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West And Russia Vying For Allies And Energy In Caucasus And Central

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  • West And Russia Vying For Allies And Energy In Caucasus And Central

    WEST AND RUSSIA VYING FOR ALLIES AND ENERGY IN CAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

    AsiaNews.it
    http://www.asianews.it/index.php ?l=en&art=13248&size=A
    Sept 17 2008
    Italy

    NATO continues its approach to Georgia. Moscow talks about a "Cold
    war" climate as it strengthens its ties with Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia. Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan try to find a difficult balance
    between the two rival camps. China takes advantage of the situation
    to gain important energy deals.

    Tbilisi (AsiaNews/Agencies) - Georgia's march towards NATO membership
    continues but Georgian authorities must "push ahead with reform
    and improve further its democratic institutions and practices,"
    said NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer who just ended a
    two-day visit to the Caucasian country.

    In a press conference Mr Hoop Scheffer said that the recent war with
    Russia did not change the Georgia-NATO relationship and that no-one
    can prevent the Alliance from accepting new members.

    He did none the less say that he hoped that there would be no more
    reports from international observers saying that Georgia's elections
    were "tainted." Current President Mikhail Saakashvili won a recent
    election by a slim margin which the opposition said was full of
    irregularities.

    Anxious of finding support after his bitter military defeat President
    Saakashvili agreed with the NATO chief. But in the country itself
    his domestic opposition is growing, demanding fresh elections for
    next spring.

    The Kremlin slammed the "Cold War" visit, calling it anti-Russian. For
    Moscow a stronger NATO-Georgia link is "not timely and does not help
    stabilisation in the region."

    Whilst Hoop Scheffer was in Tbilisi, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
    Lavrov on Monday flew to Sokhumi in Abkhazia, the most senior Russian
    official to visit the territory since 1993. And today Russian President
    Dmitry Medvedev signed "friendship treaties" with the presidents of
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia. In Moscow yesterday Medvedev met Azeri
    President Ilham Aliyev.

    Russia is pushing Azerbaijan to sell its gas to Russian state-owned
    Gazprom, but no agreement came out of the meetings in the Russian
    capital. The Azeri leader is still trying to play a balancing act
    between Russia and the West and intends to sell to both.

    For the European Union Aliyev remains a crucial ally because of his
    country's energy resources as well as the transit role the latter
    could play for Central Asian gas, bypassing Russia.

    On Georgia Aliyev was careful to stress the "need to consolidate
    efforts in order to provide peace" and "diminish tension." Indeed
    Baku too has to deal with its own separatist enclave of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Medvedev insisted that there was no connection
    between Karabakh and the situation in Georgia, expressing Russia's
    support for the "continuation of direct talks between Azerbaijani
    and Armenian presidents".

    In light of the Russia-EU rivalry, the vice president of Azerbaijan's
    State Oil Company (SOCAR) Elshad Nasirov said on 12 September that
    "All destinations [of gas export] are equally possible and we will
    mostly consider the net profit for SOCAR," adding that that exporting
    gas to India or China via Turkmenistan could be another option.

    In the game Russia and the West are playing for friendly ties and
    energy in the Caucasus and Central Asia, China is not standing idle.

    On 29 August Turkmenistan and China signed a framework agreement to
    increase planned gas supplies to China by 10 billion m3 to 40 billion
    m3 a year with deliveries starting at the end of 2009, once a gas
    pipeline via Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan is completed.

    The deal was signed right after the Russian deputy Prime Minister
    Viktor Zubkov visited Turkmenistan, a sign that Turkmen leaders want
    to counterbalance Moscow's influence.

    Similarly, at the 28 August summit of the Shanghai Co-operation
    Organisation (SCO) in Dushanbe China opposed any declaration of support
    for Russia in its war against Georgia as Moscow had requested. Instead
    the SCO group, which includes China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia,
    Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, urged the parties to solve the conflict in a
    "peaceful manner."

    Kazakhstan is also trying to strike a balance between Russia and
    the European Union. It has rejected a Russian offer to buy all its
    gas, but in Brussels yesterday at its annual summit with the EU,
    the Central Asian nation did not endorse the EU's Nabucco project--a
    planned gas pipeline from Azerbaijan to Austria--saying it was still
    in a preliminary phase. (PB)
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