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Russia Asserts Policing Role In The Caucasus

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  • Russia Asserts Policing Role In The Caucasus

    RUSSIA ASSERTS POLICING ROLE IN THE CAUCASUS
    by Hannah Cooper

    Open Democracy
    http://www.opendemocracy.net/terrorism/a rticle/security_briefings/031108
    Nov 3 2008
    UK

    Russia's president hosts talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
    disputed territory. Bolivia halts US drug enforcement operation
    within its borders. Violence seethes in Pakistan, Indonesia and
    Iraq. Screening processes in the US war on terror suggest rampant
    ethnic profiling. And much more in today's update. 3 - 11 - 2008

    Talks are to accelerate between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
    the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. A joint statement by
    Ilham Aliyev, the Azerbaijani president, and Serzh Sarkisian, his
    Armenian counterpart, also called for a "peaceful resolution" to the
    conflict. The statement was made on Sunday during talks hosted by
    Dmitry Medvedev, the Russian president, at his residence in Barvikha
    near Moscow. The Kremlin would act as guarantor of an agreement between
    the two countries.Keep up to date with the latest developments and
    sharpest perspectives in a world of strife and struggle.

    Sign up to receive toD's daily security briefings via email by
    clicking here

    The toD verdict: An enclave in Azerbaijan with a largely Armenian
    population, Nagorno-Karabakh broke free of Baku's control in the
    early 1990s in a war that killed nearly 30,000 people and forced two
    million to flee their homes. A ceasefire was signed in 1994 but the
    dispute remains unresolved after years of negotiations. Hopes of an
    end to hostilities between Azerbaijan and Armenia first emerged in
    2001 during a series of meetings between the former leaders of both
    countries. However, no agreement was reached.

    Along with France and the US, Russia is one of the co-chairs of
    the Minsk Group, whose aim is to find a political solution to the
    conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. After the summer war with Georgia,
    Russia is arguably trying to underline its influence in the Caucasus
    by taking an active role in the discussions. Moscow is also competing
    with Washington for Azerbaijani oil which is currently shipped through
    western-backed pipelines via Georgia and Turkey, bypassing Russia.

    However, the 200-word declaration that was produced still avoids
    defining the exact status of Nagorno-Karabakh itself. Other sticking
    points remain unaddressed, such as the ownership of districts outside
    the territory that remain in the hands of Armenian forces. Finding
    a lasting peace that is agreeable to all will require more than a
    visit to the Russian president's dacha.

    Morales suspends US anti-drugs operations

    Evo Morales, Bolivia's left-wing president, has halted the operations
    of US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) officials, accusing
    them of espionage. Addressing a crowd in the coca-producing region
    of Chapare on Saturday, Morales accused DEA agents of disrupting
    government activities and causing unrest, in addition to implicating
    them in the clashes with government forces in September that left
    nineteen people dead. Relations between La Paz and Washington have
    grown increasingly tense since the former expelled the US ambassador
    in September. US officials dismissed Morales' claims, insisting that
    his government has "failed demonstrably" to meet their obligations
    in countering drug trafficking.

    Bolivia is the world's third-largest cocaine producer after Colombia
    and Peru. The ratcheting up of rhetoric comes as the drug trade in
    central and south America once again finds itself under the global
    spotlight, with the arrest last week of a Mexican drug cartel leader
    and suspected corruption within the state bureaucracy.

    US "war on terror" data suggests ethnic profiling

    The US government has been accused of profiling Muslim immigrants after
    the disclosure of data on a US operation in 2004 meant to disrupt
    potential terrorist plots before and after that year's presidential
    election. The operation focused on more than 2,000 immigrants from
    predominantly Muslim countries, but the clear majority were found
    to have done nothing wrong. Most of these immigrants were legally
    resident in the US and the majority were not charged; the charges
    made were mostly for immigration violations. Whilst the operation was
    being carried out, government officials from the immigration agency
    had publicly announced an intention to follow up on leads to disrupt
    terrorism plots, but maintained that the investigations were being
    carried out "without regard to race, ethnicity or religion." However,
    the National Litigation Project at Yale Law School found that 79
    percent of the suspects were from Muslim-majority countries.

    Bomb blasts unsettle Iraqi capital

    Two bombings on Monday killed at least six, injuring twenty others,
    in the centre of Baghdad. The explosions took place near the office of
    the police crime investigation unit in the central Karrada district,
    coming in quick succession of one another. At least 10 policemen were
    among those hurt in the attack. One of Iraq's deputy oil ministers
    was also wounded close to his home. Despite the fact that overall the
    number of bombings in the Iraqi capital has fallen in the last year,
    this attack follows a bombing last week outside an ice-cream shop
    that killed five people and wounded seventeen.

    Unrest in Indonesia as bombers' executions draws near

    Three small petrol bombs exploded in the Molucca islands in Indonesia
    early on Monday, damaging the governor's office and house but
    leaving no casualties. Security in some parts of the country has
    been heightened in recent days ahead of the imminent execution of
    three Muslim militants for their role in the 2002 Bali bomb attacks
    which killed 202 people, mainly foreign visitors. A district court has
    accepted an application that asks for the Supreme Court to reconsider
    the death sentences. This is a small victory in delaying the impending
    executions.

    Violence continues in Pakistan

    Suspected US missile strikes on targets in Pakistan's tribal belt
    killed 32 people on Friday, reportedly including two al-Qaeda
    operatives. A number of Arab fighters are also thought to have been
    killed. Officials said that Mullah Nazir, a top Taliban commander,
    was wounded in one of the attacks. None of these deaths have been
    independently confirmed and are still in doubt. Two days later, on
    Sunday, a suicide bomb at a checkpoint near the Afghan border killed
    at least eight Pakistani paramilitary troops. The explosion occurred
    in the tribal area of South Waziristan when a suicide truck bomber
    rammed his vehicle into a convoy.

    These events coincided with the arrival of General Petraeus, the
    Chief of US Central Command (CENTCOM), in Pakistan on Sunday to
    discuss the "war on terror" with government and military authorities
    in his first foreign visit since assuming the command of CENTCOM on
    31 October. General Petraeus is an advocate of the American strategy
    of self-defence, which promotes the idea that the US can attack a
    target in any country, without notifying that government, if there is
    a threat to American interests. Relations between the US and Pakistan
    are already cool because of continued cross-border air strikes on
    the part of the Americans, and it remains to be seen wheter Petraeus'
    appointment will smooth current tensions.
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