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BAKU: Caucasus Most Likely Flashpoint In Eurasia - US Intelligence C

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  • BAKU: Caucasus Most Likely Flashpoint In Eurasia - US Intelligence C

    CAUCASUS MOST LIKELY FLASHPOINT IN EURASIA - US INTELLIGENCE CHIEF
    Dennis C. Blair

    News.Az
    Wed 03 February 2010 | 07:45 GMT

    The US Senate's Select Committee on Intelligence held an open hearing
    on "Current and Projected Threats to the United States" on 2 February.

    "The unresolved conflicts of the Caucasus provide the most likely
    flashpoints in the Eurasia region," the USA's director of national
    intelligence, Dennis C. Blair, told the hearing.

    "Moscow's expanded military presence in and political-economic ties to
    Georgia's separatist regions of South Ossetia and sporadic low-level
    violence increase the risk of miscalculation or overreaction leading
    to renewed fighting," Blair said.

    "Although there has been progress in the past year toward
    Turkey-Armenia rapprochement, this has affected the delicate
    relationship between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and increases the risk
    of a renewed conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh."

    Blair said in his Annual Threat Assessment of the US Intelligence
    Community that America's relations with Russia could suffer as the
    United States seeks closer ties with Georgia and other former Soviet
    states.

    He said Russian President Dmitry Medvedev viewed Moscow's former
    Soviet neighbours as a "zone of privileged interests", which could
    undermine relations with Washington.

    "The role Moscow plays regarding issues of interest to the United
    States is likely to turn on many factors, including developments
    on Russia's periphery and the degree to which Russia perceives US
    policies as threatening to what its leadership sees as vital Russian
    interests," Blair said.

    "There have been encouraging signs in the past year that Russia is
    prepared to be more cooperative with the United States, as illustrated
    by President Medvedev's agreement last summer to support air transit
    through Russia of lethal military cargo in support of coalition
    operations in Afghanistan and Moscow's willingness to engage with the
    United States on constructive ways to reduce the nuclear threat from
    Iran. I remain concerned, however, that Russia looks at relations with
    its neighbours in the former Soviet space - an area characterized
    by President Medvedev as Russia's 'zone of privileged interests' -
    largely in zero-sum terms, vis-a-vis the United States, potentially
    undermining the US-Russian bilateral relationship. Moscow, moreover,
    has made it clear it expects to be consulted closely on missile
    defence plans and other European security issues."

    Blair also dwelt on the security problems posed by the North Caucasus.

    "On the domestic front, Moscow faces tough policy choices in the face
    of an uptick in violence in the past year in the chronically volatile
    North Caucasus, which is fueled in part by a continuing insurgency,
    corruption, organized crime, clan competition, endemic poverty,
    radical Islamist penetration, and a lagging economy that is just
    beginning to recover from the global economic crisis. Some of the
    violence elsewhere in Russia, such as a deadly train bombing in late
    November 2009, may be related to instability in the North Caucasus.

    "In addressing nationwide problems, Medvedev talks about Russia's
    need to modernize the economy, fight corruption, and move toward a
    more rule-of-law-based and pluralistic political system, but he faces
    formidable opposition within the entrenched elite who benefit from
    the status quo. Turbulence in global energy markets was a painful
    reminder to Moscow of the Russian economy's overdependence on
    energy, dramatizing the need for constructive steps toward economic
    modernization and diversification. However, moving forward on issues
    such as reforming Russia's state corporations or creating conditions
    more conducive to foreign investors could produce a backlash by those
    forces who might lose from competition."

    Dennis Blair began his report on a cautious note.

    "We see some improvements, but also several entrenched problems
    and slow progress in some areas for the foreseeable future. Several
    large-scale threats to fundamental US interests will require increased
    attention, and it is on one of these threats that I will focus our
    initial discussion."

    Blair chose the cyber threat as the first area of concern in his
    report. He went on to look at the situation worldwide with special
    mention of the Middle East, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq and
    North Korea. He also looked at the threats posed by global economic
    problems and climate change.
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