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  • Stratfor: "The Region About To Trade Turmoil For Crisis"

    STRATFOR: "THE REGION ABOUT TO TRADE TURMOIL FOR CRISIS"

    Milaz.info
    http://milaz.info/en/news.php?id=5559
    May 27 2011
    Azerbaijan

    US global analytical company published a book titled "A Crucible of
    Nations: The Geopolitics of the Caucasus"

    US global analytical company STRATFOR published a book titled "A
    Crucible of Nations: The Geopolitics of the Caucasus", APA reports.

    The book's introduction reads: "In the Caucasus, three great historical
    empires converge: Russia, Persia and Turkey. They are no longer
    empires but republics, and Persia has changed its name to Iran,
    while Russia called itself the Soviet Union for seven decades. The
    names, ideologies and fortunes have changed, but these three great
    powers have this in common: Each is part of the Caucasus region but
    has greater interests outside the Caucasus region. That means that
    interests far away frequently drive the behavior of the three great
    powers in the Caucasus. For all three powers, the Caucasus is sometimes
    at the center of their thinking and sometimes an afterthought".

    "Another characteristic they share is that all three are rising
    powers. Turkey is shaking off three generations of self-imposed
    isolation and exploring its neighborhood. The process is awkward,
    painful and plagued with mistakes and setbacks, but Ankara is tired
    of having its fate determined by others and so has no choice but to
    continue. Iran seeks to reach into the areas near it that have been
    weakened by the Soviet collapse and the U.S. wars in the Islamic
    world. Alone among the region's states in its relative internal and
    external security, Iran has many opportunities for expansion. The
    post-Soviet collapse is over, and Russia's twilight will not begin for
    another decade, producing a rising tide of Russian power throughout its
    periphery that seems irresistible - until it recedes. The attention
    of all three powers shifts based on the demands of the day, but all
    regularly cross gazes in the Caucasus".

    "There are also three nations entirely within the Caucasus that are
    much smaller and weaker than those great powers: Armenia, Azerbaijan
    and Georgia. They are ancient mountain cultures that have survived
    because the rugged mountains provided natural barriers to invaders.

    During the last century, Czarist Russia, and then the Soviet Union,
    occupied all three nations. The Russians changed borders, moved
    populations and forced cultural changes but were unable to suppress the
    Caucasus peoples' national self-awareness. Indeed, in odd ways, these
    mountain cultures fought back by giving in. The Caucasus nations played
    Politburo politics with the same ruthless cunning with which they
    fought each other. The Georgians even gave the Russians Joseph Stalin".

    Each Caucasus country contains fragments of the populations of the
    other countries in the region, and each contains smaller groups
    - fragments of older nations. The claims about what belongs to
    each of these nations and what was stolen from them date back for
    centuries; yesterday and a thousand years ago are remembered with
    equal vividness. The very antiquity of the cultures creates the most
    contemporary conflicts".

    "Most Azerbaijanis, having been conquered by the Persians, live in
    Iran. Russia has broken Georgia's control over territory it claims.

    Armenia claims a blood debt against Turkey over mass murders in
    1915, while Azerbaijanis claim similar debts against Armenians. This
    is not ancient history. Georgia fought a war with Russia in 2008,
    Armenians and Azerbaijanis are currently edging toward a new war,
    and Iranians infiltrate Azerbaijan regularly".

    "When all of the Caucasus is under the control of the three major
    powers, the region tends to be more stable than when the three smaller
    powers are independent. A smothering occupation limits the options for
    the smaller nations. When the three smaller states are independent,
    they attempt to purify their internal regions of smaller groups,
    they compete with each other and they compete with the greater
    powers. The friction creates both challenges and opportunities for
    the greater powers. Wars become seen as just another tactic in the
    balance-of-power game".

    "When STRATFOR steps back and look at the region broadly, we see a
    region about to trade turmoil for crisis.

    We find that the Russian hold on the North Caucasus is firm, but
    that the challenge from Islamist and nationalist insurgents in
    the region is substantial and growing. There is low but increasing
    tension between Iran and Azerbaijan, both because northwestern Iran is
    ethnically Azerbaijani and that Tehran and Baku have starkly different
    outlooks. Turkey and Iran are sliding toward confrontation while
    Armenia is in indefinite confrontation with Turkey. The conflict
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan is almost certain to erupt into war
    in the near future. Russian power has broken the Georgian state,
    but Georgia's position makes it the logical gateway for any outside
    power that wishes to enter the game".

    The opportunities for a range of conflicts are substantial, and
    the timing of such conflicts is unpredictable - and that is without
    factoring in the United States, whose relations with Iran, Russia
    and Turkey are hostile, cold and deteriorating, respectively.

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