National Interest: It’s time to go all-in on the EastMed pipeline

For Biden to deliberately undercut European gas alternatives does not further national security but rather, it empowers irredentists in Russia & Turkey

After a month of war in Ukraine, the world has learned that there is no substitute for energy security. Not only was curtailing American production of a vital resource shortsighted but also turning a blind eye if not encouraging growing European dependence on Russian oil was strategic malpractice.

Within the White House and State Department, that malpractice continues. Two months ago, the State Department reversed its support for the Eastern Mediterranean Pipeline that would bring Israeli and Cypriot gas to Europe via a pipeline from Cyprus to Greece. The scheme had broad diplomatic support. Cyprus, Egypt, Greece, Israel, Italy, Jordan, and the Palestinian Authority established a forum in Egypt to coordinate gas development. France also sought to join, and both the United States and European Union requested observer status. It was a masterstroke of diplomacy bringing European and Arab states as well as former rivals together for a common purpose.

Unfortunately, it occurred during the Trump administration, and so fell victim not only to the Biden administration’s hostility toward fossil fuels, but also to President Joe Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s mania to reverse any agreement the Trump administration supported without due consideration of its merits. A letter sent by Representatives Gus Bilirakis (R-FL-12) and Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY-11) to Naz Durakoglu, a former staffer to Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) who now serves as a principal deputy assistant secretary in the State Department, devastates the State Department’s stated position and the falsity of the facts upon which Blinken acted.

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Given Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, ignorance about the importance of a gas supply to Europe not subject to blackmail by hostile powers is no excuse.

The State Department initially withdrew its support for the EastMed Pipeline because it deemed it commercially inviable. This is misguided for three reasons.

First, base commercial calculations should not trump national security concerns. This was where Biden and Blinken erred with Nord Stream II. The issue was never, as the Germans suggested, commerce; it was the fact that waiving sanctions on Nord Stream II enriched and empowered Russian president Vladimir Putin. Likewise, the United States based its campaign against the Chinese telephone manufacturer Huawei on the security problems Chinese intelligence penetration of the company created. To wave those aside because Huawei’s phone might cost less would be incompetence.

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