Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Dick Cheney Mistakenly Staked on Caspian

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Dick Cheney Mistakenly Staked on Caspian

    http://www.kommersant.com/p1020720/Ilham_Aliyev_re luctant_to_fully_support_America/

    Sep. 05, 2008
    Dick Cheney Mistakenly Staked on Caspian

    // Ilham Aliyev is in no hurry to support the Nabucco project

    U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney finished his tour of the South
    Caucasus, which was intended to strengthen Washington's positions in
    its struggle for Caspian energy resources. The visit he paid to
    Tbilisi yesterday went smoothly as expected. However, the talks he
    held in Baku Wednesday failed. According to the information of
    Kommersant, Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev gave his American
    guest a cold welcome and sent a clear message that Baku won't support
    the idea to redirect the energy resources pipelines so that they would
    omit Russia. He came to that conclusion watching the developments in
    the neighboring Georgia.

    Money instead of tanks

    Yesterday at 11 a.m. Dick Cheney arrived from Baku in Tbilisi, where
    Georgia's Prime Minister Lado Gurgenidze. Before the meeting of the
    U.S. Vice President with Georgia's President Mikheil Saakashvili
    Georgian Security Council Secretary Alexander Lomaya revealed the
    talks' agenda to Kommersant. "First, Dick Cheney wants to demonstrate
    the U.S. support to Azerbaijan, Georgia and Ukraine," he said.
    "Second, during the negotiations the parties will discuss the security
    of communication lines that allow shipping the Caspian energy
    resources to the West omitting Russia."

    After the talks in the new residence of Georgia's head-of-state,
    Mikheil Saakashvili stated at the joint press-conference, "Georgia
    feels the U.S. support, which is strong as never before." The
    journalists had a chance to assess the strength of that support
    following Dick Cheney's address. The U.S. Vice President said that
    Washington allocates $1 billion to restore the Georgian economy. "We
    stand in solidarity with the people of Georgia. After your nation won
    its freedom in the Rose Revolution, America came to the aid of this
    courageous young democracy. We are doing so again, as you work to
    overcome an invasion of your sovereign territory - and an
    illegitimate, unilateral attempt to change your country's borders by
    force that has been universally condemned by the free world," the Vice
    President stated. "Russia's actions have cast grave doubt on Russia's
    intentions and on its reliability as an international partner - not
    just in Georgia but across this region and indeed throughout the
    international system." Besides, Dick Cheney reiterated that Washington
    fully supports Georgia's NATO ambitions. "Georgia will be in our
    alliance," he claimed.

    Nevertheless, according to the sources of Kommersant in the Georgian
    Chancellery, the talks of Mikheil Saakashvili and Dick Cheney didn't
    go as smoothly as their press-conference did. The discussion mainly
    focused on the security of the existing pipelines, which were laid in
    Georgia omitting Russia, and the project of the Trans-Caspian gas
    pipeline Nabucco. Dick Cheney made no secret of the fact that the U.S.
    is ready to provide the security of these pipelines using political
    methods only. So, Georgia won't get military assistance from the U.S.
    now.

    By the way, Wednesday, U.S. State Secretary Condoleezza Rice made this
    position public. "It is not yet time to look at the questions of
    assistance on the military side," she stated in Washington. However,
    Mikheil Saakashvili declared ready to further support American energy
    projects in the region. According to the sources of Kommersant, he
    promised to Dick Cheney that Tbilisi will support the Nabucco project
    "whatever" in case the U.S. gets the approval of Georgia's neighbors,
    Baku, first of all.

    The Baku emissary

    Meanwhile, according to the information of Kommersant, Dick Cheney's
    visit to Azerbaijan he made on Wednesday turned out complete failure.
    The guest of honor, who came in Baku for the first time, was met
    neither by President Ilham Aliyev nor Prime Minister Artur Rasizade.
    Instead, First Deputy Prime Minister Yagub Eyubov and Foreign Office
    Chief Elmar Mammadyarov met Dick Cheney in the airport. As to Ilham
    Aliyev, he was in no hurry to receive Mr Cheney. That's why the U.S.
    Vice President first went to a meeting with BP President in Azerbaijan
    Bill Schrader and Chevron Azerbaijan top managers. Then he visited the
    U.S. Embassy in Baku and held a meeting with Ambassador Anne E. Derse.
    It was not earlier than in the evening that Dick Cheney went to the
    residence of Azerbaijan's President.

    According to the sources of Kommersant with the Office of Azerbaijan's
    President, the talks turned out pretty tough, in spite of the fact
    that Dick Cheney and Ilham Aliyev have had close ties since Mr cheney
    worked with Halliburton and Mr Aliyev was SOCAR (Azerbaijan's
    state-run oil company) Vice President. They discussed the war in
    Georgia and the prospects of constructing the Nabucco gas pipeline.
    According to the information of Kommersant, Dick Cheney informed Ilham
    Aliyev that the U.S. will support its allies in the region and intends
    to promote the project of the gas pipeline omitting Russia.
    Nonetheless, Ilham Aliyev sent a clear message that although he
    appreciates the relations with Washington, he is not going to have a
    row with Moscow. In fact it meant that under the present circumstances
    Baku decided to bide its time without fostering the Nabucco project.
    Kommersant interlocutors with the Presidential Office said that Dick
    Cheney was irritated by the outcome of the discussion - he even
    refused to attend a banquet in his honor.

    Ilham Aliyev's reluctance to support Washington quarreling with Russia
    is easy to explain. Baku regrded Tbilisi's definitively losing of
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia as well as Russia's tanks entering Georgia
    as a signal to everyone in the region who is willing to join NATO.
    Azerbaijan's budget incurs great losses: because of the explosion at
    the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline on August 12 - Turkey put the
    blame on the Kurdistan Workers Party - and the pauses of the work of
    the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum gas pipeline and Baku-Supsa oil pipeline,
    energy carriers export from Azerbaijan in the western direction was
    suspended. At the same time Baku has no claims to Russia. Moreover,
    according to the information of Kommersant, Azerbaijan's authorities
    expressed their gratitude to the Russian Federation because during the
    military operation and bombardments of the Georgian territory no
    BTC-related facilities were destroyed.

    Nevertheless, Baku can't overhaul its stance towards the pipelines on
    the territory of Georgia. Azerbaijan is said to have increased the
    workload of the Baku-Novorossiysk oil pipeline. It concluded that in
    the present situation it's more secure to transport gas to Europe via
    Russia, rather than Georgia and Turkey. Even more so in June Gazprom
    offered to buy Azerbaijan's gas at any volumes according to the
    European pricing formula. During his visit to Baku in July Russian
    President Dmitry Medvedev and Ilham Aliyev agreed to launch
    negotiations concerning the matter. It seems the talks will be
    accelerated, just like the pace of Baku and Moscow's developing closer
    relations.

    The Russian leaders have already started work in this direction. In
    the evening after the talks of Dick Cheney and Ilham Aliyev finished,
    Dmitry Medvedev called Azerbaijan's President. Sources in the Kremlin
    explained to Kommersant the necessity of the telephone conversation
    with Dmitry Medvedev's desire to bring home to Ilham Aliyev, one of
    the region's most influential players, Russia's position regarding
    Georgia. Even more so Azerbaijan has a territorial dispute with
    Armenia, which remains unresolved. "Armenian leader Serzh Sargsyanhas
    recently visited Moscow and discussed the situation over South Ossetia
    and Abkhazia during his talks with Dmitry Medvedev. The Russian
    President thought it important to discuss those matters with the
    Azerbaijani party as well because Baku belongs neither to SCO nor CSTO
    - the organizations Russia has intensified contacts with," a source in
    the Kremlin told Kommersant. In her turn, Press-Secretary of the
    Russian President Natalya Timakova told Kommersant that during their
    conversation the leader of Russia and Azerbaijan discussed a
    possibility of a meeting in the near future.

    &
    Purge in Georgia's army

    A massive purge started in the Georgian army, with Mikheil Saakashvili
    controlling the process personally. "After the hostilities it's
    natural that we should estimate the efficiency and effectiveness of
    the military's actions. After the assessment we'll take all necessary
    measures," said Georgian Deputy Defense Minister Batu Kutelia.
    According to the information Kommersant got from Georgia's Defense
    Ministry yesterday, "Land forces artillery brigade commander Devi
    Chankotadze was the one to have best distinguished himself during the
    hostilities." Yesterday he was appointed Deputy Head of the Georgian
    Army Staff. He succeeded Alexiy Osepaishvili, who was downgraded to
    head of one of the Ministry's minor directorates because of "a bad
    organization the troops' movement" during the war. Land brigade
    commander Zurab Agladze also got promoted - he was appointed land
    troops commander. His predecessor Mamuka Balakhadze was sent to
    Germany for advanced training.

    Besides, National Guard Commander David Aptsiauri, who was responsible
    for the preparation and mobilization of reservists, was fired. In the
    view of the Georgian authorities, the mobilization process was badly
    organized during the war. For example, the leadership of the National
    Guard was unable to provide ammunition and coordinate the activities
    of the reservists, which led to numerous casualties among them.

    Georgy Dvali, Tbilisi


    Georgian government arrested Tsotne Gamsakhurdia

    Wednesday night, son of Georgia's first President Zviad Gamsakhurdia
    Tsotne was detained by the Georgian Interior Ministry in Tbilisi
    airport after he arrived from Moscow. He is accused of attempting to
    stage a coup. Here the events of the autumn of 2007 are meant. At that
    time the Georgian government and opposition confronted. On November 7,
    2007 as the confrontation was at its peak, causing clashes between the
    police and demonstrators, the Georgian Interior Ministry made public a
    record of a telephone conversation between Tsotne Gamsakhurdia and his
    elder brother. During the conversation Tsotne, who resided in Moscow,
    reproached the leaders of the opposition that they didn't prompt
    people to take to the streets and storm governmental buildings on
    November 2 during an unprecedented anti-government meeting in
    Rustaveli Avenue. The authorities regarded it as an attempt to stage a
    coup.

    Interestingly, Tsotne Gamsakhurdia knew that a suit was brought
    against him, but after the Russia-Georgian military conflict he
    decided to return to his motherland. Perhaps he was encouraged by the
    fact that such suits were brought against many opposition leaders, but
    no one of them was arrested. For example, the Georgian Prosecutor
    General's Office instituted proceedings against Labor Party leader
    Shalva Natelashvili, but didn't arrest him. Apparently, the deciding
    factor was that unlike Mr Natelashvili, Tsotne Gamsakhurdia had lived
    in Moscow and returned to Tbilisi after the war. Tbilisi is sure that
    the Russian government's aim during the recent conflict was toppling
    President Saakashvili.

    Activists of the Svoboda (Freedom) opposition party told Kommersant,
    "The Interior Ministry doesn't let lawyers visit Tsotne Gamsakhurdia,
    and that's why we may apply to the international community."

    Georgy Dvali, Tbilisi


    Alexander Gabuev, Vladimir Solovyov; Rafael Mustafayev, Baku; Georgy
    Dvali, Tbilisi
Working...
X