Looks like our friends in Russia have found a new weapon?:nuts:
Russian gas theories abound
Several gas pipelines run through Ukraine to the rest of Europe
By Rupert Wingfield-Hayes
BBC News, Moscow
Winston Churchill once famously described Russia as "a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma". This week Russia has once again lived up to its difficult reputation.
As an outsider it's extremely easy to be desperately confused by the way this country behaves.
Is Russia's decision to cut gas supplies to Ukraine simply a commercial dispute?
Is it the Kremlin extracting political revenge for Ukraine's Orange Revolution?
Or is it an even more convoluted conspiracy involving powerful political figures in Moscow and Kiev?
Depending on who you talk to, it's all of the above.
Political tool?
Talk to the deputy chairman of Russia's state gas giant Gazprom, Alexander Medvedev, and he'll tell you it's purely a commercial dispute.
"The rest of Europe pays more than $400 for each thousand cubic metres of gas it gets from Russia."
Alexander Medevdev says Gazprom needs 'alternative transit routes'
He tells me: "We have offered Ukraine extremely favourable terms for gas deliveries in 2009, but they have still refused to sign a new contract.
"So now we have no legal basis to continue supplying gas to them."
All of this is true. Up to now Ukraine has got its gas at just $179 per thousand cubic metres. This year Russia wants to raise that to $250.
That's still far below what the rest of Europe pays.
But talk to Masha Lipmann, a well-known political commentator at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Moscow, and you'll hear a very different story.
"Moscow can't pretend this is purely a commercial dispute" she says.
"There's little doubt that Russia is using its energy resources as a political tool." But why? What does the Kremlin want to achieve? According to those who subscribe to the political weapon theory, Russia's purpose is to bring down the government of Ukrainian President Victor Yushchenko. [more]http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7809131.stm