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The Washington Centre For Azerbaijan Studies Has Been Set Up As An I

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  • The Washington Centre For Azerbaijan Studies Has Been Set Up As An I

    THE WASHINGTON CENTRE FOR AZERBAIJAN STUDIES HAS BEEN SET UP AS AN INDEPENDENT, BIPARTISAN ORGANIZATION

    "Noravank" Foundation
    www.news.az
    06 May 2010

    The centre has been founded by young Azerbaijani and international
    scholars to serve as a platform for policy evaluation and independent
    thinking and to contribute to the strategic debate on Azerbaijan,
    the Caucasus and Caspian.

    The new centre held a lunch presentation on 'Geopolitics of Caspian
    Energy: Perspectives and Challenges' at the Elliott School of
    International Affairs on 27 April. The event was moderated by Henry
    Hale, director for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies at George
    Washington University, and featured Edward Chow, senior fellow at
    the Centre for Strategic and International Studies.

    Before the discussion started, Efgan Niftiyev from the Washington
    Centre for Azerbaijani Studies outlined the organization's mission.

    Discussion at the event centred on emerging trends in oil and gas
    production in the Caspian region, focusing on the role of Azerbaijan
    as an energy producer and transit country. Recalling trips to the
    region in the early 1990s, Edward Chow said Azerbaijan had been
    able to rapidly develop energy contracts with foreign companies and
    turn them into serious projects. He said the government had anchored
    the balance between the interests of private companies and national
    interests to provide for sustainable investment in Azerbaijan. 'The
    achievements that have been made in the past 17-18 years are not
    to be underestimated,' Chow said. He said it was hard to imagine
    sustainability without a solution to frozen conflicts in the region.

    Touching upon Turkish-Armenian rapprochement, Edward Chow said
    that without a clear path to a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict there was no imminent prospect of the Turkish-Armenian
    border being opened. The Turkish-Armenian issue is a negative factor
    in Turkish-Azerbaijani energy projects, he said.

    Talking about the recent nuclear security summit in Washington, Edward
    Chow described as a 'missed opportunity for the US' the failure to
    invite Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev to the summit. He said that
    senior officials from the Obama administration should make more visits
    to Azerbaijan.
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