Is Tehran convinced the United States is out to steal its oil? Here's Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev, in a cable describing a Jan. 14, 2009, meeting in the capital city of Astana between Nazarbayev and U.S. Gen. David Petraeus, in which the Kazakh leader recounts his recent conversations with Iran's leaders:

[Nazarbayev] said Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khameni told him that even if Iran compromises on the nuclear issue, the United States would always find another reason to criticize "because they hate us -- all the United States wants is to conquer the entire region and steal the oil." General Petraeus interjected, "We could have bought all the oil in the region for 100 years for what we've spent in Iraq!" Nazarbayev, looking a bit amused, said, "I know. I'm just telling you what he said."

The cable, signed by Richard Hoagland, the U.S. ambassador to Kazakhstan, is also interesting for Nazarbayev's pretty shrewd insights into Afghan politics. Nazarbayev is worried about publicized efforts to bring the Taliban into the Kabul government. Petraeus, then the head of U.S. Central Command, replies that this is just an attempt to break up the movement, while roping certain elements into the power circle. That's all well and good, Nazarbayev replies, but suggests that the Taliban is all about control, and not sharing power: "The Taliban leadership will never change its position," Nazarbayev says.

KARIM SAHIB/AFP/Getty Images

 

JGARZIK

11:26 PM ET

December 3, 2010

typo

"Tehran convince" should be "Tehran convinced"

 

STEVELEVINE

12:00 AM ET

December 4, 2010

JGarzik

Thanks for that catch!

 

BIRDFLEW

3:52 AM ET

December 4, 2010

The real currency war

Buy it in what? USD or Euros? After all, that's what this is really about.

OPEC is deserting the USD like rats off a sinking ship.

 

SLIGHTLY_OPTIMISTIC

2:20 PM ET

December 5, 2010

State capitalism

Anyway the extent of state capitalism is staggering.

Link: Why the power of the state is back

"the 13 largest energy companies on Earth, measured by the reserves they control, are now owned and operated by governments. Saudi Aramco, Gazprom (Russia), China National Petroleum Corp., National Iranian Oil Co., Petróleos de Venezuela, Petrobras (Brazil) and Petronas (Malaysia) are all larger than ExxonMobil, the largest of the multinationals. Collectively, multinational oil companies produce just 10% of the world's oil and gas reserves. State-owned companies now control more than 75% of all crude oil production."

"The financial crisis and global recession have made it much more difficult for those who believe in free-market capitalism to make their case to those who don't. China's strong economic rebound, America's high unemployment and financial volatility in Europe have all cast doubts on the free-market model."

 

THROUGHTHESEASONS

9:17 AM ET

December 10, 2010

This is improper

It is not appropriate for a general to speak of U.S. foreign policy, especially in regard to business.

 

WikiLeaked is FP’s blog dedicated to sorting through and making sense of the more than 250,000 State Department cables acquired by WikiLeaks.

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