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Report: Bryza for Baku

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  • Report: Bryza for Baku

    Report: Bryza for Baku

    Politico (Washington, DC)
    April 23, 2010

    Laura Rozen On Foreign Policy

    The outgoing Bush administration recommended that a U.S. diplomat
    heavily involved in U.S. policy to Georgia and the Caucasus during the
    2008 Georgian-Russian war Matthew Bryza become the next
    U.S. ambassador to Baku.

    But the nomination didn't materalize, and the U.S. has had no
    ambassador in Baku since last fall. Until now, former Wall Street
    Journal and New York Times Caucasus and Central Asia correspondent
    Steve LeVine reports on his blog:

    I've received confirmation that -- after the clearing of a couple of
    remaining administrative hurdles -- the White House will officially
    nominate Bryza as U.S. ambassador. He will then be scheduled for a
    nomination hearing in the Senate.

    The hearings should be lively. For starters, Bryza himself has been
    something of a lightning rod of attention. This blog has written about
    his time as deputy assistant secretary of state for European and
    Eurasian affairs.

    Over recent years, I received fairly frequent emails griping about
    this or that impolitic (read: anti-Russian) speech that Bryza
    delivered on his journeys, and his inexhaustible supply of rationales
    for building the ill-fated Nabucco natural gas pipeline. Bryza seemed
    to rub the Foggy Bottom crowd the wrong way when he made no secret of
    his desire for the Azeri post, and when it seemed he might get it
    since he was a favorite of Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice.

    Getting past these intramurals, the 2008 Georgian-Russian war is
    likely to be a key subject of the confirmation hearings. Bryza was
    extremely close to Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, and Bryza's
    critics assert that he helped to mislead Saakashvili into thinking he
    could expect U.S. military assistance should he run into trouble while
    he attacked South Ossetia in August 2008. As we know, no such
    assistance arrived as a considerable swath of Georgian territory was
    overrun by the
    Russian military. The fiasco was an enormous blow to U.S. prestige,
    because it led governments throughout the Caucasus and Central Asia to
    understand that, contrary to what at least some of them believed, they
    couldn't expect U.S. help in a confrontation with Russia.

    In his own defense, Bryza will deny that he led Saakashvili to any
    such conclusion. It was the opposite -- Bryza will point to numerous
    occasions in which he told Saakashvili not to use force in his
    conflict with South Ossetia.

    In the end, Bryza has been watching and working on the region's most
    important topics for more than a decade from the inside. He can hit
    the ground running, the first order of business being smoothing over
    the tension over the Turkey-Armenia accord, which itself appears to be
    in trouble. The likelihood seems that all the topics will be aired,
    and Bryza will be confirmed.


    http://www.politico.com/blogs/lauraro zen/0410/Report_Bryza_for_Baku.html
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