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    The Caucasus
    At history's centre
    Oct 10th 2008
    >From Economist.com

    Oil, war and stirring imperial ghosts

    Monday
    INTREPID travellers have long had a penchant for visiting the Caucasus. This
    is a land of mountains and seas, squeezed into the borders of three old
    empires-Persian, Ottoman and Russian. As such it has been strategically
    important (and remains so, as we learned again in the short war that Russia
    fought against Georgia in August). And it has an enticing whiff of
    exoticism, associated with all the old images of fierce mountain tribesmen
    who spent the 19th century resisting successive attacks by the Russians,
    always keen to incorporate the Caucasus into their empire.
    The city of Baku, where I begin my trip to the three countries of the south
    Caucasus (Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia), was an important Russian base
    during most of those wars. The old walled town in the centre retains an
    appealing medieval look. But what attracts the eye more are the garish
    modern buildings, extravagantly large cars and jeeps, massive traffic jams
    and the city's general gaudiness. For this is today an oil town: the
    equivalent of a Gulf emirate dumped on the shores of the Caspian.


    Baku got there first, of course. Amid today's glitz can be discerned some
    sturdy late 19th century mansions, many of them put up by the French, when
    Baku went through its first oil boom. At that time, this region was
    responsible for as much as half of the world's oil output. The industry went
    into decline during the late 20th century under Soviet rule, but it has
    boomed in the past decade or so, on the back of more offshore discoveries in
    the Caspian and rising oil prices.
    Because of its oil and, increasingly, gas, Azerbaijan has become a key
    country for the West. A stream of top American officials have visited. The
    Russians are also courting the country, hoping to persuade it to ship more
    of its oil and gas northwards. But the government, led by President Ilham
    Aliev, is wary. There are big advantages in selling energy to all comers,
    not just to a monolithic unfriendly company like Russia's gas giant Gazprom.
    And BP, the biggest Western oil company in Baku, has been a great friend to
    the country for a decade and a half.
    The president, who would not grant us an interview, is no democrat, even
    though his economic advisers insist that he has liberalised the economy and
    cut back on red tape. So much so, indeed, that Azerbaijan recently came top
    for most rapid improvement in the World Bank's annual report "Doing
    Business".
    Next weekend Mr Aliev faces an election that the leading opposition
    candidates have boycotted. In a café, we meet one opposition leader who
    wanted to run, but he notes that elections are rigged, the opposition is
    harassed and the media is not free. Indeed, he suggests that things are a
    lot worse than they were in the days of Ilham's father, Heidar, who ran the
    country from 1994 to 2003 before passing it on to his son like some oil-rich
    satrapy.
    In the streets of Baku, plenty of people complain about soaring inflation,
    and most also suggest that the benefits of high oil prices have not trickled
    down to ordinary folk. Azerbaijan has a bad reputation for corruption,
    although BP says it has no problems. Certainly the oil money is going
    somewhere-the restaurant in the old town where we have dinner, and the hotel
    in which we stay, are both almost as expensive as in Moscow, which is now
    the costliest city in Europe. And, given the country's reputation for
    corruption, it is no surprise to find that the cost of an entry visa at
    Heidar Aliev international airport has risen sharply to $100-or that an army
    of dubious-looking fixers swarm around the arrivals hall offering to sort
    out all the documents and jump the long queues. For a price, naturally.

    Tuesday
    YOU cannot avoid BP in Baku. By some estimates the oil company accounts for
    around half of Azerbaijan's GDP. So we swing by BP's palatial headquarters
    to meet the top man, Bill Schrader, an engaging American who took over the
    job of running BP Azerbaijan from a Brit, David Woodward, in 2006. Asked how
    he likes Baku, which is rather a dour place, he bats back that it certainly
    compares favourably with his previous two postings, Luanda and Jakarta.
    BP's greatest triumph is the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, through which oil
    began to flow at the end of 2006, bypassing both Russia and the congested
    Bosporus straits. There is a also a gas pipeline to Turkey. Although there
    were plenty of rumours of possible Russian attacks on pipelines during the
    war with Georgia, nothing serious seems to have happened-negating one
    Russian objective, which was to convey the message that pipelines skirting
    Russian territory were inherently dodgy and vulnerable.
    AP


    No oil boom here
    Yet although Azerbaijan has plenty of oil and gas for now, Mr Schrader is
    quick to concede that hopes of giant new finds in the western Caspian have
    been disappointing. The real goal for the future lies in the east, in
    Turkmenistan. This is where the contest between Russia and the West for gas
    will be most intense. Turkmenistan is an even more autocratic (and less
    predictable) place than Azerbaijan. Gazprom desperately needs Turkmen gas
    just to fulfil its existing contracts. But Western companies (and political
    leaders) still hope one day to bring it westwards via a pipeline under the
    sea.
    There is little sign that the oil-fed economic boom in Azerbaijan is
    benefiting ordinary citizens. We stop at a market outside Baku to ask some
    locals about their daily lives. The older shoppers are quick to say that
    things were better under the Soviet Union. Younger folk seem more bitter
    about the loss of Nagorno-Karabakh, an autonomous enclave in the mountains,
    to Armenia during a war in the early 1990s; several men volunteer that they
    are eager to fight a new war to regain their lost territory.
    Ominously enough, the government has used a chunk of its oil wealth to
    splurge on military spending. But there is little enthusiasm among the
    public for Mr Aliev's government, and no expectation at all of any change
    after this weekend's presidential election.
    The atmosphere is quite different in Tbilisi, where we fly to in the
    afternoon. There is surprisingly little evidence in the Georgian capital
    that the country was only recently at war with Russia, and indeed that in
    mid-August there were fears that the city might be overrun. Restaurants and
    bars are full, roads are choked with cars and ordinary Georgians seem, as
    usual, to be out having a good time. It is commonplace in Tbilisi to stay up
    drinking and eating until one or two in the morning. Unlike Azerbaijan or
    Armenia, there are few signs that this place was part of the Soviet Union
    only two decades ago.
    The same is true of Georgia's political scene. Russia's bugbear, President
    Mikheil Saakashvili, is criticised by some for his authoritarian
    instincts-and by many more for apparently (and very unwisely) starting the
    August war with his decision to shell the South Ossetian capital,
    Tskhinvali, on the night of August 7th.
    But he remains highly popular among voters, he won a presidential election
    earlier this year and his party has a large majority in parliament. Despite
    Russia's trade embargo on Georgia, the economy is growing fast. This is, in
    short, a place that feels as if it is rapidly breaking away from its Soviet
    past and becoming part of the liberal, democratic West-something that is
    much less certain in the rest of the Caucasus.

    Wednesday
    WITH few signs of the war in Tbilisi, it is time to head to the front. We
    drive out to Gori, which the Russians occupied in mid-August (and where they
    dropped a cluster bomb that killed, among others, a Dutch journalist). The
    clearest evidence of recent conflict along the way is from the fires that
    Russian forces set to destroy trees and crops, but we also pass a Georgian
    armoured column gingerly exercising on a side-road.
    In Gori the market is functioning much as usual, and acres of shattered
    glass have mostly been repaired. Parked in the central square behind the
    statue of the town's most famous son, Joseph Stalin, is a clutch of modern
    trucks, several of them from the Italian Red Cross. Not far away, hard by
    another statue of Stalin, is a refugee camp, where Georgian families driven
    out of South Ossetia are living in tents that look worryingly ill-equipped
    to face a Georgian winter. Yet building proper accommodation for the
    refugees will take time (and money); the government says there are as many
    as 60,000 of them in all (on top of those left after the wars of the 1990s).


    Our driver then takes us north, as close to the "border" with South Ossetia
    as he can get. At a Russian checkpoint we find an impressive-looking
    military helicopter. We talk to a scruffy Russian soldier, who is happily
    waving through Ossetian and Georgian traders. His commanding officer comes
    over to shoo us away. These soldiers are clearly not going to let the
    European Union observers, who have just arrived to monitor the ceasefire and
    Russian withdrawal, into the disputed enclaves, which Moscow has now
    recognised as independent countries.
    Back in Tbilisi, we get caught up in everybody's favourite argument: what
    really started the war? The Russians and Ossetian militias say it was an
    unprovoked attack on the South Ossetian capital, Tskhinvali, ordered at
    around 11 pm on August 7th by the Georgian president, Mikheil Saakashvili.
    But Georgia's interior minister, Vano Merabishvili, produces radio
    intercepts to show Russian forces entering the Roki tunnel and pouring into
    South Ossetia long before. The government's line is, in short, that they
    were responding to a Russian invasion. Mr Merabishvili also plays us
    hilarious video footage showing one drunken Russian soldier smashing up a
    Georgian barracks and another offering to sell his weapons and hand grenades
    for cash.
    Certainly Georgian voters seem to be behind their leader-one poll recently
    gave Mr Saakashvili a 76% approval rating. Yet beneath the surface there
    lurks plenty of discontent, as was reflected in the street protests last
    November that the government suppressed. One of the president's closest
    former allies, Nino Burjanadze, a former speaker of parliament, is now a
    critic both of his authoritarian ways and of the war. She tells us that she
    plans to form a new opposition party; perhaps she will join forces with
    others over the coming year or two.
    None of this, however, seems to faze the president himself. Late in the
    evening, we go to see him high above the river in his presidential compound,
    which looks like nothing so much as a scaled-down version of Berlin's
    Reichstag. He has already given several interviews during the day but he
    remains calmly and courteously insistent that, if he had to do it again, he
    would take the same decisions. The Russians were itching for war on any
    pretext. He also suggests that they will not stop at South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia-the history of the 1930s suggests that there will be more examples
    of Russian aggression, either in Georgia or elsewhere.
    With his command of English (and other languages) and his forceful manner,
    it is hard not to be impressed by Misha Saakashvili. He has undoubtedly done
    many good things for his country, starting by firing almost the entire
    corrupt traffic-police force. He even makes jokes about his hot-headed
    reputation. But it is hard to leave him without wondering if his personal
    crusade against the Russians and his insistence on restoring Georgia's
    territorial integrity have always been entirely wise.

    Thursday
    BEFORE leaving Tbilisi, we take one last look round its churches and
    monuments. One notable feature of the Caucasus how ancient its civilisations
    are, though like so many other modern cities, Tbilisi is suffering from a
    rash of modernisation. The Romans were here, and left some recognisable
    remains, including temples, in both Armenia and Georgia. The early
    Christians were here too. Indeed, there is today a (friendly) rivalry
    between the Armenian and the Georgian Orthodox churches over which is older.
    On a hill near Tbilisi that overlooks the old capital of Mskhetha stands one
    of Georgia's finest old churches, Djvari (picture), built in the 7th
    century. Like the cathedral in Mskhetha, which dates from two to three
    centuries later, it is being restored. Unlike the cathedral, at least when
    we visit, it has few tourists, being somewhat inaccessible. In this at least
    it differs from some of Armenia's ancient churches and monasteries, which
    seem to be overrun by tourists when we get to them.


    For Armenia is our next destination after Tbilisi. The drive through the
    mountains and up to Lake Sevan is exhilarating. We stop for a simple lunch
    in a hut by the lake and are brought not only delicious bread and salad but
    also some excellent barbecued fish just pulled from the water. It makes a
    nice contrast to the noise and pollution awaiting us in a dusty Yerevan,
    Armenia's capital, where we arrive in the late afternoon only to join a
    horrendous traffic jam down the main street that makes us late for most of
    our appointments.
    Yerevan has neither the ancient walls and seashore of Baku nor the river and
    picturesque setting of Tbilisi. But on a good day it does offer one
    remarkable sight: the looming hulk of Mount Ararat, which is sacred to the
    Armenians but is actually in Turkey. As one travels about the city, views of
    the mountain where Noah's Ark is supposed to have come to rest after the
    flood subsided occasionally break through the haze. Most Armenians wish to
    climb Ararat before they die; unfortunately the border with Turkey is closed
    and the only way round is a long journey via Georgia.
    As it happens, talks on normalizing relations with Turkey with a view to
    reopening the border have recently begun, helped by Abdullah Gul, Turkey's
    president, who attended a World Cup qualifying match between the two
    countries in Yerevan. We ask a diplomatic adviser to the foreign minister,
    who has been enthusing about the promise that might grow out of the
    presidential visit, who won the match, but she cannot remember (it was
    Turkey; Armenia is now out of the 2010 World Cup).
    I reflect that there are some notable female diplomats in this part of the
    world. The newly arrived American ambassador to Yerevan is a woman, as is
    her counterpart in Baku, where the British ambassador is also female. The
    new British ambassador in Moscow is too. Perhaps having women as ambassadors
    in these still largely patriarchal societies is a good way of giving the
    host countries a shock.

    Friday
    LIKE the rest of the region, Armenia was troubled by Russia's August war
    with Georgia. But the Armenians have two more specific reasons to be edgy.
    The first is that they are traditionally Russia's strongest ally in the
    Caucasus, to the extent even of hosting two Russian military bases. The
    second is that they are landlocked and face closed borders to the west (with
    Turkey) and the east (with Azerbaijan). That means 80% of their trade goes
    through Georgia, whose ports the Russians smashed up during the war. Brief
    as the fighting was, the country soon began to suffer from petrol shortages.
    With a clutch of other foreign journalists, we go along to see the
    president, Serzh Sarkisian. He is anxious to be on good terms with both
    Russia and the West, and clearly finds it harder than it used to be to
    balance the two. Hence his cautious negotiations with the Turks, which may
    yet lead to an opening of the border. Dealing with Azerbaijan is harder, for
    the fact that he (like his predecessor, Robert Kocharian) comes from the
    disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. Although Armenia is ready to give up
    some of the Azerbaijani territory that it now controls, there is no way it
    can compromise over the autonomy of Karabakh.
    Mr Sarkisian seems secure enough in his job (though some rumours suggest
    that Mr Kocharian would like to come back). But his election as president
    last February was highly controversial. Independent election monitors were
    critical of its conduct, and the opposition candidate, Levon Ter-Petrossian,
    announced that the result had been fixed. He even brought his supporters out
    onto the streets of Yerevan. When the government suppressed the
    demonstrations, ten people were killed, and as many as 74 are still in jail.
    We visit Mr Ter-Petrossian, the grand old man of Armenian politics, a former
    member of the Soviet politburo who became the independent country's first
    president. Today he lives in a splendid timber house surrounded by beautiful
    grounds, right above Yerevan's football stadium. Sitting in his garden,
    drinking tea, he insists that the election was falsified and calls the
    government deeply corrupt. When we tell him we have been told there are no
    political prisoners in Armenia, he laughs and says that Stalin said there
    were no political prisoners in the Soviet Union. But for all his charisma,
    it is hard to see him playing a big political role in future.
    As an antidote to Armenia's troubled politics, we finish our trip by
    visiting perhaps Yerevan's most haunting site: the genocide museum, perched
    on top of the hill above Mr Ter-Petrossian's house. On a beautifully sunny
    afternoon, it is a strangely peaceful place. In the grounds are trees
    planted by visiting presidents and American congressmen. The museum itself
    is simple and moving: it shows records, newspaper articles, books and
    letters recording just what happened in Anatolia in 1915, when the Young
    Turks in charge of the country decided to expel the Armenian population. As
    many as 800,000-1m Armenians died. Next to the museum is a memorial with an
    eternal flame.
    Yet the issue of what really happened remains highly controversial today.
    The Armenian government no longer insists on Turkey recognising what it
    calls the genocide as a precondition for better relations. But there is a
    powerful Armenian diaspora in France and California that lobbies
    vociferously on the matter. The US Congress almost passed a resolution
    recognising the Armenian genocide last year; it may return to the issue
    after the November election. Turkey is moving heaven and earth to stop this
    resolution. Whatever happens, it certainly negates Hitler's remark, as he
    planned the Holocaust in the 1930s: "Who now remembers the Armenians?" The
    answer, thankfully, is that we all do.
    From: Baghdasarian
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