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  • Ethnic And Regional Conflicts

    ETHNIC AND REGIONAL CONFLICTS

    http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/comments-lr ahos15285.html
    14:02:50 - 23/09/2009

    Regional Imbroglio

    Cultural, historical, political, territorial and economic claims and
    counter-claims led to ethnic tensions and conflicts in the Southern
    Caucasus even before the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. They
    exploded afterwards.

    Georgia witnessed periods of internal political instability,
    including violent regime changes, was engulfed into civil wars with
    its breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and in August
    2008, in a short war confrontation with Russia. These conflicts have
    been frozen, but the situation remains volatile. The government of
    Mikheil Saakashvili is actually internally challenged by a broad
    internal opposition movement.

    Periods of political instability, revolts and regime change also
    in Azerbaijan, where the regime of Ilham Aliev has muzzled the
    opposition, and seems in control. The Azeri-Armenian conflict over
    Nagorno Karabakh is also frozen, but the no-war no-peace situation
    blocks the normalization of relations between Azerbaijan, and Armenia
    and Turkey. The legitimacy of the regime of Serzh Sargsyan in Yerevan
    is also contested internally. The three countries experienced a
    decline in their democratic development in 2008, according to the
    US-based Freedom House. The worst situation is in Azerbaijan, while
    the actual government systems in Georgia and Armenia are described
    as "consolidated authoritarian regimes" (Freedom House, Nations
    in Transit, 2009). A more adequate label in my view would be -
    "authoritarian ethnocracies."

    The Caucasus, both its southern part, with Armenia, Azerbaijan and
    Georgia, and the Northern Caucasus, with its tiny autonomous republics
    that are part of the Russian Federation, is a patchwork of various
    ethnicities. Moscow has problems in controlling Muslim opposition
    groups in the north. Although Chechnya has been mostly pacified,
    political violence has recently spilled into Ingushetia and Daghestan
    (BBC News, July 13, 2009). The position of ethnic minorities living in
    Georgia and Azerbaijan remains extremely precarious. Living conditions
    of refugees and internally displaced persons (ethnically cleansed
    from conflict zones) in the three Southern Caucasus states are even
    worse. These problems are contributing to internal instability.

    Competing interests of external powers are complicating further the
    already complicated regional imbroglio.

    First, is Russia that resents the penetration of outside players
    into the former Soviet space. NATO and the EU are already at its
    western borders, and the three Baltic republics - Lithuania, Latvia
    and Estonia - have been co-opted into their structures. Moscow tries
    to prevent further encroachments into what it considers of being its
    "strategic depth" on its southern flanks. From Kremlin's perspective,
    the whole corridor, stretching from Belarus and Moldova in the
    west, with Ukraine in the south-west, to the Southern Caucasus and
    Central Asia, is part of its "near abroad." That is the reason why
    Russia has from the very beginning supported the Georgian breakaway
    provinces, and came to the rescue of its South Ossetian (and Abkhaz)
    clients last summer, recognizing afterward their self-proclaimed
    "independence". Russia also contributed to the Azeri defeat in
    Karabakh, and has established with Armenia a "strategic partnership",
    practically a military and economic alliance.

    Second are the Americans and their European allies, whose respective
    moves are not always coordinated, but who have developed a keen
    interest in the energy resources of the Caspian region, which are
    also important to Russia. This penetration of the West into Moscow's
    former backyard took, during the last decade, different forms. It
    started with the building of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline
    that bypasses the Russian transit corridor (as well as the Iranian),
    and carries Azeri oil through Georgia to the Turkish Mediterranean
    terminal. In the same time, the West enthusiastically supported the
    "colored revolution" in Georgia (as well as similar "revolutions'
    in Kyrgyzstan and Ukraine). Then came the active support of the Bush
    administration to the Georgian application (and Ukrainian) for NATO
    membership, which skeptic European allies have postponed. The EU,
    however, sponsored, with US support, the "Nabucco" pipeline project,
    which is supposed to pump Caspian gas via Geo!

    rgia and Turkey to Europe, undermining the Russian position of major
    gas provider to European customers. In the same time, the EU launched
    its "Eastern Partnership" program, which includes Belarus, Moldova,
    Ukraine, Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, former Soviet republics
    located on the southern Russian flank, along the corridor that runs
    from the eastern borders of EU/NATO to the shores of the Caspian Sea.

    Third are Turkey and Iran, bordering the Southern Caucasus
    region. Turks supported the Azeris, their ethnic cousins, during
    the Karabakh War, and Ankara imposed on Armenia an economic
    blockade. Turkish siding with Baku blocked at that time Armenian
    ambitions to overtake the Azeri exclave of Nakhichevan. Although
    officially neutral, Iran economically supported Christian Armenia,
    fearing that Baku's ultra-nationalist leaders of that time might steer
    separatist troubles in Iranian Azerbaijan (the total population of
    independent Azerbaijan is around 8 million, while it is estimated that
    approximately 20 million Azeri Turks are Iranian citizens). Teheran
    in the same time also provided and still provides a life-line
    to Nakhichevan (rail/road connections with Baku). Although not
    identical, Turkish and Iranian interests in the Southern Caucasus
    are complementary. The two countries maintain cooperative bilateral
    relations in a number of domains, among which is the issue of
    Kurdish se!

    paratism (the Kurdish ethnic body is spilt between the two of them,
    and Iraq and Syria; a smaller Kurdish community was also living
    in Karabakh). Turkey is a long-time member of N.A.T.O., but has,
    during the last two years, significantly upgraded its bilateral
    relations with Moscow. Beside its close ties with Azerbaijan, and
    a fruitful cooperation with neighboring Georgia, it has opened a
    dialogue with Armenia, hoping to find solutions to the problems that
    plague their bilateral relations. The Islamic Republic of Iran is in a
    more difficult position. It is still ostracized by the United States
    and the West, and is practically excluded from regional security and
    energy arrangements that are supervised by Washington.

    Frozen Conflicts, Uncertain Futures

    Although Georgian problems with Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and by
    extension with Russia, as well as the Azeri-Armenian conflict over
    Karabakh, are actually frozen, the precarious "no-war, no-peace"
    situation remains potentially dangerous (Feifer 2009; ICG 2009;
    Merry 2009). Armenia and Azerbaijan are continuing their arms race,
    and Georgia is speeding up the reconstruction of its devastated
    army. Each new border incident, and they are frequent, could spark a
    new war. Without consensual solutions to the above hot-spots of crises,
    the stabilization of the broader region remains out of reach. Because
    of that - internal political adjustments and democratic openings in
    Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia are postponed. Their economies are
    suffering and the wellbeing of their populations is neglected. The
    refugees and internally displaced persons remain in limbo, and the
    position of minorities groups tends to deteriorate further.

    Following the five-day war with Georgia, Russia has recognized the
    self-proclaimed independent states of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. It
    has signed with the authorities of Sukhumi and Tskhinvali a series
    of cooperation treaties, including on mutual defense and on the
    stationing of its troops on their territories. Russian military bases
    were set-up in both state-entities, and a naval base is constructed
    on the Abkhazian coast (the latter could become in the future the
    home-port for the Russian Black Sea Fleet that is actually anchored at
    Sebastopol, in Ukraine). Both countries became in practice Moscow's
    client-states, only formally dissimilar to the Russian autonomous
    republics in the neighborhood.

    Similar to the case of Kosovo independence, imposed by
    the United States/ N.A.T.O., Moscow has imposed here a new
    reality. Internationally mediated talks, aiming to avoid further
    conflict between Russia and its clients on one side, and Georgia
    on the other, initiated in October 2008 in Geneva, Switzerland,
    have not produced any significant result so far. Georgian appeals
    for the respect of International Law and for the restoration of its
    "territorial integrity," failed to impress the Russian delegates,
    who argued that this principle is "only virtual in nature" (Reuters,
    July 1, 2009). They used as counter-argument the principle of
    "national self-determination," which is equally embedded in
    International Law. Anyway, such legal arguments are not likely
    to lead to an agreement on the final status of the two breakaway
    state-entities The problem is political. Presidents Obama and Medvedev
    had recently in Moscow - a "frank discussion on some areas where
    (they) disagree." Medvedev!

    mentioned the "configuration of the global missile defense," while
    Obama re-iterated his "belief in Georgia's sovereignty and territorial
    integrity," but added that "no one has interest in renewed military
    conflict" (Reuters, June 6, 2009).

    Meanwhile, the international mediators - the EU, UN. and OSCE. -
    scheduled new talks for the near future. Definitely not helpful to
    the mediation process was the N.A.T.O. military exercise organized on
    Georgian soil last June, in the same time when the Saakashvili regime
    was facing mass protests in the streets of Tbilisi. The Georgian
    opposition was demanding, and still demands, his resignation, and
    anticipated presidential and parliamentary elections. Moscow accused
    N.A.T.O. of "dangerous provocation." And it reciprocated by staging
    its own, equally "provocative," large-scale military exercise in the
    Northern Caucasus in July. The signals sent by the two sides are far
    of being constructive, and if Moscow and Washington continue to stick
    to their separate agendas, the conflict will remain unresolved. Georgia
    practically became hostage to their relations.

    Russo-American rivalries are not playing an equally negative role in
    the case of Nagorno Karabakh. Both Moscow and Washington, albeit for
    different reasons, would like to see the conflict, which was frozen
    in 1992 when the cease-fire was signed. Initially, when American and
    Western oil companies were exploring the possibility for the building
    of a pipeline for the evacuation of Azeri oil to Turkey, a swap
    of territories was suggested - Karabakh would have been integrated
    into Armenia, and Azerbaijan would gain direct territorial access -
    a corridor to Turkey - and even more important, to its Nakhichevan
    exclave. This was rejected by both Baku and Yerevan, but the idea was
    remembered last summer, when advancing Russian troops approached the
    BTC. pipeline in Georgia. They did not cut it, although they had the
    possibility, but the vulnerability of the Georgian track was exposed.

    Following 1992, the Minsk Group of the Organization on Security
    and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE.), co-chaired by France, Russia and
    the United States, stepped in, and, mediating between the two sides,
    tabled a number of conflict-resolution proposals. The Group opened its
    representative offices in Baku, Stepanakert and Yerevan, and its chairs
    and envoys began shuttling between the three, but all their plans
    and road-maps were repeatedly rejected. However, the presidents of
    Armenia and Azerbaijan began to meet at least once a year. In November
    2007, the co-chairs of the Minsk Group agreed on the "Preliminary
    Principles" for the solution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, in
    a document known also as the Madrid Declaration, which envisaged:
    (1) the return of territories surrounding Karabakh to Azeri control;
    (2) interim status for Karabakh, guaranteeing self-governance and
    security; (3) a corridor linking Karabakh to Armenia; (4) the right
    of IDP and refugees to return to their f!

    ormer place of residence; (5) Karabakh finally status through legally
    binding expression of will; (6) international security guarantees
    and international peacekeepers. These principles offered guidelines
    for negotiations.

    A year later, Aliev and Sargsyan met in Moscow, and, together
    with Russian President Medvedev, signed a Declaration on Nagorno
    Karabakh in which they committed themselves to seeking a political
    solution to the conflict, "on the basis of the norms and principles of
    International Law, documents adopted within that framework," and with
    a stated objective "of creating a more healthy situation in the South
    Caucasus" (RFE/RL, November 3, 2008; Fuller and Daneylan 2009). It
    was a significant breakthrough, because Azerbaijan for the first time
    publicly committed itself not to use military force. The problem is,
    as in the cases of Abkhazia and Southern Ossetia vs. Georgia, that
    International Law includes both the principle of "territorial integrity
    and sovereignty" and of the "right to national self-determination." The
    suggestion of the Minsk Group to grant to Karabakh an "interim status,"
    before the final solution is found, seems acceptable in principle,
    but Baku insists that it sho!

    uld be "within Azerbaijan," while Yerevan refuses any reference to the
    would-be Azeri sovereignty over Karabakh. Other bilateral issues, such
    as the return to Azerbaijan of territories outside the Karabakh enclave
    that are occupied by Armenian forces, and of the refugees on both
    side, are apparently negotiable and solutions could be found. Aliev
    and Sargsyan are scheduled to meet again in Moscow on July 17, but
    few observers believe that they could agree. Sargsyan is less likely
    to accept a compromise, because of the opposition he facing at home.

    Turkey is a close Azeri ally. When Ankara opened a dialogue
    with Yerevan aimed at the normalization of bilateral relations,
    Baku conditioned its support with the solution of the Karabakh
    problem. Signing a preliminary deal with Russia on the sale of its
    gas to its northern neighbor, Baku practically threatened to cut
    its future supplies to the EU-sponsored "Nabucco" pipeline, which
    will run through Turkey to Europe. It was not the only reason why
    the deal with Armenia was postponed. More important was the Armenian
    insistence that Turkey accepts the blame for the Armenian genocide of
    1915. Additionally, Yerevan is reluctant to officially recognize the
    existing border that separates the two countries. The first step of
    the normalization process was supposed to be the opening of this border
    and the end of the Turkish blockade. This would have greatly simplified
    bilateral trade and travel, actually going through the Georgian detour.

    Anyway, Ankara accepted Baku's argument and the Karabakh issue became
    part of the package leading to the normalization of its relations
    with Armenia.

    In its turn, if this normalization, coupled with the normalization of
    Azeri-Armenian relations (which depends on the solution of the Karabakh
    knot), become reality, then a window for a possible readjustment of
    interstate alliances in the region could open. Armenia is for the time
    being in a "strategic partnership" with Russia, but with cooperative
    relations with Azerbaijan and Turkey, this alliance could become
    superfluous. Its public opinion, and its political parties, both
    those in position and opposition, are definitely pro-Western. This
    is not the case with the Azerbaijani ruling elite, which is tied to
    West only because of its narrow economic interests.

    The Issue of the Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons (IDP)

    The problem of refugees and IDP in the region is linked to the solution
    of frozen conflicts. In 2006 there were 578,000 registered refugees and
    IDP in Azerbaijan, and 234,000 in Georgia. After the August 2008 war
    with Russia, the Georgian refugee/IDP population increased by 130,000,
    but many have since then returned. The number of former refugees
    in Armenia was estimated at 235,000 in 2004 (UNHCR website, viewed
    on March 1, 2007). But these numbers are uncertain, because "by law
    or by virtue of administrative practice, the (recipient) countries
    tend to recognize the descendents of persons displaced in various
    capacities within the region as 'refugees' or 'displaced persons',
    with the result that the total number of refugees and displaced persons
    never seem to decrease. The majority of refugees and IDP are in that
    situation because of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and deportations
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan, or, using the term coined during the
    recent Yugoslav wars - they!

    have been ethnically cleansed. Many others were displaced as a result
    of the conflicts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, not the mention the
    Chechens who took refuge in the Southern Caucasus because of the
    conflict in their homeland. Unable to return to the regions from
    which they had been ethnically cleansed and nonintegrated into the
    host communities the "situation of the refugees and displaced persons
    (.) continues to be an obstacle for the development of (the host
    countries/regions) in economic, socio-political and health terms"
    (Council of Europe, Doc. 10835, 8 February 2006).

    Additionally, there is a mass of displaced persons and refugees
    from the same regions who tried to find new life in Russia and
    elsewhere. For example, the Russian autonomous republics of Ingushetia
    hosted in the 1990s some 60,000 Ingushs who fled conflict from South
    Ossetia, and following the Georgian invasion of South Ossetia in
    2009, some 34,000 South Ossetians took refuge in North Ossetia. Many
    of them had Russian citizenship and it is impossible to estimate
    their number. The issue of their return to the regions from which
    they had been expelled or have been displaced is also one of the
    major obstacles for peaceful settlements of the conflicts in the
    Southern Caucasus. This is the case of the Azeris and Kurds who were
    displaced by the Armenian victory in Karabakh and occupation of some
    14% of additional Azeri territory, as well of the Armenians who fled
    Azerbaijan. Most of them, probably, are not ready to return to the
    localities of their origin, and compensations are sup!

    posed to be negotiated.

    One of the major hurdles on the way to the normalization of Turkish
    and Armenian relations, related to the Armenian demand for the Turkish
    recognition of the 1915 genocide, is the fact that the descendents of
    the victims, not only Armenian citizens, but also from the Diaspora,
    could later demand compensation for the suffering of their ancestors,
    compensation for lost property, or even the "right to return."

    The Problem Ethnic Minorities

    The Caucasus Region, with more than sixty spoken native languages,
    described by a Medieval Arab traveler as a "mountain of languages,"
    was always an ethnic patchwork (see Matveeva 2003 and 2002; Middel
    2004; ICG 2006a). South of the Caucasus Range, today's Armenia is
    the most ethnically homogeneous of the three Caucasus states (and
    was so among former Soviet republics), with about 2% of remaining
    non-Armenians, mainly few Yezidi Kurds and Assyrians. Practically
    all the Azeri Turks who represented 3% of the total population of
    Armenia proper in 1989 have been expelled. Forcefully displaced were
    also the Azeris from Karabakh and adjacent occupied territories,
    who are actually refugees in Azerbaijan.

    Although the Azeri ethnic body in Azerbaijan was enlarged following
    the Karabakh War, ethnic minority groups still represent some 10%
    of the total population (Lezgins, Avars and other North Caucasians,
    Russians). In comparison to the situation of minority groups
    in neighboring countries, they are relatively better integrated
    into the mainstream society, as many of their members are bi- or
    even trilingual, speaking their native languages, Azeri and often
    Russian. But there was in the 1990s secessionist unrests among
    the Lezgins, located on the border of Dagestan, who demanded their
    unification with their ethnic siblings in Russia.

    According to the 2001 census, major minority communities in Georgia
    are: Azeris representing 6.5% of the total population, Armenians 5.7%
    and Russians 1.5%. Most of these groups, except for the remaining
    Russians, are located in remote rural and underdeveloped areas. Since
    independence the general conditions of minorities, involving all
    services previously offered by the Soviet state, have drastically
    deteriorated.

    The Azeri and Armenian communities in Georgia, respectively
    concentrated in Kveno-Kartli and Samtskhe-Javakheti regions, remain
    completely separated from the Georgian ethnic mainstream. They still
    benefit a degree of cultural autonomy (primary and secondary schools)
    inherited from the former Soviet Union, but "instruction in the schools
    is inadequate, and fewer minorities are attending higher education
    institution". They are "underrepresented in all spheres of public life,
    especially government," which is very visible in Kveno-Kartli, where
    "Georgians hold all important positions" (ICG 2006a). Because of its
    interest to maintain cooperative relations with neighboring Georgia,
    Baku never attempted to foment separatist sentiments among the Georgian
    Azeris. There were demands among the Armenians of Samtskhe-Javakheti
    for territorial autonomy within Georgia, but these were discouraged
    by Yerevan.

    Perhaps the most tragic is the case of Meskhetian Turks, who have been
    collectively deported in 1944, mixed with Kurds and Muslim Armenians
    from the Samtskhe-Javakheti region to Central Asia. Those settled in
    the Ferghana Valley in Uzbekistan became victims in 1989 of ethnic
    pogroms and are since scattered around the Commonwealth of Independent
    States (CIS). Their total number was estimated at some 120.000 in
    2003. Those resettled then in the Krasnodar Kray of Russia were met
    with enmity by the local Cossacks. By that time perhaps one thousand
    returned to their native regions. Once resettled they were forced to
    "reinstate" their Georgian surnames and to "confirm" themselves as
    ethnic Georgians. Additionally, they were met with hostility by the
    Armenian population of that Georgian region (Brennan 2003). More of
    them were better received in Azerbaijan, Turkey and the United States.

    Both the refugees and members of ethnic minorities contributed
    substantially during the last years to the massive voluntary emigration
    from the region. Although numbers are uncertain, it seems that
    especially affected are Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    The Georgians themselves are subdivided in several distinct clan-based
    communities speaking different dialects. Additionally, the Adjarans,
    who are ethnic Georgians, are in majority Sunni Muslims, while the
    majority of Georgians is Christian Orthodox.

    In a region where separate identities led to mutually exclusive
    nationalist projects, such internal fault-lines could lead to future
    conflict.

    Religious Minorities

    "The role of religion in the Caucasus has gained prominence in
    post-Soviet times. For many it provides not only a pillar of national
    identity, but also spiritual guidance and psychological comfort at
    a time which has been rife with turmoil and hardship. Socially, it
    serves to assert distinguished group identity and is sometimes used
    as political weapon" (Middel 2004: 11).

    Although the constitutions of the three independent countries
    stipulate the separation of state and religion, Georgia has
    reserved a privileged position to its Christian Orthodox Church, and
    Armenia to its Apostolic Church. Among the biggest post-independence
    investments in both countries were the monumental cathedrals in their
    capitals. State-sponsored allegiance to the dominant religion is in
    practice equated with patriotism. Many Soviet-days atheists, including,
    for example, former Georgian President Shevardnadze, hurried to be
    baptized in well-publicized public ceremonies. After the Saakshvili
    government re-imposed its authority over the Autonomous Republic of
    Adjara in May 2004, many Muslim Ajarans followed the lead of their
    atheist co-nationals. They were not compelled by the authorities,
    but they wanted to show that they loyal Georgian citizens

    Other traditional religious communities in Georgia and Armenia are
    formally free to practice their rites, which is not always the case
    with non-traditional groups, which are refused registration.

    Although the issue of religion has not irrupted into Azerbaijan's
    politics, it should be noted that about 25-35% of its population is
    connected to Sunni traditions, while the majority is at least nominally
    Shiite (Valiyev 2005). Azerbaijan is the most "secular" of the three
    countries. It has adopted a constitution inspired by the Kemalist
    model, and, similarly to Turkey, the authorities strictly control
    religious activities. The phenomenon of "Wahhabism," a pejorative
    term used to label disparate Sunni-inspired opposition groups in the
    Northern Caucasus and Central Asia, is only marginally present in
    Azerbaijan. But Moscow's security forces and incumbent authorities of
    the autonomous republics in the Northern Caucasus are embroiled into
    localized low-scale wars with these Islamist insurgents. Trying to
    counter their simplified and literal interpretation the Sunni creed,
    sometimes indeed inspired by preachers educated in Saudi Arabia and
    the Gulf, Chechen President Kadyrov, b!

    egan to promote, a "softer," Sufi version of state-sponsored Sunni
    Islam. And following the example of his Christian cathedrals in the
    Southern Caucasus, he built in the center of reconstructed Grozny,
    his capital, a monumental mosque.

    Transport Corridors and Geopolitics

    As mentioned previously, important financial advantages offered to
    energy-starved Armenia for the construction of a shortcut pipeline
    linking Azerbaijan to Turkey through Armenian territory were
    disregarded. Subsequently, pipelines that circumvent Armenia via
    Georgia, were built and became operational. The Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan
    (BTC) oil pipeline (Starr and Cornell 2005; Auty and Soysa 2006;
    Devdariani and Hancilova 2007a) and the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzerum (BTE)
    gas pipeline have shaped the alliance between the three countries.

    Until recently the European Union played a modest political role in
    the region, although it has representative offices in the capitals
    of the Southern Caucasus, and the three countries are members of the
    Council of Europe. Instruments such as bilateral Partnership and
    Cooperation Agreements, and aid and developments programs such as
    TRACECA, INNOGATE, TACIS and ECHO had rather modest outcomes. However,
    this eventually began to change with the launching at the 2009 EU
    Summit of the "Eastern Partnership" program (EP). This program offers
    to six former Soviet republics, all located in the corridor that
    goes from EU's borders do the Caspian Sea, free trade arrangements,
    economic aid, and cooperation in the security and energy fields. In
    fact, it is complementary to the planned 3,300 kilometer "Nabucco"
    project. The pipeline will use the BTE route, which will be extended
    to Bulgaria, Romania and Hungary, and will carry Azeri gas to Austria
    (Eksi 2009; Grove 2009).

    The problem is that the quota committed by Azerbaijan is not
    sufficient, and that additional supplies from the Caspian region and
    the Middle East are needed. Turkmenistan and Egypt have volunteered,
    and Iran and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) have expressed
    their interest (Kazakhstan has abstained). However, each of these
    potential suppliers has problems - Turkmenistan has to establish
    a link, either by an undersea pipeline to Azerbaijan, or by the
    intermediary of Iran. For the time being, Iranian gas and transit
    routes are blocked by Washington. The Americans are also blocking the
    Syrian transit route for Egyptian gas. The presence of the U.S. special
    energy envoy Richard Morningstar at the signing ceremony on July 13
    in Ankara, was not only a demonstration of US's endorsement of the
    project, but also of the fact that it has also a say when it comes
    to the selection of new participants. Washington could eventually
    help the Baghdad government and the KRG to sort out!

    their differences over the deliveries of Iraqi gas to "Nabucco." The
    Austrian managing director of the project Reinhard Mitschek, however,
    said that "Nabucco does not exclude any potential source and will
    be open for transportation of any gas meeting quality requirements
    from every potential gas supplier, including Russia and Iran, to
    destinations in Europe" (Today's Zaman, July 15, 2009). If at least
    one additional supplier, able to deliver sufficient gas quantities,
    is co-opted, then "Nabucco" would be profitable and its construction
    might start. But once completed, the pipeline will not break entirely
    European dependence on Russian exports. As for Turkey, she hopes that
    her position as indispensable participant in the project will enhance
    her chances to join the EU (Grove 2009).

    Moscow, uneasy with the EU "Eastern Partnership" program, sees
    "Nabucco," circumventing Russian territory, as another threat
    to its interests (Babich 2009). Russia, which had problems with
    its gas exports through the Ukrainian corridor, is promoting two
    alternative pipeline project - the "North Stream" undersea pipeline in
    cooperation with Germany, and the two-track "South Stream" combined
    undersea//continental pipeline in cooperation with Italy. In order
    to supply them, it needs to buy additional quantities of gas from
    the same Caspian exporters - Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan - who are
    supposed to supply "Nabucco." Both of them are still keeping the two
    options open. Turkmenistan is negotiating the renewal of its supplies
    to Gazprom. Azerbaijan and Gazprom had signed a preliminary agreement
    (Zaynalov 2009). Even Turkey has not excluded its future participation
    in the "South Stream" project. In the same time, it is interested to
    receive additional Russian gas through the "Blu!

    e Stream" pipeline that runs under the Black Sea.

    China is also an active player in these energy chess games. She
    has concluded a number of deals for the exploration and pumping of
    Kazakh oil and is rapidly building a pipeline that will connect the
    two countries. She has also gained access to one giant gas field in
    Turkmenistan, and has started to build the pipeline that will carry
    this gas to Northern China. Her biggest energy deals are with Russia,
    from where she imports oil by rail. An agreement has been also signed
    for the construction of a gas pipeline.

    Iran has secured a concession for exploitation of another gas field in
    Turkmenistan (previously pumping gas to Russia), and the two countries
    agreed to establish another pipeline link by the end of this year.

    Eventually, Turkmen gas could be pumped into "Nabucco" by the
    intermediary of Iran (Bhadrakumar 2009). This would be cheaper than
    carrying it under the Caspian Sea to Azerbaijan through a would-be
    pipeline that is not yet constructed.

    It is a race for the access to energy resources and for gas deliveries
    with far-reaching geopolitical implications.

    Landlocked Armenia, bypassed by most of these transit routes, is trying
    to find its place on the energy map. When the Russo-Georgian border was
    closed, it began to heavily rely on Iranian supplies. Although Russian
    gas continues to come transiting Georgia, another pipeline was built
    in 2007, bringing-in Iranian gas across the Arax River (RIA Novosti,
    March 19, 2007). At that time, speculations appeared that Russia,
    in its attempts to counter the East-West transit corridor promoted
    by the West, was trying to establish the North-South route by which
    it will be linked to Iran.

    When Moscow cut its trade relations with Georgia, the latter began
    to increasingly rely on Turkey. Soon Turkey became its main trading
    partner. The annual trade turnoff reached $1 billion by the end of
    2008, when a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between the two countries
    entered into force. Turkish construction companies additionally expect
    to be awarded infrastructure contracts amounting to $1,5 billion
    from the $4,5 billion aid package granted to Georgia following its
    war with Russia. Besides the two functioning pipelines (BTC and BTE)
    that transit Georgia, carrying Azeri oil and gas to Turkey, the two
    countries and Azerbaijan are building the missing Akhalkalaki-Kars
    rail link, another east-west corridor that will establish a rail
    connection between Azerbaijan and Turkey via Georgia (Ismayilov 2007).

    Some Concluding Remarks

    All local, regional and international actors, involved in one way or
    another into the Southern Caucasus, claim that they are interested
    in the stability of the region. But stability cannot be achieved
    without the resolution of frozen conflicts. Without the solution of the
    Karabakh controversy, there could not be solutions for the problem of
    refugees and IDP. The same is valid for the conflicts that oppose the
    Georgian government to the self-declared independent state-entities
    of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Of course, many of the refugees and
    IDP .are not likely to return to their original home-territories,
    but they should be fairly compensated in order to facilitate their
    integration into receiving communities. Ethnocentric nationalist
    policies, actually promoted by all Southern Caucasus ruling elites, are
    additionally exacerbating the problems of ethnic minorities, especially
    in Georgia, and to a lesser extent in Azerbaijan (practically there
    are no remaining minorities in !

    Armenia and Armenian-occupied territories). Finally, constant tensions
    that could escalate into new military confrontations are blocking
    internal political openings and democratic reforms.

    Actors external to the region could give their positive contribution
    to conflict resolution, but they could, as it is still the case today,
    also play less constructive and even disruptive roles. The struggle
    for influence in the region, whose main protagonists are Russia and the
    United States, together with competing alliances and energy axes, are
    certainly destabilizing factors. The European Union, which seems now
    more interested than previously, could give its positive contribution
    only if it abstains of joining this power game. But, as asserted by
    an objective foreign observer, "the US pursues an aggressive policy
    aimed at rolling back Russian influence in the Caucasus, Caspian and
    Black Sea regions. Most important it has largely succeeded in making
    Russia's relationship with the European Union hostage to the fault
    lines appearing in the geopolitics of the Eurasian region" (Bhadrakumar
    2009). That was indeed the policy of the Bush administration, followed
    by its NATO alli!

    es. The Obama team has vowed to "reset" American relations with Russia,
    but it is not yet clear how this readjustment, using the Russian term
    of "perestroika," will affect the Southern Caucasus.

    The conflicts in this region cannot be resolved without the
    constructive involvement of both Russia and the United States. As
    argued in this paper, frozen regional conflicts, refugee and minorities
    problems, ethnic human right issues and processes of democratic reforms
    are interrelated. The region badly needs cooperation, dialogue and
    diplomatic engagement of all parties; confidence building steps;
    not additional confrontations.

    And solutions could not be isolated from each other. They cannot
    be bilateral only. They have to be part o multilateral agreements,
    with the participation of all regional actors and guaranteed by the
    international community, not forgetting that the Southern Caucasus
    is now part of the Greater Middle East regional laboratory.

    _____________________________________ _________________________________
    Ivan Ivekoviæ, Professor of Political Science at the American
    University in Cairo, Egypt (iwek@ aucegypt.edu). Author of Ethnic
    and Regional Conflicts in Yugoslavia and Transcaucasia. A Political
    Economy of Contemporary Ethnonational Mobilization, Ravenna, Longo
    editore, 2000.
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