Silk Road for the 21st Century. For the obvious political reasons, nothing became of the project and it was abandoned in 1999. It's high time, however, to revive it at this point in time and perhaps on a larger scale than originally planned. </em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>The Centgas project was to carry natural gas from the Dauletabad Field in southeastern Turkmenistan (which has independently certified reserves of more then 25 trillion cubic feet (708 billion cubic meters and is one of the world's largest) at a rate of up to 2 billion cubic feet per day (20 billion cubic meters per year). A 48-inch diameter pipeline was to extend from the Afghanistan-Turkmenistan border, generally follow the Herat-to-Kandahar Road through Afghanistan, cross the Pakistan border in the vicinity of Quetta, and terminate in Multan, Pakistan, where it was to tie into an existing pipeline system. Turkmenistan was to construct a pipeline to link with the CentGas line at the border and stretch approximately 105 miles to Dauletabad. A potential 400 mile extension from Multan to New Delhi was also under consideration. Estimated cost of the project was $1.9 billion for the segment to Pakistan, and an additional $600 million for the extension to India. </em></p><p><em>Soviet estimates from the late 1970s placed Afghanistan's proven and probable oil and condensate reserves at 95 million barrels. Most Soviet assistance efforts after the mid-1970s were aimed at increasing gas production. Sporadic gas exploration continued through the mid-1980s. The last Soviet technical advisors left Afghanistan in 1988. After a brief hiatus, oil production at the Angot field was restarted in the early 1990s by local militias. Output levels, however, are though to have been less than 300 b/d. Near Sar-i-Pol, the Soviets partially constructed a 10,000-b/d topping plant, which although undamaged by war, is thought by Western experts to be unsalvageable. </em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>Petroleum products such as diesel, gasoline, and jet fuel are imported, mainly from Pakistan and Uzbekistan, with limited volumes from Turkmenistan and Iran serving regional markets. Turkmenistan also has a petroleum product storage and distribution facility at Tagtabazar ( Kushka – it’s on the Turkmen side) near the Afghan border, which supplies northwestern Afghanistan. </em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>Besides oil and natural gas, Afghanistan also is estimated to have 73 million tons of coal reserves, most of which is located in the region between Herat and Badashkan in the northern part of the country. Although Afghanistan produced over 100,000 short tons of coal annually as late as the early 1990s, as of 2000, the country was producing only around 1,000 short tons.</em></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brunner, post: 199810, member: 70"] Miras a la luna y no te das cuenta que tiene sos zapatos en un charco:recuerda a Martin Fierro cuando consideres a los brasileros" Pa un lado ponen los huevos, pal otro pegan los gritos!" el Braisl hace exactamente lo que refieres respecto de la Argentina-ha bloqueado intentos argentinos de adquirir mineral d eherro delos yacimientos del Mutun en Bolivia,y ha echo su propio juego con el gas boliviano y nos deja en la estacada-y squi hablamos no solo del pasado sino del futuro.En el caso de Afganistan, no son los EEUU quien estan interesados en ese gas, sino sus cecinos, y Ryusia, por supuesto, demas del valor estrategico que tiene ese pais para Rusia y sus vecinos comouna especie de corredor para oleoductos y gasoductos a traves de la region...Por cierto, no veo que protestes por eso..Dime, hubieras protestado por la invasion d la URSS Afgahnistan en 1979, o la invasion d ela URSS a Polonia en la decada del 80?:D :D Ese te pasa por sentarte siempre en la mesa de la izquierda de la pizzeria "Oro di Napoli":D :D [I]Afghanistan's best chance for attracting foreign capital rests with its strategic location as a potential major transit route for Siberian and Central Asian oil and natural gas exports to South and East Asia. Energy demand there will grow rapidly over coming years and alternative supply sources to Middle East production will be welcomed from India and Pakistan to Taiwan, South Korea and Japan. Major oil and gas supply routes from western Siberia, the southern and northern Caspian regions, and Uzbekistan conjunct in Turkmenistan and from there supplies can pass through Afghanistan to Pakistan, India and beyond. In 1997, six international energy companies - with America's Unocal Corporation in the lead - and the government of Turkmenistan formed Central Asia Gas Pipeline, Ltd (CentGas) to build a 790 mile (1,271 kilometer) pipeline to link Turkmenistan (which has its own abundant proven natural gas reserves) with Pakistan. The group also considered an extension of the line to the New Delhi area in India. Unocal said at the time that the project could be the foundation for a new commerce corridor for the region - the Silk Road for the 21st Century. For the obvious political reasons, nothing became of the project and it was abandoned in 1999. It's high time, however, to revive it at this point in time and perhaps on a larger scale than originally planned. The Centgas project was to carry natural gas from the Dauletabad Field in southeastern Turkmenistan (which has independently certified reserves of more then 25 trillion cubic feet (708 billion cubic meters and is one of the world's largest) at a rate of up to 2 billion cubic feet per day (20 billion cubic meters per year). A 48-inch diameter pipeline was to extend from the Afghanistan-Turkmenistan border, generally follow the Herat-to-Kandahar Road through Afghanistan, cross the Pakistan border in the vicinity of Quetta, and terminate in Multan, Pakistan, where it was to tie into an existing pipeline system. Turkmenistan was to construct a pipeline to link with the CentGas line at the border and stretch approximately 105 miles to Dauletabad. A potential 400 mile extension from Multan to New Delhi was also under consideration. Estimated cost of the project was $1.9 billion for the segment to Pakistan, and an additional $600 million for the extension to India. Soviet estimates from the late 1970s placed Afghanistan's proven and probable oil and condensate reserves at 95 million barrels. Most Soviet assistance efforts after the mid-1970s were aimed at increasing gas production. Sporadic gas exploration continued through the mid-1980s. The last Soviet technical advisors left Afghanistan in 1988. After a brief hiatus, oil production at the Angot field was restarted in the early 1990s by local militias. Output levels, however, are though to have been less than 300 b/d. Near Sar-i-Pol, the Soviets partially constructed a 10,000-b/d topping plant, which although undamaged by war, is thought by Western experts to be unsalvageable. Petroleum products such as diesel, gasoline, and jet fuel are imported, mainly from Pakistan and Uzbekistan, with limited volumes from Turkmenistan and Iran serving regional markets. Turkmenistan also has a petroleum product storage and distribution facility at Tagtabazar ( Kushka – it’s on the Turkmen side) near the Afghan border, which supplies northwestern Afghanistan. Besides oil and natural gas, Afghanistan also is estimated to have 73 million tons of coal reserves, most of which is located in the region between Herat and Badashkan in the northern part of the country. Although Afghanistan produced over 100,000 short tons of coal annually as late as the early 1990s, as of 2000, the country was producing only around 1,000 short tons.[/I] [/QUOTE]
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