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  • Second-Quarter Forecast: The Presidency,Iraq And The Waiting Game -

    SECOND-QUARTER FORECAST: THE PRESIDENCY, IRAQ AND THE WAITING GAME - PART ONE
    April 03, 2006 21 45 GMT

    Stratfor
    April 4 2006

    Two issues will dominate the international system in the second
    quarter of 2006.

    The first is the political strength and stability of the Bush
    administration. For months, the administration has been plagued by
    internal problems. What with devastating hurricanes, chaos in Iraq,
    the fall of the administration's chief congressional ally Tom DeLay,
    the Jack Abramoff scandal, Vice President Dick Cheney's shooting
    accident, ongoing investigations involving key White House staff
    members and -- above all -- a fracturing of the Republican Party due
    to an odd Supreme Court nomination and the Dubai ports debate, George
    W. Bush is teetering on the edge of a failed presidency. During the
    first quarter, his public approval ratings slipped into the mid-30
    percent range; should they fall much further, it will mean that Bush
    has lost his core base of support. No president in modern history
    has recovered from such an event.

    The strength of the U.S. presidency is a crucial issue for the world's
    secondary powers. So long as the United States remains the center of
    gravity of the international system, other countries must consider it
    as a primary factor in their own strategic thinking. For some, such as
    the Central European states, the weakening of the Bush presidency poses
    a problem, as these states depend upon American security guarantees
    to shield them from a resurging Russia. For others, such as Venezuela,
    it represents opportunity; a U.S. administration distracted by
    internal problems, and with fewer political tools at its disposal,
    increases Caracas' options for action.

    In all cases, however, a sudden weakening of the American president
    is actually problematic. Whether the power in question hates or loves
    Washington, moving too fast to take advantage of, or compensate for,
    presidential weakness means risking American reprisals if the situation
    should reverse. World leaders need to know whether Bush is truly down
    for the count before they shift course; counting the Americans out is a
    dangerous move -- and a potentially a lethal one, if they guess wrong.

    Most leaders, therefore, will be waiting with bated breath throughout
    much of the second quarter to see whether Bush's ratings move
    decisively one way or another. Consequently, the pressure is on
    for the administration to make things happen; every day that passes
    with political paralysis only encourages other countries to go their
    own way.

    The question, of course, is how long will they wait? We expect the
    holding pattern to continue for most until the midterm congressional
    elections in November, when it will be clear whether U.S. voters
    have damned their leader. If Bush can reverse his political slide,
    the second quarter will be his best chance to make a move; as the
    elections draw nearer, his window of opportunity will narrow and close.

    While most countries will be able to wait for U.S. election outcomes
    to choose their courses, a desperate few, lacking other options,
    will be forced to deal with the United States in the meantime as
    though nothing has changed.

    And that will be the case for Iraq -- the second issue that will
    dominate the quarter.

    Ultimately, all of the players in Iraq -- the Kurds, the Shia and
    the Sunni -- need an accurate assessment of the U.S. wherewithal
    in order to negotiate effectively. That wherewithal is intimately
    bound up in the political standing of Bush himself. In other words,
    Bush's problems impact the "stability" of Iraq perhaps more than any
    other single factor. The Iraqis -- unlike the Russians, the Indians,
    the French or a host of others -- do not have the luxury of being able
    to wait for clear signs as to how much strength Bush has (or lacks).

    They are actively involved in the struggle for their own villages,
    towns and nation -- and, because of this, are adjusting tactics
    according to daily events in Washington as well as in Baghdad.

    That simple reality will make Baghdad -- both politically and
    militarily -- an incredibly busy place during the next three months.

    Significantly, there is one middle power that also is mixed up in
    Iraq -- and, like the Iraqis, does not have the option of sitting
    back and waiting for history to unfold. That middle power is Iran.

    Ultimately, outcomes in Iraq will be determined by the ability of
    the United States and Iran to come to terms with each other. Tehran
    wants to ensure that its western border is secure; Washington wants to
    re-establish the traditional balance of power in the region in order
    to keep Tehran in check. That sounds like an intractable situation --
    and in many ways it is -- but the Americans and Iranians do share one
    interest: Both are concerned with containing the Arabs. Therein lies
    the common ground necessary for reaching an agreement.

    Within the past month, all of the power brokers that matter in both
    the United States and Iran -- up to and including Iranian President
    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has yet to come across a condemnation of
    Americans that he could not spice up -- have agreed to the idea of
    direct talks on the subject of Iraq.

    Thus, outside of Washington, the single most important development
    in the second quarter will concern Iraq. We do not expect to see
    the endgame there this quarter -- there is still too far to go --
    but rather the development of a U.S.-Iranian relationship that will
    allow that endgame to be shaped. By the end of the quarter, it should
    be obvious whether the United States and Iran can collectively grope
    their way out.

    MIDDLE EAST

    Events in the Middle East in the first quarter of 2006 mostly kept
    with Stratfor's forecast of political accommodations and negotiations
    among the region's emerging political forces, incumbents and the
    United States, and that violence would drop back to pre-Sept. 11
    levels. This can be seen not only in Iraq, where all three major
    ethno-sectarian groups, Washington and now Tehran are negotiating to
    stabilize Baghdad, but also in the U.S.-Iranian back-channel talks on
    Iraq and the public diplomacy on the nuclear issue. Such negotiations
    are also happening in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In the second
    quarter, Iraq, Iran and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will remain
    the key drivers of events in the region.

    Stratfor's annual forecast for 2006 said that a new full-term Iraqi
    regime will move to stabilize the country and progress will be made
    toward a significant reduction in U.S. and coalition forces toward
    the end of the year. Currently, Iraq's various political groups --
    the Shia, Sunnis and Kurds -- are engaged in intense talks aimed at
    political stability, and there is movement toward drawing down the
    foreign troop presence. While the government is being formed, the
    transitional government, cooperating with certain Sunni political
    forces, is going after jihadists and the other rejectionist Sunni
    elements. The insurgency is beginning to show initial signs of waning
    now that Sunnis are included in the political process. A new type
    of violence -- along sectarian lines -- has erupted, but it has not
    offset the negotiating process. In fact, the sectarian clashes likely
    accelerated efforts toward forming a coalition government because each
    side knows that civil strife will hurt its political interests and
    that the United States is trying to significantly reduce its forces
    in the country.

    Pressured by internal dynamics and Washington, the Iraqis likely will
    form a full-term government, but this will not lead to any dramatic
    improvements in stability and security. The public negotiations
    between the United States and Iran could result in a preliminary
    understanding between Washington and Tehran regarding the future
    balance of power in Baghdad. However, Iran's public entry into the
    negotiations over Iraq will complicate talks with the Sunnis, and the
    Bush administration will be engaged in a balancing game to achieve
    some semblance of equilibrium between the two sides.

    The jihadists will spend the quarter trying to sabotage the
    U.S.-Iranian-Iraqi negotiations. Al Qaeda in Iraq will continue to
    attempt attacks designed to start a civil war to slow the pace of
    Sunnis' turning away from insurgency, but these efforts will not
    succeed. Another major event like the Golden Mosque bombing will not
    derail the political process, but someone -- either jihadist or Sunni
    nationalist -- will surely make an attempt. The next quarter will
    see offensives in Anbar province, Baghdad and the Sunni Triangle,
    with Iraqi units participating more than they did in 2005. Pressure
    will increase on the jihadists, and they might begin relocating to
    other theaters, such as the Arabian Peninsula, the Horn of Africa,
    the Levant, North Africa, Central Asia and West Africa. Meanwhile, the
    United States will continue on its course of scaling back its presence.

    Sensing that the Bush administration's domestic position has been
    weakened and could slide even further, the various political actors
    with interests in Iraq will drive a hard bargain. The sectarian
    violence is not expected to alter the dynamics of the negotiating
    process. The Shia will try to hold on to as much power as possible,
    and the Sunnis will try to gain greater say in matters having to
    do with security, the constitution and oil revenues. The Kurds will
    try to exploit the Shia-Sunni tensions to advance their agenda for
    greater autonomy for their northern Kurdistan region.

    Developments regarding Iran also keep with Stratfor's assessment
    that the real issue is not the nuclear crisis; it is U.S.-Iranian
    engagement, which has moved from back channels into the public arena.

    Based on the progress of talks with Washington on Iraq, Tehran
    will move toward de-escalating tensions on the nuclear issue by
    agreeing to some sort of arrangement that will give it enough room
    to reignite the matter when it needs to. Iran will try to exploit
    Russia and China's entry into the diplomatic process. More important,
    it will try to use Moscow's proposal to enrich uranium on behalf of
    Tehran to push ahead for its demand to have the right to engage in
    nuclear fuel activities on its own soil. As per Stratfor's forecast,
    Iran also will use the leverage it has on the Iraqi issue to extract
    concessions on the nuclear issue.

    The U.N. Security Council (UNSC) on March 29 approved a first response
    to Iran's defying International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) calls
    to suspend uranium enrichment activity. A presidential statement
    -- a nonbinding document -- gives Iran 30 days to heed the IAEA's
    demand to end all nuclear fuel cycle work, after which IAEA head
    Mohamed ElBaradei will submit a report on Tehran's compliance or lack
    thereof. Talks between Iran and the P-5 -- permanent UNSC members
    Russia, the United States, the United Kingdom, France and China --
    plus Germany will continue to get Iran to back down throughout the
    quarter. Considering that the P-5 had a hard time agreeing to the text
    of the presidential statement, it will be some time before the UNSC
    will move toward creating some form of a resolution, which will also
    be a preliminary warning as opposed to a final threat of sanctions
    if Tehran remains in noncompliance.

    In the Israeli-Palestinian theater, although Stratfor forecast
    that Hamas would become a major player in the wake of the Jan. 25
    legislative elections, we did not expect it to replace Fatah as the
    dominant Palestinian political force. That said -- and as expected
    -- Hamas is in the throes of balancing its political vision for a
    Palestinian state with the need to consolidate its electoral gains.

    It has yet to accept a compromise but there could be movement in
    that direction in the second quarter. The radical Islamist group's
    political rise has led to a situation in which it can contain attacks
    inside Israel. Considering that Hamas can deliver on any deal, Israel,
    the United States and the European Union will seek accommodation with a
    Hamas-led Palestinian National Authority (PNA) while sustaining their
    pressure on the radical Islamist movement to moderate its position
    on Israel and the "roadmap" process.

    In the annual forecast for 2006, Stratfor also underestimated
    Israel's Kadima party's ability to sustain itself as the country's
    largest political group. Despite the incapacitation of Kadima
    leader and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, the pragmatic
    conservative-centrist party managed to retain its leadership in
    parliament after the March 28 early parliamentary elections and
    will form a coalition government. This event will set the stage
    for a new phase of Israeli-Palestinian relations, but before the
    Israeli government forms, Hamas will try to come to an agreement
    with Fatah and other Palestinian factions regarding the status of the
    Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and a power-sharing arrangement
    involving the PLO and the PNA. Considering that the Kadima government
    will move toward unilateral action to establish the Jewish state's
    final borders, and that Hamas' control of the PNA can pose a security
    threat to Israel, both sides will work toward establishing some sort
    of understanding and unwritten rules of engagement.

    Elsewhere in the Middle East, Saudi Arabia and Egypt will try to
    advance their geopolitical positions in the region, especially given
    the threat from a rising Iran. The Saudis and Egyptians will move
    to act as power-brokers in the disputes between Syria and Lebanon,
    in the Israeli-Palestinian theater and in Iraq by using a mix of
    direct and indirect involvement in negotiations.

    Regarding the region's economy, specifically the energy sector, oil
    prices will not drop because of the strong demands from the United
    States and China and the incremental volumes of oil coming online in
    the Middle East.

    Al Qaeda jihadists are expected to try and stage additional strikes
    against oil-related targets in the Arabian Peninsula and Persian
    Gulf region. There is also the possibility of attacks in the Levant
    as Abu Musab al-Zarqawi continues his efforts to expand his reach
    beyond Iraq. Attacks in Europe and possibly the continental United
    States are also expected in the next quarter as the annual cycle
    of jihadist operations in the West comes to a close. Since 2004, al
    Qaeda has staged two significant attacks in Europe -- the bombings
    of trains in Madrid in March 2004 and the attacks against London's
    Underground and bus systems in July 2005.

    Al-Zarqawi also will work to revive the Saudi branch of al Qaeda and
    enhance his regional leadership position in the jihadist movement. As
    the homegrown jihadist movement has declined in Saudi Arabia,
    cooperation between the Saudi and Iraqi branches of al Qaeda has
    grown. The Saudi regime's support of the insurgency in Iraq is bound
    to have a boomerang effect as Saudi Islamist militants return home
    and try to rejuvenate the movement in the kingdom, especially with
    additional attempts on oil-related targets.

    SOUTH ASIA

    Stratfor's forecast that India would work to enhance its global
    influence through arms deals, economic pacts and alliances in 2006 was
    correct. Stratfor also forecast that toward the end of 2006 Pakistani
    President Gen. Pervez Musharraf's regime will face domestic problems
    stemming from instability from Islamabad's civil-military hybrid
    system and moves by the opposition to weaken Musharraf.

    Musharraf has already begun losing momentum in the face of a mix of
    international and domestic factors.

    The major geopolitical drivers in South Asia next quarter will be
    efforts by Afghan President Hamid Karzai's government to consolidate
    and enhance its power, Musharraf's moves to counter internal threats to
    his hold on power and shape a jihadist-free foreign policy toward India
    and Afghanistan, and India's push toward regional/global-player status.

    Afghanistan is expected to continue pressuring Pakistan on the issue
    of the Taliban and al Qaeda's launching attacks on Afghanistan from
    Pakistani soil. This will not only increase tensions between Kabul and
    Islamabad but will adversely affect the Musharraf government's domestic
    position. A growing, Taliban-led insurgency, which is expected to get
    worse as warmer weather sets in, will force U.S. and NATO forces to
    engage in countermilitancy operations.

    NATO will take over command in Afghanistan as planned in the summer,
    with the United Kingdom as commander and the United States as deputy.

    Of 16,000 U.S. troops in country, only 6,000 will be subordinate to
    the NATO force. Kandahar province and other provinces in the east
    and south with majority Pashtun populations will be active as the
    transition takes place. Local forces will be testing the Canadian
    troops replacing U.S. troops in the country. The Taliban spring
    offensive in Kandahar province will be the Canadians' first major test,
    and they will do well.

    The simultaneous emergence of many problems plaguing the Musharraf
    regime has accelerated the country's drift toward a political
    impasse. With talk of the 2007 parliamentary elections being postponed
    by as much as a year, and sensing that Musharraf is weak both at home
    and abroad, opposition forces are expected to begin whipping up an
    anti-government campaign in the second quarter. In the coming three
    months, at least, Musharraf will not be in a deal-striking mood and
    thus will try to undercut his political opponents by sustaining his
    divide-and-weaken approach. The conditions affecting the Musharraf
    government's ability to govern will worsen, but the regime is not
    expected to lose control in the coming quarter.

    As for India, state assembly elections in the key states of West
    Bengal, Kerala and Tamil Nadu will leave India's left-wing parties
    weakened. Since the left-wing parties support the Congress-led United
    Progressive Alliance in parliament, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's
    administration will use this weakening to demand concessions from the
    left-wing parties. The administration will demand greater flexibility
    in foreign policy matters concerning the pending civilian nuclear deal
    with the United States and the Iranian nuclear affair. New Delhi also
    will move ahead to forge deals to satisfy its energy needs.

    China has joined India in getting involved in Nepal's domestic
    political fray. This will allow the monarchy room to maneuver as it
    seeks to contain the Maoist insurrection and the opposition, which
    is trying to contain King Gyanendra's efforts to enhance his power.

    Recent events such as the Prophet Mohammed cartoon controversy, the
    collapse of the Dubai ports deal and the Afghan Christian convert
    gaining asylum in Italy will further exacerbate anger in the region,
    which could lead to rising security threats.

    The global jihadist movement is expected to stage medium-scale attacks
    involving multiple simultaneous suicide bombers striking at Western
    and government targets in the coming quarter within both the Middle
    East and South Asia, in addition to the routine operations under way
    in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    FORMER SOVIET UNION

    As the first quarter of 2006 ends, Stratfor's annual forecast for the
    former Soviet Union (FSU) is right on the mark. The basic premise of
    Russia's defense of its perimeter has held true and become even more
    evident. In the second quarter of 2006, this policy will again be put
    to the test in Russia's buffer zones. Stratfor correctly forecast
    Russia's overtures toward the Middle East, where it will continue
    to play a part in the negotiations over Iran's nuclear program and
    Hamas' government of the Palestinian National Authority. The Kremlin,
    as expected, has also continued to consolidate its control of key
    industry sectors such as energy, and its efforts will persist in the
    second quarter of 2006.

    Russia has recently pursued the policy of placing national integrity
    above all other considerations and faces challenges on several
    fronts. As Uzbekistan inches toward Russia and the rest of Central Asia
    remains relatively stable, Moscow will focus its efforts on Georgia
    and Ukraine, which are attempting to pull further out of its orbit.

    In the tug-of-war between Washington and Moscow, Ukraine can be
    expected to continue teetering back and forth. The unexpected events
    of the last three months in the FSU were both related to Ukraine
    -- the Jan. 10 parliamentary vote of no confidence in the Ukrainian
    Cabinet and the March 3 enforcement of customs regulations on Ukraine's
    Transdniestrian border. The Transdniestria blockade continues to be
    a point of contention between Moscow and Kiev, but the issue became
    less pressing after Ukraine's parliamentary elections.

    In line with Stratfor's assessment that Russia is seeking to strengthen
    its periphery, Moscow played a less obvious, but equally significant,
    role in Ukraine's March 26 parliamentary elections than in the
    presidential election of 2004. Viktor Yanukovich's pro-Russian Party
    of Regions won the most seats but did not gain an outright majority. A
    reincarnated Orange coalition -- should President Viktor Yushchenko's
    Our Ukraine party, the Bloc of Yulia Timoshenko and the Socialist
    Party agree on a platform -- looks likely to gain the upper hand and
    name the next prime minister. Negotiations between Yushchenko and
    Yanukovich remain a possibility, albeit more remote than an Orange
    coalition reunion. Prime Minister Yuri Yekhanurov will remain in
    power until the top three finishers in the parliamentary elections
    can agree on who will join whom in a coalition.

    The nationalist Yushchenko, whose powers were somewhat reduced by
    recent constitutional changes, will still formulate foreign policy.

    He has had to work with a deeply divided parliament, and that
    will not change after the election. However, even a hostile prime
    minister probably would be unable to stall the legislative process
    significantly, as Yushchenko's party likely will be part of a majority
    government.

    The parliamentary election outcome factors into Ukraine's further
    course regarding NATO membership and eventual EU accession. The
    Orange coalition, should it come to power, will be tempered by the
    obvious disaffection of most Ukrainian voters for the Yushchenko
    government. Even if the ostensibly pro-Western Timoshenko becomes
    prime minister, she and the president will feel their ambitions
    tempered by the knowledge that their support has slipped.

    The Transdniestrian blockade could have jeopardized Russia's
    influence in Ukraine at a sensitive time before the parliamentary
    elections. Moscow has been cautious not to break Ukrainian law by
    bypassing the customs regulations and has limited its involvement
    in the Moldovan breakaway republic to humanitarian aid supplied
    by political parties and Russia's regions. Russia has supported
    the Transdniestrian regime, which derives most of its income
    from smuggling. Now that the Ukrainian elections have occurred,
    Moscow will feel freer to assert its support for Transdniestria
    with the governments of Moldova and Ukraine. Implications from the
    eventual outcome of this situation will serve as precedent for other
    Russian-supported secessionist regions, such as South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia in Georgia and Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan.

    The most radical change in the Russian periphery will take place
    in the Caucasus. The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline is to start
    exporting oil by the end of the second quarter. The Azerbaijani and,
    to a lesser extent, Georgian governments will fill their coffers
    at an unprecedented rate, funding military spending among other
    expenditures. The pipeline's launch marks an inflection point in the
    region's power balances. Azerbaijan now will be ascendant relative
    to Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia, just as Georgia will be ascendant
    relative to South Ossetia and Abkhazia. However, greater capabilities
    will not immediately lead Baku or Tbilisi to launch hostilities. This
    is the quarter in which the equation will begin to change, not the
    quarter in which the war will begin. Georgia and Azerbaijan are
    still too weak to take part in any serious operations, although --
    just like Russia -- when Georgia and Azerbaijan get money, one of
    their first priorities will be security.

    Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili is also gathering international
    support for replacing the Russian command of the international
    peacekeeping force stationed in the Russian-supported secessionist
    region of South Ossetia. Saakashvili probably will not attempt
    to reincorporate South Ossetia or the more volatile Abkhazia, but
    small groups operating without government consent (but with implicit
    government support) could cause regional skirmishes.

    Insurgents in both Abkhazia and South Ossetia continuously clash
    with Georgian groups, furthering their cause without implicating the
    Russian government in outright aggression. However, Russia is not too
    eager to fully step into the conflict. Biding its time and stealthily
    supporting insurgent initiatives, Moscow will refrain from taking any
    drastic steps, such as incorporating South Ossetia into its territory.

    Elsewhere in the Caucasus, the Russians will continue to prevail over
    the Chechens, with occasional raids and skirmishes taking place.

    Militants will still be able to stage attacks, and Muslim unrest will
    continue to spread across the North Caucasus.

    Uzbekistan, as the central and most influential republic in Central
    Asia, will take further steps toward securing its position. Having
    finally quit GUAM (the cooperation organization of Georgia, Ukraine,
    Azerbaijan and Moldova, known as GUUAM until Uzbekistan withdrew),
    but not yet having joined the Commonwealth of Independent States'
    Collective Security Treaty Organization, a Russian-dominated
    security grouping, Uzbekistan is attempting to retain a semblance
    of neutrality. However, expanding its relationship with the Russian
    state-controlled natural gas monopoly Gazprom by selling exploratory
    and development rights to major natural gas fields will serve to
    strengthen ties between Tashkent and Moscow. Aside from economic
    cooperation with Russia, Uzbekistan is shunning additional organization
    memberships in order to avoid tying its future to other countries
    and conforming to foreign standards. President Islam Karimov does
    not wish to justify his crackdowns on opposition and his continuing
    consolidation of power to international organizations.

    The U.S. military will continue to lose momentum in Central Asia. As
    this happens, assets and operations will be transferred to Afghanistan,
    which is secure enough. Washington paid the $200 million fee for
    the use of Manas Air Base in Kyrgyzstan, so the U.S. military will
    maintain a presence there for at least another year.

    As the U.S. presence fades from its periphery, Russia will continue to
    expand its military presence in Central Asia with the aim of securing
    friendly regimes. Moscow will continue with its military expansion,
    as it finally has enough money to produce weapons for its military
    rather than for export.

    Russia will further advance its goals in the Middle East by continuing
    to play a part in negotiations with Iran and extending a hand to Hamas,
    challenging Western powers in both cases. As relations with both
    Iran and Hamas are likely to continue in the same tone next quarter,
    Russia will come out confident of its mediation efforts. It is playing
    the part of the alternative, the go-between, with the U.S.

    and European side and the Middle East. Further inroads into the Middle
    East -- starting with the recent cooperation agreement with Algeria
    on joint ventures in natural gas technologies -- will follow.

    Russia's interaction with Europe is epitomized in one word: energy.

    In recent informal talks with EU Commission President Jose Manuel
    Durao Barroso, Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed this issue,
    which will occupy both parties for the foreseeable future. A proposed
    agreement that would allow European access to Russian natural gas
    infrastructure and reserves in exchange for Gazprom's access to EU
    markets will go nowhere, as Russia's nationalistic and protectionist
    stance toward its energy sector will not be overcome by a mutually
    beneficial business proposition.

    The Sino-Russian relationship has recently benefited from U.S.

    President George W. Bush's relative weakening. Since the drop in his
    approval rating, Bush is being continuously challenged by both Putin
    and Chinese President Hu Jintao in the international arena. The
    U.S.-China-Russia triangle has slightly shifted its balance, but
    the relationship between the Eastern partners is merely tactical,
    not amiable. The Russia-China summit March 21-22 led to the signing
    of several bilateral agreements, many on the ever-pressing question
    of Chinese energy needs. Although these projects are unlikely to ever
    come to fruition, they contribute to the positive image of Sino-Russian
    camaraderie. Beijing and Moscow will continue in the second quarter
    to present an allied front when it suits their purposes, while the
    heart of the relationship remains cold.

    Russian domestic policy will progress toward consolidation of
    the energy sector. As Russia continues raising natural gas prices,
    Gazprom will increase its involvement in domestic industry and foreign
    contracts. The state-owned oil company Rosneft is also seeking to
    expand its scope; it will attempt to take over other companies,
    such as Surgutneftgaz.

    The former Soviet Union will continue to follow the path Stratfor's
    2006 annual forecast projected. Significant shifts will occur on the
    Russian periphery, but Moscow will stick to its current policy and
    take the entire region along with it.

    EAST ASIA

    As Stratfor forecast at the beginning of the first quarter of 2006,
    China is addressing the rural-urban income gap by pouring money into
    infrastructure development in the countryside. The National People's
    Congress met in the first quarter to approve the next five-year plan,
    which focuses on transferring wealth from coastal to rural areas.

    This plan was necessary for the Chinese government, which saw a
    potential political and economic crisis brewing.

    Although Beijing had to address the income gap or face eventual
    collapse, the government's actions could prove to be its downfall.

    Beijing now is walking a fine line between the needs of the
    countryside and those of the coastal region, which is the engine for
    the economy. The new five-year plan addressing the need to develop
    the countryside is not the first such measure to be tried. All other
    attempts were quickly set aside to continue feeding the growth engines
    of the coast. If China cannot keep its economy ticking, unemployment
    will soar and create new tensions. China's economy is heading for a
    downturn that will have significant political ramifications.

    Evidence of this downturn will appear in the second quarter, but it
    will not fully manifest until the end of 2006 or beginning of 2007.

    The second quarter will see growing tensions between local officials
    and the central government as Beijing tries to take back the
    economic control that was given to lower-level governments in an
    effort to liberalize the economy. Decentralization provided economic
    incentives for liberalization, and it worked so well that the central
    government lost much of its ability to shape the economy. The desire
    to recentralize will manifest in crackdowns on corrupt local officials.

    Criminal cases against local officials will be highly publicized and
    will become more frequent in the second quarter.

    The next three months will also see more public protests directed at
    local officials as the central government harnesses public opinion
    and sways it toward Beijing's new policies.

    It is a dangerous game, and in the long run the government could lose
    control of this strategy, as happened during the Cultural Revolution.

    However, the government will approve and even foment protests targeting
    local officials during the second quarter. The Chinese government also
    will work to convince local and regional governments to get on board
    with the new five-year plan, even though the structural change will
    hurt many local interests. Beijing will float incentives with coercive
    undertones but there will be no major clashes in the next quarter.

    In the second quarter, the United States will continue its tough
    rhetoric on yuan revaluation, but no specific moves will be made. A
    trade measure proposed by U.S. Sens. Charles Grassley and Max Baucus,
    which will allow the United States to impose restrictions on China,
    will be debated and might pass toward the end of the second quarter.

    Regardless, its loose wording will give the Bush administration
    considerable leeway in implementing the legislation. There will be
    no decisive action against China in the second quarter. The mid-April
    meeting between Chinese President Hu Jintao and U.S. President George
    W. Bush, which once had potential to lead to a showdown over the yuan
    revaluation, will generate tough rhetoric at the most.

    Beyond Sino-U.S. relations, Sino-Japanese relations will continue
    deteriorating in the second quarter as China continues its posturing
    and vitriol against Japan. Picking fights internationally quells
    domestic battles and spurs nationalism, and taking this tack with Japan
    is a strategy that has worked, and continues to work, for Beijing.

    Japan, China and the United States might meet again on different turf
    if six-party talks over North Korea continue. If they do not resume by
    the end of the second quarter, the United States will wash its hands
    of the North Korean issue. The recent threats emanating from North
    Korea -- such as statements that Pyongyang has a nuclear first-strike
    capability -- are signals that North Korea is trying to get the United
    States back to the table. If they do not have anything concrete to
    offer, Washington will give up on Kim Jong Il. However, the United
    States will not give up on its security arrangements in East Asia;
    Washington will just shift the burden of dialogue with North Korea
    to China. This will throw South Korea, which is depending on bigger
    players to resolve the North Korea issue, into a frenzy and further
    deteriorate Sino-U.S. relations.

    Elsewhere in Asia, the second quarter will see other noteworthy
    changes. Indonesia will continue to battle threats to multinational
    corporations (MNCs) operating in country. Foreign investors are keeping
    a close eye on Jakarta before weighing the feasibility of starting or
    continuing operations in Indonesia. Despite more upsurges in violence
    in the next quarter, Jakarta will remain firm in its protection of
    foreign investment. The government will talk tough to appease its
    domestic constituency, but backroom deals with MNCs will ensure the
    multinationals' safety and progress in Indonesia.

    The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) will capture
    attention in the next quarter as it gets tough on Myanmar, altering the
    association's typical stance of noninterference. The United Nations,
    the United States and the European Union will bolster ASEAN's move
    to pressure Myanmar's military regime to reform.

    Thailand's political troubles will continue, albeit somewhat abated, in
    the next quarter. Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra's troubles aside,
    the Thais have to address flaws in their democracy. The intensity
    of the street protests seen in this quarter will disappear, but the
    political parties will have a hard time compromising on constitutional
    reform. The Thai Rak Thai party will remain in power, and so will
    Thaksin -- in one form or another -- which will increase discord with
    the opposition. Opposition groups will not respect the Thai Rak Thai's
    majority and will boycott the April snap elections, which will enable
    them to claim that Thai Rak Thai's mandate is a sham. The standoff
    in parliament between Thai Rak Thai and the opposition will continue,
    shackling all political decisions until the constitution is revised and
    there is a compromise between the parties. Under these circumstances
    Thaksin's own Thai Rak Thai party will ask him to resign to avoid a
    parliamentary impasse, but Thaksin will still be able to influence
    any political outcome. These troubles will just be starting in the
    second quarter of 2006.

    Tensions are likely to flare up again in the Philippines. The military
    will become more politicized -- despite recent efforts to depoliticize
    the military by ceasing to use soldiers as bodyguards for VIPs and
    politicians -- as recently appointed Armed Forces Chief of Staff
    Gen. Generoso Senga makes appointments to bolster his authority, and
    President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo consents. Senga wants more troops to
    combat the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), and if his request
    is approved, negotiations between the government and MILF will not
    be resolved in the next quarter.

    The second quarter of 2006 will be marked by rising tensions throughout
    Southeast and East Asia. Even where some conflicts seem to be resolved
    -- Thailand and the Philippines -- there will be ongoing discord that
    will continue throughhout the year.

    The second-quarter 2006 forecast continues in Part Two.

    http://www.stratfor.com/products/premium/rea d_article.php?id=264313&selected=Analyses
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