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Iran's
ideological army takes on energy contracts

By
Siavosh Ghazi
AFP
TEHRAN
Petroleumworld.com
06 27 06
Iran's powerful ideological army, the Revolutionary Guards, is set to
enter the oil and gas sectors in a move that would increase their stake
in the Islamic republic's economy.
"The Revolutionary Guards have obtained the contract to develop
phases 15 and 16 of South Pars," a huge offshore gas field divided
between Iran and Qatar, General Abdolreza Abed said in an interview
with the Shargh newspaper.
Abed, who heads up the Guards' economic operations, said the contract
was worth 2.09 billion dollars.
The deal would be a major boost to the operations of the force, initially
created after the 1979 Islamic revolution to protect the regime from
foreign and domestic threats.
It comes on the back of a string of advances into Iran's economy: several
weeks ago the Pasdaran -- as the Guards are called in Farsi -- were
awarded a 1.3-billion-dollar contract to construct a 900-kilometre (570-mile)
pipeline between South Pars and southeastern Iran.
In both South Pars cases, the projects were awarded after the usual
tendering process was abandoned.
For the South Pars development deal, the Revolutionary Guards -- under
the name of their economic nerve centre of Khatam al-Anbia -- entered
a partnership with the Norwegian firm Aker Kvaerner, although this firm
subsequently pulled out.
The oil ministry then moved to open another tender process, but this
was cut short.
Last week, press reports said the Revolutionary Guards have also been
awarded a two-billion-dollar contract to develop Tehran's metro system.
For many observers, the wave of lucrative deals going to the Guards
is connected to last year's shock presidential election win by hardliner
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad -- a veteran of the force -- who promised to favour
domestic entrepreneurs.
In his former job as Tehran's mayor, Ahmadinejad had already awarded
municipal contracts to the Guards, who began to move into business during
the reconstruction phase after the 1980-88 war with Iraq.
Completed contracts include the construction of a new 120-kilometre
highway between Tehran and Saveh to the south, as well as dams.
The Pasdaran have also been steadily encroaching into national politics,
and during disputed parliament elections in 2004 some 40 Revolutionary
Guards veterans managed to win seats.
General Abed told the centrist Shargh newspaper that there was nothing
wrong with the Revolutionary Guards -- now one of Iran's most powerful
institutions -- branching out.
"Since when do the Pasdaran have to stick to building roads, dams,
small tunnels or short pipelines?" he argued. "If we take
on big projects we can put small entrepreneurs to work."
The general said the Revolutionary Guards' economic reach currently
consists of 247 projects worth 21 trillion rials (2.28 billion dollars),
while 1,220 projects worth between 2.7 and 3.2 billion dollars have
already been finished.
But with foreign investment in the oil sector limited, the Guards appear
ready to shift into top gear by filling the gap -- with General Abed
also revealing his force's involvement in a new petrochemical port.
"Thirty percent of the Pasdaran's engineering capacity is dedicated
to economic activities, and 70 percent to military," he said.
AFP 271348 GMT 06 06
Copyright ©AFP. All Rights Reserved.
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