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Moscow: Choke Points and Bedfellows

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  • Moscow: Choke Points and Bedfellows

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    Jan 26 2009


    Choke Points and Bedfellows


    26 January 2009
    By Richard Lourie

    The computer may have freed communication from space and time, but
    geopolitics still rule the world.

    The Russian-Ukrainian gas crisis has raised a cry for alternate
    "reliable" energy sources, but they are very limited. Apart from
    Russia, there are only two countries on the Caspian Sea's western
    shore through which gas and oil can flow to Europe. Iran is clearly
    out, at least for the time being. That leaves Azerbaijan, a country
    with large oil and gas reserves of its own. In the two decades since
    the Soviet collapse, Azerbaijan has only had two leaders: a former KGB
    general and now his son, who was elected president in October with a
    comfortable 89 percent margin.

    From Azerbaijan, energy can flow westward only through Armenia or
    Georgia. But since Azerbaijan and Armenia have been at war for years
    over Nagorno-Karabakh, that leaves only Georgia. That fact fed
    Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili's exaggerated sense of
    self-importance, which played a major role in Tbilisi's disastrous
    August war. Russia's incursion made the following points clear about
    Georgia: It still belongs to Moscow's sphere of influence, it should
    be kept out of NATO, and it is an unreliable energy transporter.

    >From Georgia, energy can move to the country's Black Sea port or on
    to Turkey. But the next alternate pipeline, the Nabucco, is already
    caught up in Turkey's increasingly unlikely bid to join the European
    Union.

    Paradoxically, as Washington advocates energy diversity for itself,
    the United States and NATO are almost entirely dependent on Russia for
    fuel supplies to fight the war in Afghanistan.

    In reality, even before the inauguration, Obama was in close contact
    with General David Petraeus as he traveled to Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
    Turkmenistan and Tajikistan to secure air, trans-shipping and
    refueling rights and to shore up an existing base now needed because
    of attacks by militants on the Khyber Pass, which links Pakistan and
    Afghanistan.

    The Afghan campaign puts the United States and NATO in bed with
    regimes whose human rights records can be described as various shades
    of abysmal. But both sides found a way to save face: Most of the
    shipping will be handled by private commercial companies, meaning that
    the Central Asian nations aren't really dealing with
    U.S. imperialists, who aren't really dealing with dictators.

    Dmitry Rogozin, Moscow's envoy to NATO, says Russia supports NATO in
    Afghanistan because a NATO defeat there would mean a "strengthened
    enemy [Islamic extremists], emboldened by success, standing on the
    threshold of our home." James Appathurai, NATO's chief spokesman, has
    said that despite other arguments with Russia, "this area of
    cooperation has been walled off and preserved."

    But any wall can fall. Look at Berlin. And Rogozin exaggerates the
    danger that a NATO defeat in Afghanistan would pose to the
    Kremlin. And in Chechnya, Russia has already demonstrated it is able
    to deal with these types of threats.

    Russia is most vulnerable to Islamic nuclear terrorism. The nuclear
    material is already there and need not be transported across
    borders. In reality, aiding NATO and Washington can only make Russia
    more susceptible to such terrorism.

    Dependent on Russia for fuel, partnering with despots, Obama will
    enter a land of warlords and poppy fields -- a graveyard for invaders
    for centuries. He will need to be very smart, very careful and very
    lucky.

    Richard Lourie is the author of "The Autobiography of Joseph Stalin"
    and "Sakharov: A Biography."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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