Biden killed Canada's Keystone XL, but just cut deal with ‘terrorist’ Venezuela
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — Wonder how Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau feels now that U.S.
President Joe Biden is turning to Venezuela to ramp up oil for Western markets?
You know, the same Venezuela whose President Nicolas Maduro still has a $15
million State Department bounty on his head for unqualified “narco-terrorism”
(despite that being primarily the domain of U.S. allies in neighboring
Colombia).
The same Venezuela that Washington has spent years relentlessly denigrating,
sanctioning, and attempting to overthrow. The same country whose leader Western
allies attempted to replace with an opposition figure, Juan Guaido, whom they
all constantly referred to as “Venezuelan Interim President Juan Guaido.”
And now, suddenly, the Biden administration has just decided to loosen sanctions
against Caracas in exchange for Chevron going in and grabbing the country’s oil
for the U.S. market.
Biden was elected in part on a promise to kill off the Keystone XL pipeline that
was set to run from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. This cornerstone of North
American economic sovereignty and energy independence sure would have come in
handy right now amid the global energy crisis. Instead, Biden offered it up as a
sacrifice to the climate change fanatics who have deputized themselves to police
the planet for everything from gassy cows to carbon footprints.
Today, Europe is scrambling to replace the cheap Russian fuel that powered its
economy and allowed it to rival the U.S. on the global economic playing field.
Having decided to stick it to Russian President Vladimir Putin amid the Ukraine
conflict by foregoing their main energy supplier, they’ve since been scrambling
for replacements. North America should have been in a position to profit from
the situation and to help out their allies. But because of Biden, it wasn’t.
You’d think that Biden would have at some point this year turned to Trudeau and
expressed renewed interest in firing up the Keystone project as energy prices
soared. After all, the project is a perfect fit for the Biden administration’s
new strategy of “friendshoring” — the notion of limiting supply chains to
trusted partners, as introduced by Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen over the
summer, as a means of depriving global competitors like China and Russia from
benefits of Western economic cooperation.
In case Biden hasn’t noticed, the climate change agenda has already flown out
the window in Europe along with its energy security. Desperate to replace
Russian fuel, Germany is firing coal plants back up
while citizens are chopping firewood as household energy costs start to bite.
The European Union itself has conveniently reclassified previously “dirty”
energy, like nuclear and gas as “green”, as France has been scrambling to revive
its rusting and decommissioned nuclear energy plants. And despite bragging about
cutting itself off from Russian oil, Britain and Europe have both been using
ship-to-ship transfers of oil from Russian tankers to those flagged under
“friendly” countries in order to sufficiently launder it for public opinion
purposes.
They’ve also been importing Russian fuel commingled with oil of other
nationalities from other countries like China, according to various press
reports.
The fact that the U.S. and Canada aren’t in position to step in and help is,
quite frankly, pathetic. Other than the elite European geniuses who cut off
their own main energy source, the biggest economic loser in all this is Canada,
caught flat-footed in the pivot back to a fossil fuel future despite literally
floating on oil. In the wake of Biden’s election and the Keystone kill off,
Trudeau did little more than whine. The prime minister raised Canada’s
disappointment with the United States’ decision on the Keystone XL pipeline. A
statement from Trudeau’s office read, “The prime minister underscored the
important economic and energy security benefits of our bilateral energy
relationship, as well as his support for energy workers."
As America’s top energy supplier, you’d think Trudeau would have tried using a
bit more leverage instead of shrugging it all off like a store clerk had just
told him the last Xbox had been sold.
Does Venezuela have some kind of magic technology to eliminate the climate
change impact of its oil? If Canada doesn’t, then it’s hard to imagine that
cash-strapped Venezuela would fare much better. But Venezuela, being sanctioned
to the hilt and in desperate need of relief, is certainly a more vulnerable
target for exploitation than Canada is. Hey, with any luck maybe they’ll just
give the fuel away.
Funny how quickly all the sanctimonious “Western values” get swept aside when
economic viability is at stake. Washington and its allies no doubt see this as
an opportunity to exploit and control Venezuelan oil to their benefit, and to
eventually pick off a key Russian ally in Latin America.
Suddenly “terrorism”, human rights, and climate change don’t matter as much.
Unless, of course, one considers the possibility that they never did, and have
only ever been useful tools in the battle for global economic supremacy.
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN