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  • Azerbaijan Becomes Object of Russian-Western Rivalry

    World Politics Review
    Sept 7 2008

    Azerbaijan Becomes Object of Russian-Western Rivalry

    Richard Weitz | 07 Sep 2008
    World Politics Review Exclusive

    Although widespread fighting in Georgia has ceased, the war's
    diplomatic repercussions continue to ripple throughout the region. One
    major concern in Washington is that Russia's successful military
    intervention in Georgia will intimidate other former Soviet republics
    to, if not bandwagon with Moscow, at least distance themselves from
    the United States to avoid antagonizing a newly belligerent Russia.

    It is therefore no accident, as Russian Prime Minister Vladmir Putin
    likes to say, that U.S. Vice President Richard Cheney visited
    Azerbaijan last week. Cheney travelled to Baku even before arriving in
    Georgia and Ukraine, whose governments have been engaged in more acute
    confrontations with Moscow. Nor is it a coincidence that the White
    House chose Cheney -- an anti-Russian hardliner with deep experience
    in the energy industry -- to make the trip.

    Upon his arrival, Cheney reaffirmed that, "President Bush has sent me
    here with a clear and simple message for the people of Azerbaijan and
    the entire region: the United States has a deep and abiding interest
    in your well-being and security."

    After meeting Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Cheney underscored
    Washington's priorities: "Energy security is essential to us all and
    the matter is becoming increasingly urgent." Deliberately excluding
    Russia from this east-west energy partnership, Cheney continued:
    "Together with the nations of Europe, including Turkey, we must work
    with Azerbaijan and other countries in the Caucasus and Central Asia
    on additional routes for energy exports that ensure the free flow of
    resources." Cheney also met with Robert Dastmalchi, Chevron's country
    manager for Azerbaijan, and William Schrader, president of the British
    Petroleum's venture in the country.

    Since gaining independence after the disintegration of the Soviet
    Union, Azerbaijani leaders have been eager to cultivate good
    commercial relations with Western countries to avoid excessive
    dependence on Moscow. The government has depicted Azerbaijan as a core
    east-west transit country, especially for connecting Caspian oil and
    natural gas supplies to European energy consumers eager to reduce
    their dependence on pipelines that either traverse Russian Federation
    territory or are controlled by Russian energy firms.

    Most prominently, the 1,100-mile Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, which
    is already in operation, moves approximately 1 million barrels of
    crude oil a day from the Caspian shore through Georgia and Azerbaijan
    and onto Turkey's Mediterranean coast, from which it is dispersed to
    multiple consumer countries.

    The Georgian War occurred at a time when Azerbaijan was engaged in
    detailed discussions about possible trans-Caspian undersea energy
    pipelines that would extend from Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. Even
    without these additional sources, Azerbaijan can meet a considerable
    share of European demand for natural gas from its own estimated stock
    of some 70 trillion cubic feet.

    European energy managers intend for Azerbaijani gas to fill the
    planned 2,000-mile Nabucco pipeline, which would run from Azerbaijan
    across Georgia towards Turkey and then on to Austria's Baumgarten via
    Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary. Construction was planned to begin in
    2010, with the first gas flowing around 2013. Even before the Georgian
    War, however, support for continuing the project was weakening due to
    its rising costs. The war will now likely cause potential Western
    investors in the pipeline to worry about its increased political risks
    as well as expected financial costs.

    U.S. policymakers support these east-west pipelines because they
    provide energy to America's European allies, revenue to several former
    Soviet republics, and help keep oil and gas flows away from Iran,
    which Washington aims to isolate, and Russia, whose government has
    used energy as a weapon of influence against other countries.

    Yet, factors besides the perceived U.S. defeat in the recent Georgian
    War will also weaken Cheney's efforts to realign Baku further
    westward. For over a decade, Azerbaijani leaders have been careful to
    balance relations with the United States and other NATO countries with
    a desire to sustain good ties with Russia. Unlike Georgia and Ukraine,
    for instance, the Azerbaijani government is not formally seeking NATO
    membership.

    Azerbaijanis also continue to lobby Moscow to pressure Armenia to
    withdraw its troops from Azerbaijani territory occupied during the
    1992-94 Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Ideally, they also hope to enlist
    Russian support for a peace settlement that would restore Azerbaijani
    authority in Nagorno-Karabakh, which legally is part of Azerbaijan but
    is inhabited primarily by ethnic Armenians, many of whom hope to merge
    with the Republic of Armenia.

    For a fleeting moment last year, it looked as if Azerbaijan could be
    the focal point of a possible Russian-American security
    reconciliation. At the June 2007 G-8 summit in Germany, Putin
    unexpectedly offered to provide the United States with access to data
    on Iranian missile developments from the Russian-leased Gabala radar
    station in Azerbaijan in return for Washington's freezing its planned
    deployments of ballistic missile defense systems in Poland and the
    Czech Republic, a move many Russians denounced as
    threatening. American officials quickly dismissed the gambit,
    unwilling to trust Moscow to provide unimpeded data from the radar,
    which American strategists considered technically inadequate in any
    case. The Gabala option has since faded as a possible basis for
    achieving a Russian-American missile defense compromise.

    The Georgian War has now forced Azerbaijani policy makers to reassess
    their relationships with Russia and the West. Azerbaijan has become a
    clear object of rivalry between a resurgent Russia and an
    energy-hungry block of Western democracies. The Russian government's
    decision to so forcefully back the seccessionists in the two breakaway
    regions of Georgia, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, has led some Azeris to
    fear that Moscow might provide similar support for the separatists in
    the region of Nargano-Karaback if Baku aligns too closely with the
    West. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev reportedly called Aliyev
    during Cheney's visit, thereby underscoring that Moscow was watching
    his moves closely regardless of the topic of their conversation.

    Azerbaijani officials have been responsive to Russian
    concerns. Throughout the escalating conflict between Russia and
    Georgia this year, Azerbaijani leaders were careful to refrain from
    criticizing Moscow or its local allies in the separatist
    regions. After the fighting errupted, the State Oil Company of
    Azerbaijan Republic (SOCAR) began diverting oil exports to Europe from
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan to pipelines that pass through Russia rather than
    Georgia. Russia's state-controlled natural-gas monopoly, Gazprom, has
    offered to buy all of Azerbaijan's gas exports at market prices. These
    rates are likely higher than those sought by European firms in their
    proposed long-term contracts, which would not even yield Azerbaijan
    much revenue until the still-uncertain Nabucco pipeline opens.

    On Sept. 4, 2008, EU Energy Commissioner Andris Piebalgs warned that
    EU governments need to intensify their efforts to secure gas for
    Nabucco, as well as accelerate the pipeline's construction, in light
    of recent developments. "Our objective of diversifying our sources and
    routes is even more important after the events in Georgia," Piebalgs
    told reporters in Brussels. "We need more political engagement to
    remove all the obstacles to Nabucco to bring gas from the Caspian
    basin to the EU."

    Before Cheney's arrival, U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan Anne Derse
    characterized the trip as seeking to underscore Americans' support for
    the "Euro-Atlantic integration aspirations" of Azerbaijan as well as
    Georgia and Ukraine. "Many in the region are afraid now that these
    actions [by Russia] are directed not only against Georgia, but against
    all of those who have democratic aspirations."

    Although Cheney presumably tried to reassure President Aliyev about
    continued American interest in Azerbaijan's security, the war in
    Georgia has demonstrated that U.S. backing would not include military
    support against Russia. In addition, Azerbaijani leaders are
    undoubtedly aware that Cheney and the Bush administration will soon
    leave office, rendering the future nature of the American presence in
    the former Soviet states uncertain. In contrast, the newly resurgent
    Russian military looks set to reinforce its position in the South
    Caucasus for years to come.

    Richard Weitz is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and a World
    Politics Review contributing editor.

    http://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/articl e.aspx?id=2632

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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