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ANKARA: For Now...

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  • ANKARA: For Now...

    FOR NOW...
    By Erdal Safak

    Turkish Press
    Sept 15 2008

    SABAH- Energy and Natural Resources Minister Hilmi Guler's answer
    to a question at a press conference in Baku last week was noted by
    Western capitals and companies involved in energy, but the Turkish
    public missed it. The question was this: Is there talk about routing
    the Nabucco gas pipeline through Armenia? Guler said there was no
    such talk, for now. But normally he would have answered like this:
    'Where did you ever get such an idea? The route of the Nabucco gas
    pipeline was laid down years ago, with the approval of all the parties
    involved. Everyone knows the line will come to Turkey via Azerbaijan
    and Georgia and then go to Western Europe through Bulgaria.'

    The difference in his answer signals that the softening atmosphere
    between Turkey and Armenia and even between Azerbaijan and Armenia
    in the wake of the Georgian-Russian conflict has radically shifted
    balances in the Caucasus. Indeed, Georgia is no longer a reliable
    route for the energy corridor, as any glance at a map of the Caucasus
    would tell you. Not only the section of Nabucco in Georgia, but
    also the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and Baku-Supsa oil pipelines and the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum natural gas pipeline are all within the range
    of Russian tanks and field guns. Neither the European Union nor
    multinational investors consider it reasonable to add another entry
    to this list of three risky pipelines.

    For the Georgia alternative to stay on the table, not only the Georgian
    issue, but also all the stubborn conflicts in the Caucasus would have
    to be resolved. But just like Alexander 'resolved' the Gordian knot,
    Russia has resolved some of these conflicts which concern Georgia,
    by using swords and guns! In other words, South Ossetia and Abkhazia
    won't return to Georgia but will remain so high risk that no insurance
    company would guarantee a single cent there. On the other hand, a
    great opportunity has emerged for solving the Upper Karabakh issue,
    which is the third longstanding conflict, through Turkey's mediation.
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