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Losing The Caucasus

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  • Losing The Caucasus

    Commentary Magazine
    Oct 29 2008


    Losing The Caucasus


    Abe Greenwald - 10.29.2008 - 12:37 PM


    America missed a golden opportunity by not taking a larger role in
    Azerbaijan's `frozen conflict' with Armenia. And Moscow just picked up
    the ball dropped by Washington: Russia will soon enjoy the allegiance
    of the Azeri population and access to Azerbaijan's critical gas and
    oil reserves.

    On November 2, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian
    President Serzh Sarkisian will meet in Moscow, where Russian President
    Dmitry Medvedev will play peacemaker and try to find a way to end the
    on-going conflict. This meeting should have happened in Washington,
    with George W. Bush presiding.

    I was in Azerbaijan in August, just days after Russia invaded
    neighboring Georgia, and it is impossible for me to overstate the
    earnestness of pro-Western sentiment in the country. (I've written
    about it here, here, and here, and Michael Totten has a piece about
    the same trip here.) To a man, Azeris practically begged for American
    help in resolving the Armenian occupation of Azerbaijan's Nagorny
    Karabakh region. Sadly, following the Palestinian model of victimhood,
    there was a lot of talk about the all-powerful Armenian lobby and its
    supposed influence in DC. There was no other way for Azeris to
    understand why America didn't do more to help a post-Soviet moderate
    Muslim territory with decidedly democratic aspirations.

    Russia had sided previously with Armenia in the Nagorny Karabakh
    dispute, but in the northern part of the country I saw Russian-made
    jet fighters running drills from Azeri bases. We weren't selling
    Azerbaijan weapons`Russia was. Geographically, Azerbaijan borders
    Russia, Georgia, and Iran. Politically, it's torn between snail's-pace
    westernization and continued Kremlin intimidation (plus Tehran's
    largely failed attempts to make an impact.) Instead of tipping the
    scales in our favor, we sat on our hands and gave Putin and Medvedev a
    priceless gift.

    Borut Grgic and Alexandros Petersen write in today's Wall Street
    Journal that Russia is not only hosting talks, but has switched its
    support from Armenia to Azerbaijan. If Putin and Medvedev firmly tilt
    Azerbaijan in Moscow's direction, it will be a massive step toward
    re-establishing Russian power throughout the Caucasus. It also
    furthers Russia's cause as an indispensable energy player. The
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, which begins in Azerbaijan's capital
    city, brings gas and oil from the Caspian Sea directly to European
    markets. The whole pending fiasco is a lesson in the cost of American
    inaction.

    http://www.commentarymagazine. com/blogs/index.php/greenwald/40532
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