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  • The China-India-Russia alliance

    The China-India-Russia alliance
    Strategy and Politics


    As U.S. unilateralism has asserted its role as the sole global
    superpower, the rest of the world is exploring a variety of ways of
    pushing back. One is the creation of several new regional security
    consortiums which are independent of the U.S.

    http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?i darticle=13396
    Sunday, January 06, 2008

    By Tarique Niazi

    As U.S. unilateralism has asserted the role of the United States as the
    sole global superpower, the rest of the world is exploring a variety of
    ways of pushing back. One is the creation of several new regional
    security consortiums which are independent of the U.S. One of the most
    important is the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), a security
    alliance led by Russia and China, with several non-voting members
    including India. Its rising economic, political and military profile
    this year can serve as a useful lens through which to view this
    geopolitical pushback. It is based on promoting a multipolar world,
    distributing power along multiple poles in the international system,
    such as the United States, Europe, Asia-Eurasia and the Middle East,1
    while also promoting the multilateralism of international cooperation.2
    In recent years, Russia and China have stepped up their advocacy for a
    multipolar-multilateral alternative.

    Multipolarity

    Russia is promoting its vision of a multipolar world hinging on the
    consensus-based decision making that it wants steered through global
    institutions such as the United Nations. Chinese President Hu Jintao
    has outlined a similar vision. At a caucus of the leaders of Brazil,
    India, Mexico and South Africa in Berlin, Germany in June of 2007 he
    said: "Developing countries should strengthen cooperation and
    consolidate solidarity to promote the establishment of a multipolar
    world and a democratic international relationship.3

    India, however, treads cautiously between the competing visions of a
    world with multiple poles of power. As such, it makes a refined
    distinction between multipolarity and multilateralism, and strongly
    advocates for the latter. India rejects multipolarity that seeks to
    challenge U.S. military power[why? India's independent line is
    mentioned here and then sort of drops out of the piece], while
    espousing the need for cooperation in governing international
    relations. In 2003, India's External Affairs Minister Yashwant Sinha
    outlined the contours of multilateralism: "If globalization is the
    trend, then multilateralism is its life-sustaining mechanism, for no
    process will survive without a genuine spirit of multilateralism
    underlined by the belief that global problems require global solutions
    globally arrived at. Otherwise, the world faces the risk of repeating
    the mistakes of the past."4 He emphatically rejected unilateralism, and
    pointed out that "Iraq attests to the limits of unilateralism."5 In
    October this year, Sonia Gandhi, leader of the ruling Congress Party in
    India, while on a landmark visit to Beijing, offered her formulation of
    a world order on which her country agrees with China: "Both China and
    India seek an open and inclusive world order based on the principles of
    'Panchsheel' that were founded together by (then Chinese Prime
    Minister) Zhou Enlai and (India's founding father) Jawaharlal Nehru in
    1954."6 Later, Panchsheel became the founding charter of the
    Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) that had claimed to be the third pole of
    power in the bipolar world.

    A substantial outcome of this advocacy came about in February this year
    when Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Hu Jintao
    signed the Declaration on the World Order in the 21st Century.7 The
    Declaration called for peaceful coexistence, a just and rational world
    order, abandonment of unilateralism, and embrace of multilateralism. In
    its own words, the Declaration stated: "It is necessary to solve
    differences and disputes in a peaceful way, avoid unilateral action
    (and) not to resort to the policy of diktat, the threat or use of
    force...Every country has the right to manage its affairs in a
    sovereign way and international issues should be resolved through
    dialogue and consultations on the basis of multilateral collective
    approaches."8 Similarly India, in its bilateral relations with China
    and Russia, boldly spells out its vision of a world of shared
    governance.

    Trilateral Dialogue: China, India and Russia

    The growing convergence in the worldview of China, India and Russia
    brought them into a trilateral dialogue, which in Chinese President
    Jintao's words would see "the three nations work together for further
    communication and coordination in major international and regional
    issues and promote the solution of disputes and differences through
    dialogue."9 Russian President Putin, while speaking at the first
    trilateral summit between China, India and Russia in St. Petersburg,
    Russia, in July 2006 echoed Hu: "...that discussions held in the
    trilateral meeting would promote mutual trust not only between India,
    Russia and China individually, but also at regional and global
    levels."10 Beijing and New Delhi accepted Russia's proposal to hold
    trilateral summit because "it was beneficial to boosting the
    cooperation among the three countries as well as maintaining
    multipolarity ... in the world."11 Former Russian Prime Minister
    Yevgeny Primakov was the first leader to propose the trilateral
    relationship between China, India, and Russia during his visit to New
    Delhi in 1998. The first trilateral summit was followed by a meeting of
    the foreign ministers of three countries in New Delhi on February 14,
    2007. In a joint communiqué, the foreign ministers "expressed their
    conviction that democratization of international relations is the key
    to building an increasingly multipolar world order."12

    During his recent visit to New Delhi on January 25-26, 2007, as the
    guest of honor on India's Republic Day, President Putin further
    discussed trilateral cooperation with Indian Prime Minister Man Mohan
    Singh. Later, standing shoulder to shoulder with Singh, he told a news
    conference in New Delhi: "We want to resolve regional problems in a way
    acceptable to all sides. We therefore think that there are good
    prospects for working together in a trilateral format."13 Indians who
    have long been beholden to Russia seems to embrace Putin's trilateral
    initiative, while remaining skeptical of the Indo-U.S. alliance that is
    currently in the works. K. Subrahmanyam, India's foremost observer of
    strategic affairs, gratefully speaks of Indian pull towards Moscow:
    "Russia has seen India as a key to Asian stability for the past 50
    years, some four decades before George W. Bush's team reached that
    conclusion."14 The formation of trilateral dialogue has already been
    institutionalized. As part of this dialogue, Chinese, Indian and
    Russian foreign ministers held their first meeting in June 2005 in
    Vladivostok, Russia. As noted above, they met again in New Delhi in
    February 2007. Similarly, the leaders of three countries have been
    holding trilateral summits on the sidelines of G-8 meetings, of which
    Russia is a member and at which China and India have been regular
    invitees since 2006.

    Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO)

    Parallel to the trilateral dialogue, China and Russia took the lead to
    institutionalize their strategic relations into the Shanghai
    Cooperation Organization (SCO), of which India, together with Iran,
    Mongolia and Pakistan, is a non-voting member. The six-member SCO is
    widely seen as a collective security organization for nations in South,
    Central and West Asia. Some observers view the SCO as a counterbalance
    to the NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) and its advance into
    the region. Others believe that "Beijing and Moscow...shared the common
    aims of...frustrating Washington's agenda to dominate the (Central
    Asian) region which had been an integral part of the Soviet Union for
    three generations."15 The recent SCO summit on August 16, 2007 in
    Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, however, emphasized in a joint communiqué that
    "modern challenges and security threat can only be effectively
    countered through united efforts of the international community."16
    There is a range of events that signify the SCO's rising economic,
    political and military profile, but five events stand out in this
    regard:

    (a) post-Taliban Afghanistan;
    (b) U.S. military presence in central Asia;
    (c) SCO's rapid expansion;
    (d) the Caspian Sea Nations Summit; and,
    (e) "Peace Mission 2007."

    SCO and post-Taliban Afghanistan

    As the SCO asserts for a role in post-Taliban Afghanistan, it wants to
    see the U.S.-led forces leave Kabul. At its annual summit in July 2005
    in Astana, Kazakhstan, the SCO called on the U.S. to give a timetable
    for a pullout of its troops from Afghanistan. "As the active military
    phase in the antiterror operation in Afghanistan is nearing completion,
    the SCO would like the coalition's members to decide on the deadline
    for the use of the temporary infrastructure and for their military
    contingents' presence in those countries."17 The SCO's demands were
    based on the assumption that the Taliban has been defeated; hence,
    there is no need for the continued presence of U.S. and NATO troops in
    the region. The U.S., however, has since built several military bases
    across Afghanistan, to fight Taliban's insurgency and al Qaeda's
    terrorism. The U.S.' expanded military presence further fueld
    suspicions among SCO member states--especially China and Russia--that
    the U.S. and NATO are in the region for the long haul.

    The SCO has since begun developing its own Afghan policy with the
    founding of the Afghanistan Contact Group (ACG) to strengthen
    relationship between the SCO and Kabul. The Afghan President Hamid
    Karzai, who regularly attends the SCO's annual summits, has positively
    responded to the SCO's initiative. It is important to note that
    Karzai's political support base in the ruling Northern Alliance in
    Afghanistan continues to be beholden to Russia for the latter's
    critical support against the Taliban long before the 9/11 attacks. To
    this day, the Northern Alliance government kept up its warm relations
    with the Kremlin. Similarly, the Alliance's ethnic links with the
    Central Asian Republics (CARs), especially with Tajikistan and
    Uzbekistan, two member-states of the SCO, also play out in making
    Afghanistan receptive to the SCO. In return, Afghanistan is showered
    with economic and military support by China and Russia. In the economic
    sector, China has become Afghanistan's anchor. In late November 2007,
    Kabul gave Beijing the largest-ever mining contract in Afghanistan's
    history. Under this 30-year deal, China would invest $3b in the
    development of copper mines, which are likely to go in production in
    the next five years, in Afghanistan's Logar province. This
    single-stroke Chinese investment of $3b comes close to the entire
    foreign investment in Afghanistan of just $4b since 2001.18 Militarily,
    Moscow has continued to be Kabul's main supplier of weapons and
    military hardware since 2001. Thus, Kabul's growing economic and
    military dependence on China and Russia is further binding it to these
    nations. That's why Afghanistan is now poised to become a member of the
    SCO.

    SCO and U.S. Military Presence

    While gathering Afghanistan into its embrace, the SCO publicly
    expresses its unease at the U.S.'s military presence in the region. At
    its Astana summit, the SCO also called for the closing of U.S. bases in
    Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan. Months later, Uzbekistan evicted the U.S.
    from its air base at Karshi-Khanabad, also known as K-2. At this summit
    Uzbekistan's President Islam Karimov "essentially called on his SCO
    partners to make a choice between siding with the United States or
    'with our neighbors in Russia and China.'"19

    The United States, however, continues to keep another air base at Manas
    in Kyrgyzstan, which it has been using for humanitarian and combat
    operations in Afghanistan. The U.S. has 1,200 troops stationed there.
    Unsurprisingly, Kyrgyzstan balanced the U.S. military presence on its
    soil with the hosting of a Russian airbase nearby. As the Russian and
    U.S. air bases sit only a few miles apart, Russians use this proximity
    as a strategic vantage point to keep tabs on what goes on at Manas
    base. There are reports that China also is in talks with Bishkek to
    open up an airbase of its own in Kyrgyzstan. Furthermore, Bishkek,
    which hosted the SCO summit in 2007, has already stopped the U.S. from
    using Manas base for combat operations. It is now placing additional
    restrictions on Washington for using the base even for humanitarian
    relief supplies. Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiev, who was elected
    with U.S. support, "called for the United States to start reducing its
    military presence in the country" as "situation in Afghanistan had
    stabilized."20 Bishkek also is under mounting persuasion by Iran to not
    let its base be used for any hostile action against Tehran.

    The Expanding SCO

    As the U.S. presence in the region tends to contract, the SCO goes on
    expanding into an unparalleled Asian-Eurasian Security organization.
    Its current members include China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia,
    Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Among its members with observer status are
    included India, Iran, Mongolia and Pakistan. As noted before,
    Afghanistan also is now lining up to become a full-fledged member. So
    are Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan--two staunch U.S. allies and
    energy-rich nations. In recognition of the SCO's growing significance,
    even the U.S. applied for its membership.21 The application was,
    however, denied. Yet the SCO won global recognition with a United
    Nations Assistant Secretary General in attendance at the Bishkek summit
    this year. The SCO is now linking arms with the Russian-dominated
    Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), which is seen in the
    west as a Eurasian military pact, to further help advance mutual
    interests. Both organizations have signed a cooperation agreement this
    year. By virtue of this agreement, China has become an unofficial
    member of the CSTO, which is made up of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
    Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. Interestingly, all SCO
    members, except China, are also members of the CSTO. More importantly,
    Iran, which has applied for SCO membership, has also been invited to
    join the CSTO. The CSTO also wants a piece of action in Afghanistan,
    and insists to model the NATO in undertaking global peacekeeping,
    especially in its "region of responsibility." In parallel, China and
    Russia are ready to accept India as a voting member, which will be an
    upgrade on its current status as an observer. It is interesting to note
    that China, India and Russia all have made a massive investment in
    Iran's energy production sector, which further binds them together.
    Chinese and Indian oil and gas interests in Iran are respectively
    valued at $100b and $40b. Russia, for its part, is helping Tehran to
    build its flagship $1b nuclear reactor in Busher.

    The Caspian Sea Summit

    In so many ways, Tehran has become a catalyst for the competitive
    tensions between unipolarists and multipolarists. It can be gauged from
    the just-concluded second Caspian Sea Summit, which met in Tehran on
    October 16, 2007. Along the lines of the SCO, Russia is developing an
    alliance of the Caspian Sea's littoral states that include Azerbaijan,
    Iran, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Russia. The alliance is seemingly
    meant to share the natural wealth of the Caspian Sea, which some
    observers bill as the new Middle East. The 700 mile-long Caspian, which
    is the world's largest inland sea, contains six separate hydrocarbon
    basins. Its proven and potential oil reserves boast 270 billion barrels
    of oil. In 1994, the Azerbaijan International Oil Consortium sealed an
    $8b deal with Baku to develop three Caspian Sea oil fields with
    reserves of about 3-5 billion barrels of oil. The deal was to extend
    over 30 years. There have since been occasional skirmishes between
    Azerbaijan and Iran over the demarcation of their respective
    coastlines. The five littoral states now seek a framework to replace
    the 1921 treaty that first divided the Sea between Iran and the former
    U.S.S.R. to have an agreed-upon share in its natural bounties.

    The Tehran summit was meant to achieve this end. The summit was,
    however, clouded by the worsening standoff between Iran, Europe and the
    U.S. over Iran's nuclear program. In this tense atmosphere, Tehran
    wasted no time in claiming the presence of President Putin, who was the
    first Russian leader to travel to Iran since the Islamic Revolution in
    1979, at the summit as a vindication of its position that its nuclear
    program had all along been for peaceful purposes. On December 3 2007,
    the U.S. National Intelligence Estimate said: "We judge with high
    confidence that in fall 2003, Tehran halted its weapons program," and
    that "Tehran had not restarted its nuclear-weapons program as of
    mid-2007."22 The weapons program is defined as relating to weapons
    design, weaponization work and covert uranium work. Two weeks after the
    National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) was released, Russia delivered 80
    tons of enriched uranium for Tehran's Busher nuclear reactor.23 Putin's
    visit was, however, widely interpreted as a counterweight to
    Washington's persistent opposition to Iran's nuclear ambitions.24
    Putin, too, publicly defended Iran's right to peaceful use of nuclear
    technology. At the summit, he further cheered his Iranian hosts with a
    call on the summiteers to stand united against outside interference:
    "We have to build confidence to settle the relevant issues and not even
    think of resorting to force against each other in the Caspian Sea, or
    of allowing other countries to avail themselves of our (Caspian)
    territories."25

    Iranians believe that the U.S. is setting up Azerbaijan to
    counterbalance Iran. They are also perturbed by U.S. involvement in
    helping Kazakhstan to build its navy. So are Russians. As a result,
    there is growing convergence of views between Iran and Russia on
    keeping the Caspian Sea demilitarized. To further their cooperation
    beyond the appropriation of the Caspian Sea's natural wealth, the
    summit's member states have formed the Caspian Sea Economic Commission,
    which is scheduled to meet next year in Moscow with Putin in chair. Not
    only is the revolving door between the SCO, CSTO and Caspian Sea
    nations strengthening the Russian and Chinese influence in the region,
    it is deepening their military and security alliance as well.

    Peace Mission 2007

    The major manifestation of this deepening alliance was the SCO-wide
    military maneuvers, dubbed as "Peace Mission 2007." These maneuvers
    were conducted on August 9-17, 2007 in Chelyabinsk in Russia's Urals
    region, followed by its final phase carried out in Urumuqi, Xinjiang,
    China. The exercises involved 6,500 troops, 80 aircraft and 500 combat
    vehicles from China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and
    Uzbekistan. China and Russia supplied all of the combat vehicles, as
    well as 3,700 troops. "For the SCO...the war games mark its most
    ambitious attempt yet to build an integrated military-security
    apparatus to complement expanding political and commercial
    collaboration."26 Some observers suspect that Peace Mission 2007
    "resembles less of an anti-terrorism drill than a full-scale,
    state-on-state conventional fight."27 The SCO has never held a
    full-scale military exercise involving all member states, although
    China and Russia have held several joint exercises under the auspices
    of the SCO. In 2005, they held large-scale amphibious landings on
    China's Yellow Sea Coast, which many observers believed were intended
    for Chinese separatists in Taiwan.28 These maneuvers, however, were
    massive in their scope as they were conducted on land, in air, and at
    sea in southeast of the Shandong Peninsula in China. The stated goal of
    each drill--held in 2007 and 2005--was to fight separatism and
    terrorism. China faces problems of separatism in Tibet and Taiwan, and
    terrorism in Xinjiang, while Russia is confronted with the twin menace
    in the wide swath of its northern territories. Similarly, India is
    battling enduring separatist movements in its west and northeast.
    Although India, which is an observer at the SCO, sat out of the 2007
    drills, it is scheduled to hold joint army exercises with China later
    this month in its southwestern province of Yunnan.29 The planned
    exercises are being billed as "historic" since the two giants have come
    a long way from active hostilities to strategic partnership. In their
    luncheon meeting in Singapore on November 21, 2007, Chinese Prime
    Minister Wen Jiabao and Indian Prime Minister Man Mohan Singh further
    signified the import of these exercises by reiterating their commitment
    "to take their strategic cooperative partnership to a next level."30
    Prime Minister Singh, in his statement, added that "India and China
    ties are beyond and above bilateral matters. They are related to peace,
    stability and prosperity in the region and the world beyond...India and
    China are...friends and partners."31 The Indian Prime Minister, who has
    just returned from his state visit to Moscow, is now scheduled to visit
    China early next year.

    Conclusion

    The SCO's geopolitical pushback to the unipolar-unilateral makeover of
    the world is, however, defensive. Both China and Russia are being
    protective of their turf. Their internal divisions caused by
    "extremism, splitism, and terrorism" further unnerve them at even a
    slight hint of U.S. or NATO proximity to their "near-abroad." They have
    created the SCO and CSTO, and formed the Caspian Sea Alliance to put
    distance between their respective "spheres of influence" and NATO-US
    presence. Many argue that this alliance-building is a reaction to U.S.
    unilateralism. These alliances, however, cannot threaten U.S. security
    interests in the region. The allied nations have been consistently
    reassuring the U.S. that their alliances are not directed at "third
    party." In fact, SCO member states have helped the U.S. to protect its
    security interests in the region. In the run-up to U.S. military action
    in Afghanistan in 2001, the Russian President Putin, according to Bob
    Woodward, stunned the top U.S. policy makers with his unsolicited offer
    to let U.S. combat jets use the Russian airspace to strike the Taliban
    government in Kabul.32 The Bush White House was not even sure if
    Russians would agree to U.S. airbases in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan for
    which it sought Putin's consent. More importantly, China, which shares
    a long border with Kyrgyzstan and is next door neighbor to Uzbekistan,
    went along with the U.S. bases in both countries. Besides, and it is
    noteworthy for American policy makers, the three nations that broke out
    in spontaneous outpouring of sympathy for 9/11 victims were not Egypt,
    Jordan or Saudi Arabia, but Russia, Iran and China--in that
    order--where hundreds of thousands of marchers held candle-lit vigils
    and mourned the tragic deaths of 3,000 Americans in terrorist attacks.
    In strictly strategic sense, the U.S. by itself and together with its
    allies, especially Australia, Britain and Japan, continues to be the
    dominant force in the Middle East, the Persian Gulf, the Strait of
    Malacca and the Indian Ocean, which are the key sources and supply
    routes of energy shipments for China and trade goods for Central Asia.
    This makes China and the region vulnerable to U.S. retaliation in the
    event of any perceived or real threat to U.S. security interests.

    Yet the Asian-Eurasian regional powers, which are coalescing into the
    SCO, CSTO and Caspian Alliance, have the potential to entangle U.S.
    economic interests, especially energy interests. On this score too, the
    U.S. has been able to circumvent such potential challenges by
    establishing bilateral relations with the region's energy-rich nations,
    particularly Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. Of these,
    Kazakhstan is the richest nation, with three-fourths of the region's
    oil and about half of its gas reserves; Azerbaijan owns one-sixth of
    the region's oil and10 percent of gas reserves; and Turkmenistan
    possesses close to half of the region's gas and 5 percent of oil
    reserves. In 1993, Chevron concluded a $20b deal with Kazakhstan to
    develop its Tengiz oil field, which is estimated to contain recoverable
    oil reserves of 6-9 billion barrels of oil. An $8b Azerbaijan
    International Consortium, led by BP-Amoco-Statoil, is already
    developing oil fields off the shores of Azerbaijan. Similarly, the U.S.
    has successfully pushed for a multi-billion dollar
    Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan (TAP) gas pipeline as an alternative
    to the $10b Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) gas pipeline.

    Above all, the U.S. enjoys worldwide economic and military superiority
    that allows it to force its way through closed doors, if needed. As the
    world's strongest nation, multilateralists argue, the United States
    serves its interests best when it works in a multilateral framework on
    which China, India and Russia all agree. A starting point for
    multilateralism can be war-torn Afghanistan where the SCO and CSTO both
    want a piece of action. The U.S. should welcome both to share in
    counter-insurgency operations for which both China and Russia have a
    long-standing career. This will free up 25,000 U.S. troops in
    Afghanistan, which can be exclusively deployed for counter-terrorism;
    while NATO forces can undertake reconstruction work that has long
    remained frozen. If it happens, it will turn Afghanistan into the North
    Star of multilateralism. To the U.S.' further advantage, India's
    alliance with China and Russia would privilege multilateralism over
    multipolarism. The latter, as Indian Foreign Minister Sinha in his 2003
    address cautioned, has the potential to reprise the cold war rivalries
    that could set the world on a dangerous course. Multilateralism, on the
    other hand, would further strengthen the continuing economic
    integration worldwide, and thus lay the foundation for political
    integration as well.

    Endnotes
    1. John Van Oudenaren, "Unipolar versus Unilateral: Confusing Power
    with Purpose," Policy Review, April-May, 2004.
    2. John Van Oudenaren, "What is Multilateral?" Policy Review,
    February-March, 2003.
    3. President Hu Jintao Had a Collective Meeting With the Leaders of
    India, Brazil, South Africa and Mexico." Available online at:
    http://www.chinaembassy.org.in/eng/zgbd/t329817.h tm
    4. "Push for Multipolar World Need Not Be Confrontationist." The Hindu,
    October 19, 2003. Available online at:
    http://www.thehindu.com/2003/10/19/stories/200310 1903231000.htm
    5. ibid
    6. "India and China--a Harmony of Civilizations." Available online at:
    http://www.hindu.com/nic/soniachina.htm
    7. "China-Russia Joint Statement on 21st Century World Order."
    Political Affairs Magazine. Available online at:
    http://www.politicalaffairs.net/article/view/1455 /1/108
    8. ibid
    9. "China Russia India Trilateral Summit," People's Daily, July 18,
    2006.
    10. ibid
    11. ibid
    12. "India China Russia call for Fairer World Order." Reuters, February
    14, 2007.
    13. Rachel Douglas, "Nuclear Power Tops Putin's Agenda in India."
    Executive Intelligence Review, February 9, 2007.
    14. K. Subrahmanyam, "The Lessons From Putin's Visit." Rediff.com, Jan.
    29, 2007.
    15. Dilip Hiro, "Reordering the World Order." Guardian, August 20,
    2007.
    16. "Iran Leader Denounces U.S. Missile Shield Plan," International
    Herald Tribune, August 16, 2007.
    17. "Timetable Urged for U.S. to Pull Out of Central Asia." The Boston
    Globe, July 6, 2005.
    18. "China Wins Mega Afghan Project." BBC News, November 25, 2007
    19. Ramtanu Mitra, "Central Asia Battle Lines Being Drawn," Executive
    Intelligence Review, July 22, 2005.
    20. ibid
    21. Dilip Hiro, op.cit.
    22. "Less Scary Than We Thought?" The Economist, December 4, 2007.
    Available online at:
    http://www.economist.com/world/africa/PrinterFrie ndly.cfm?story_id=10238608

    23. "Russia Ships Nuclear Fuel to Iran." BBC News, December 17, 2007.
    24. Kaveh L. Afrasiabi, "Caspian Summit a Triumph for Iran and a
    Victory for Russia." Japan Focus. Available online at:
    http://japanfocus.org/products/topdf/2552
    25. "Caspian Sea Summit in Tehran Ends with Final Declaration,"
    Deutsche Presse-Agentur, October 16, 2007.
    26. "Putin's Politics Put Partners on Edge," Guardian, August 10, 2007.
    27. "Russian Military: Peace Mission 2007," March 29, 2007. Available
    online at: http://www.bu.edu/phpbin/news-cms/?dept=732&id =44272
    28. John Daly, "SCO to Host Peace Mission 2007 Anti-terrorist Drill in
    August," July 27, 2007. Available online at:
    http://www.jamestown.org/edm/article.php?article_ id=2372326
    29. "China, India Plan Joint Military Exercise." China Daily, November
    22, 2007.
    30. ibid
    31. ibid
    32. Bob Woodward, Bush at War (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2002).

    Tarique Niazi is an Environmental Sociologist at the University of
    Wisconsin at Eau Claire and is a contributor to Foreign Policy In
    Focus. Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the
    Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright
    © 2007, Institute for Policy Studies.
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