[Excerpt: U.S. company Unocal Corp., based in El Segundo, California, was  
considering participation in the project in the 1990s, but plans were abandoned 
 
when the United States fired cruise missiles into Afghanistan in 1998 in 
pursuit  of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network, blamed for two U.S. embassy 
bombings that  year in East Africa.]
 
_http://www.myafghan.com/news2.asp?id=577434660_ 
(http://www.myafghan.com/news2.asp?id=577434660) 
 
U.S. Companies Eye Trans-Afghan Pipeline

ASHGABAT,  Turkmenistan (AP) -- American companies might join a long-delayed 
trans-Afghan  natural gas pipeline project expected to be launched in 2006, 
the U.S.  ambassador to Turkmenistan said Tuesday.
 
"We are seriously looking at the project, and it is quite possible that  
American companies will join it," U.S. Ambassador Tracey Anne Jacobson said,  
speaking in Russian, after a meeting with Turkmen President Saparmurat  Niyazov.
 
The Turkmen government said Monday that a feasibility study for the project  
for a pipeline from the gas-rich Central Asian nation through Afghanistan and  
Pakistan was complete, and that construction would begin in 2006.
 
U.S. company Unocal Corp., based in El Segundo, California, was considering  
participation in the project in the 1990s, but plans were abandoned when the  
United States fired cruise missiles into Afghanistan in 1998 in pursuit of 
Osama  bin Laden's al-Qaida network, blamed for two U.S. embassy bombings that 
year in  East Africa.
 
Since the U.S.-led offensive that ousted the Taliban from power, the  project 
has been revived and drawn strong U.S. support. The pipeline would allow  
formerly Soviet Central Asian nations to exports rich energy resources without  
relying on Russian routes.
 
The project's main sponsor is the Asian Development Bank.
 
The 1,680-kilometer (1,044-mile) pipeline is to run through Herat and  
Kandahar in Afghanistan, the Pakistani cities of Quetta and Multan and on to 
the  
Indian border town of Fazilka.
 
The US$3.5 billion (euro2.7 billion) pipeline would tap into natural gas  
wells at Turkmenistan's huge Dauletabad-Donmez field, which holds more than 
2.83  
trillion cubic meters (100 trillion cubic feet) in gas reserves.
 
- Article submitted at 12:35 PM (CST) on 1/18/2005 
enditem
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