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US Flags Deep Interest In Ex-Soviet Countries

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  • US Flags Deep Interest In Ex-Soviet Countries

    US FLAGS DEEP INTEREST IN EX-SOVIET COUNTRIES

    Peninsula On-line
    Sept 4 2008
    Qatar

    Baku// The United States and Russia squared off over the Caucasus and
    Central Asia yesterday as US Vice President Dick Cheney said Washington
    had an "abiding" interest in vital regions once dominated by Moscow.

    Speaking in the oil-rich former Soviet republic of Azerbaijan, Cheney
    said: "President Bush has sent me here with the clear and simple
    message for the people of Azerbaijan and the entire region. "The
    United States has a deep and abiding interest in your well-being
    and security."

    Cheney said access to energy resources there and in Central Asia was
    a top concern for Washington.

    "Energy security is essential to us all and the matter is becoming
    increasingly urgent," Cheney said after meeting Azerbaijani President
    Ilham Aliyev. "We must work with Azerbaijan and other countries in the
    Caucasus and Central Asia on additional routes for energy exports,"
    he said.

    Cheney's comments came a day after Russian Prime Minister Vladimir
    Putin sealed a new gas pipeline deal in Uzbekistan.

    They were a clear signal that Washington did not intend to allow
    Moscow to regain the unchallenged control over the politics and
    natural resources of the Caucasus and Central Asian regions.

    Cheney was due to travel today to Georgia for a meeting with that
    country's beleaguered, US-backed President Mikheil Saakashvili.

    The head of Russia's powerful presidential Security Council criticized
    Cheney's tour, saying his real goal was to trade US support for
    energy supplies in the region, and to make sure these countries had
    governments sympathetic to Washington.

    "Cheney, during his visits to Georgia, Azerbaijan and Ukraine, will
    try to instill in them confidence that they will receive support of
    the US, and (he) will do it in such a way that the US will continue
    to wield influence on them," Nikolai Patrushev said during a visit
    to neighbouring Armenia.

    The US Embassy in Baku said Cheney yesterday met with local
    representatives of British Petroleum and Chevron who briefed him on
    their "assessments of the energy situation in Azerbaijan and the
    broader Caspian region -- especially in light of Russia's recent
    military actions in Georgia."
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