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Tbilisi is preparing double strike against Moscow and Yerevan

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  • Tbilisi is preparing double strike against Moscow and Yerevan

    October 14, 2006
    REGNUM
    Viktor Yakubyan: Tbilisi is preparing double strike against Moscow and
    Yerevan

    The Russian-Armenian inter-governmental commission on economic cooperation
    met in Moscow a few days ago. The same day the press reported the sides to
    have agreed on how to alleviate the impact Russia's economic sanctions
    against Georgia is having on Armenia. To remind, the sanctions were imposed
    after the arrest and release of Russian officers in Georgia and,
    particularly, concern the sphere of transport, particularly, motor and rail
    transportation. This measure has put Armenia in as hard a situation as
    Georgia.
    "The transit of cargoes from Armenia via Georgia to Russia and vice versa
    will not be stopped," the Secretary of the National Security Council of
    Armenia, Defense Minister Serzh Sargsyan said after the Moscow meeting. His
    colleague, the Russian co-chair of the commission, Russian Transport
    Minister Igor Levitin appeared with quite a sensational statement. He said
    that "the cargoes from Russia to Armenia and vice versa will be transported
    via the port of Samsun (Turkey), from there to the port of Kavkaz (Russia)
    and then to Poti (Georgia)." The ministers assured that two train ferries
    will be launched between Kavkaz and Poti by the end of this year. Sargsyan
    said that, presently, there is one train ferry between the ports that can
    carry 20 cars.
    All they said implies that the Kavkaz-Poti-Armenia route will not be used
    hereinafter. Russia has stopped almost all cargo operations with Georgia and
    is now forced to search for quite original ways to communicate with Armenia.
    It should be noted that the direct transport communication between Armenia
    and Turkey was stopped the moment Armenia proclaimed independence and will
    hardly be resumed in the near future.
    Thus, Russia is planning to send its cargoes from Kavkaz to Samsun and then
    almost back to Batumi or Poti and only then to Armenia. Thus, Turkey is
    becoming the second go-between (Georgia remains one in any case) in
    Armenian-Russian commodity turnover.
    We should take this project with certain skepticism as the point here is not
    even in political or technical difficulty but in the lack of any sense and
    logic. Such a long way round will be by far more expensive for Russian and
    Armenian companies than the long-trodden Poti-Ilichevsk (Ukraine) route and
    they will hardly give the latter up. Even without Samsum, Kavkaz-Poti is no
    rival to the Ukrainian route due to its low capacity. Presently, its train
    ferry can carry only 18 cars at one go.
    However, the point is even not that the Russian and Armenian authorities
    have "felt" some "original" way out the present situation. In fact, by
    offering a Turkish transit route to Armenia, the Russian authorities make it
    clear that their sanctions against Georgia will last for long. And it seems
    that the other possible way-out for Armenia - via the Caspian Sea and Iran -
    is not being considered.
    In Moscow Armenian DM Serzh Sargsyan had a number of meetings, particularly,
    with the leadership of the Russian Foreign Ministry. The Russian sources
    report that the sides discussed the aggravation of Georgian-Russian
    relations and the ways for Armenia to come out of the present deadlock.
    Naturally, under the current economic pressure, the Georgian authorities are
    also considering certain scenarios. Some sources say that Georgia is
    actively consulting with the US, Azerbaijan and Turkey about its further
    actions. First of all, the Georgian leadership is getting ready for a rise
    in the Russian gas price. The sources say that starting from Jan 1 2007 the
    price will be raised to $250 per 1,000 c m. Georgia will respond in a
    counter-ultimatum: the transit tariff of Russian gas to Armenia will be
    raised from $30 to $75 per 1,000 c m (after the first rise of the gas tariff
    for Georgia from $55 to $110, Tbilisi raised the transit tariff for Armenia
    from $15 to $30). Certainly, Gazprom will reject Georgia's proposal, but the
    Georgian authorities will not be "surprised" and will start the practice of
    illegal "siphoning" of the gas meant for Armenia.
    Meanwhile, as early as Jan 20 Georgia is planning to get the first gas from
    Azerbaijan via Baku-Erzurum pipeline. This will mark the beginning of the
    plan, reportedly, approved by Washington: Turkey will give its share of the
    Azeri gas to Georgia, and this will allow Tbilisi to say that it no longer
    needs the Trans-Caucasian gas pipeline, which supplies gas from Russia to
    Armenia via Georgia. This will put an end to Gazprom's plans to privatize
    the pipeline - the plans that the US strongly objects to.
    Thus, the winter 2006 will mark the introduction of new game rules in the
    South Caucasus. It will be a kind of test not only for Georgia, who has
    become a target for Russia's economic sanctions, but also for Armenia, who
    has become an involuntary hostage to the Russian-Georgian contradictions.
    Yerevan's only hope is the Iran-Armenian gas pipeline, to be launched by the
    end of this year.
    Viktor Yakubyan, expert on South Caucasus
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