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Pentagon aims to bolster security in Caspian Sea region

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  • Pentagon aims to bolster security in Caspian Sea region

    Pentagon aims to bolster security in Caspian Sea region

    Stars and Stripes (European edition)
    Wednesday, August 10, 2005

    By Russ Rizzo

    The Department of Defense will oversee a $130 million effort in the next
    six years to increase security in the volatile Caspian Sea region,
    according to European Command officials coordinating the effort.

    The U.S. hopes to improve patrolling on the Caspian Sea and secure
    borders of countries in the area to stop the flow of terrorists, weapons
    and drugs, and to stabilize a region with significant U.S. political and
    business interests, officials said.

    The program, called the Caspian Guard Initiative, focuses on Azerbaijan
    and Kazakhstan - the two most western-leaning countries in the area that
    lie on opposite sides of the sea - but could expand in future years,
    said Army Lt. Col. Scott Sweetser, who helped coordinate the program for
    European Command.

    European Command Special Forces and contractors began training members
    of Azerbaijan's Navy last year on intercepting terrorists, drugs and
    weapons trafficked on the Caspian Sea. Future training will include
    border patrol, Sweetser said.

    In both countries, the U.S. hopes to build command-and-control centers -
    similar to the one used by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security - as
    well as centers to direct air and maritime security operations, Sweetser
    said.

    The U.S. also built an interim maritime command and control center in
    Baku, Azerbaijin, which it hopes to expand, Sweetser said. The U.S.
    State and Energy departments also are taking part in the program.

    Interest in the region developed as EUCOM officials looked at potential
    threats in their area after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks,
    Sweetser said.

    `We started to look at where the threats were and realized this one was
    glaringly obvious,' Sweetser said.

    Azerbaijan is a particular interest to the United States because it
    shares borders with Russia to the north - with the nearby region of
    Chechnya - and Iran to the south, making it potential transit point for
    terrorists, Sweetser said.

    `You've got a central point, if you drew a line between those, that make
    Azerbaijan vulnerable to the movement of terrorists,' Sweetser said.

    The new interest in the region also comes as Azerbaijan situates itself
    as a key player in the U.S. effort to reduce dependency on Middle East
    oil. An oil pipeline running from Baku to Tbilisi, Georgia, to the
    Mediterranean port city Ceyhan, Turkey, opened earlier this year and is
    considered crucial to that cause, according to news reports.

    EUCOM officials were quick to downplay the role of oil in the Caspian
    Guard Initiative, saying that securing natural resources are only part
    of the overall strategy.

    `The idea is to protect regional stability,' Sweetser said. `If you
    create regional stability, it makes the security of economic
    infrastructures that much [greater].'


    http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=30850

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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