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  • Ukraine conflict exacerbates tensions in the Caucasus

    World Socialist Web Site
    March 29 2014

    Ukraine conflict exacerbates tensions in the Caucasus

    By Clara Weiss
    29 March 2014


    The Ukraine conflict is exacerbating the already tense situation in
    the Caucasus. Following the US and European Union-backed coup in Kiev,
    moves are now underway to speed up the inclusion of Georgia and
    Moldova into the EU and NATO, and strengthen ties with Azerbaijan.
    Both Georgia and Azerbaijan have lined up behind the imperialist
    powers and the right-wing government in Kiev in their campaign against
    Russia.

    The Caucasus has been a renewed focal point of imperialist interests
    since the dissolution of the Soviet Union and subsequent independence
    of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia. The region provides access to the
    Caspian Basin--one of the largest energy reserves in the world--and
    serves as a bridge between Europe and Central Asia.

    Following the US-funded "Rose Revolution" in 2003, Georgia has emerged
    as the main partner of the US and the EU in the Caucasus. In 2008,
    Georgia conducted a war against Russia in an abortive bid to regain
    control over South Ossetia and Abkhazia. The two regions remain under
    Russian control and tensions between Russia and Georgia have
    intensified enormously.

    At the end of February, Georgian President Irakli Garibashvili met
    with US President Barack Obama in Washington and urged the United
    States to accelerate the integration of the post-Soviet states into
    NATO and the EU. In particular, he called for NATO to accept Georgia
    earlier than previously planned. Garibashvili described the
    independence referendum in the Crimea as "illegal".

    NATO had originally promised Georgia membership in 2008, but allowed
    the date to pass after its confrontation with Russia. The admission of
    Georgia into NATO would be an open provocation and threat of war
    against Russia.

    Both Georgia and Moldova, which also has territorial disputes with
    Russia due to the secession of Transnistria, are also on the verge of
    concluding an Association Agreement with the European Union. Its
    signing has been brought forward for a second time, and will now take
    place in June.

    Western propaganda frequently claims that after Crimea, Georgia could
    be Russia's "next target". In fact, there is a real risk that Georgia
    could provoke a war with Russia as it did in 2008. With its open
    support for the coup in Kiev, the Georgian government has left no
    doubt as to its willingness to once again provide a casus belli.

    After Georgia, Azerbaijan is the second most important US ally in the
    Caucasus--not only against Russia but also against Iran. The
    Azerbaijani media is openly discussing direct military confrontation
    between the imperialist powers and Russia and a possible territorial
    breakup of Russia. The right-wing opposition Musavat party, which is
    pushing for an even stronger orientation to the West, vigorously
    supported the Kiev protests.

    Following weeks of silence, the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev
    addressed the crisis in Ukraine for the first time on 20 March, a few
    days after Russia's annexation of Crimea. Without naming Russia, he
    declared that the "territorial integrity of a country" could not be
    "changed without its consent," thereby echoing the political line of
    Washington and Brussels.

    The Internet newspaper Eurasianet quoted a senior Azerbaijani Foreign
    Ministry official, who stated that Baku could break all relations with
    Crimea: "There is still no decision made, but I expect it", he said.

    In the war between Georgia and Russia in the summer of 2008, Baku
    refrained from taking sides. The integration of Azerbaijan into the
    preparations for war against Iran, however, has served to intensify
    tensions with Moscow in recent years. At the end of December 2012 the
    government in Baku forced Russia to abandon its radar station in
    Azerbaijan by demonstratively increasing the rent from 7 to 300
    million dollars per year. The station was originally planned as the
    starting point for a joint missile defense project between Russia and
    Azerbaijan.

    Azerbaijan is becoming increasingly important to the strategy of US
    imperialism following the war preparations against Iran and attempts
    to re-route energy supplies from the post-Soviet region to Europe,
    bypassing Russia. On 18 March the American ambassador in Baku, Richard
    Morningstar, stated that the crisis in Ukraine made relations between
    Azerbaijan and the US and the EU even more important.

    George Friedman of the Stratfor Information Service, which has close
    links to US intelligence agencies, proposes forming an alliance of
    states, stretching from Estonia across Poland and Romania to
    Azerbaijan in order to "to engage and confront Russia" These states
    should build up their armed forces in a massive fashion and receive US
    military training, Friedman states.

    "A failure to engage at this point would cause the countries around
    Russia's periphery, from Estonia to Azerbaijan, to conclude that with
    the United States withdrawn and Europe fragmented, they must reach an
    accommodation with Russia" Friedman writes. "This will expand Russian
    power and open the door to Russian influence spreading on the European
    Peninsula itself. The United States has fought three wars (World War
    I, World War II and the Cold War) to prevent hegemonic domination of
    the region. Failure to engage would be a reversal of a century-old
    strategy."

    In a document from December 2013, "Azerbaijan's security and U.S.
    interests: time for a reassessment", Stephen Blank, who works for the
    United States Army War College, and various Washington think tanks,
    stresses that Azerbaijan is a key country in the region.

    He quoted former US National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski, who
    wrote in the 1990s: "Azerbaijan can be described as the vitally
    important "cork" controlling access to the 'bottle' that contains the
    riches of the Caspian Sea basin and Central Asia. An independent,
    Turkic-speaking Azerbaijan, with pipelines running from it to the
    ethnically related and politically supportive Turkey, would prevent
    Russia from exercising a monopoly on access to the region and would
    thus also deprive Russia of decisive political leverage over the
    policies of the new Central Asian states."

    Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey form an important corridor for the
    transportation of oil and gas from the Caspian region to the West,
    bypassing Russia. A number of pipelines are already up and running.
    The Trans-Anatolian pipeline (TANAP) is due to be completed in 2018
    and is expected to deliver up to 30 billion cubic meters of gas from
    Azerbaijan's Shah Deniz field in the Balkans.

    TANAP could also supply Ukraine, which struck a deal with Baku in
    November 2013 to form a joint consortium for the construction of the
    pipeline. Ukraine is heavily dependent on Russian gas supplies and has
    tried for years to lessen its dependency by promoting shale gas,
    liquefied natural gas imports and finding other energy suppliers.

    Since the beginning of the TANAP project Azerbaijan has expanded its
    economic relations with a number of other Eastern European countries.
    On 18 March, Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said that the
    Ukraine crisis could transform TANAP into the key pipeline project in
    the region.

    The ruling elites in Azerbaijan, however, are divided on the question
    of how far they should seek confrontation with Russia, fearing a
    resurgence of the war over Nagorno-Karabakh. The conflict between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan over the small mountain region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh resulted in around 25,000 fatalities between 1988 and
    1994. A million were made homeless, and many have still found no
    permanent place to live. Since then there have been repeated border
    conflicts.

    Tensions have increased in recent months with many observers fearing a
    new outbreak of war. Armenia has close political and military links
    with Russia, while Azerbaijan has close relations with NATO member
    Turkey.

    The confrontation between Russia and the imperialist powers in Ukraine
    has served to further exacerbate the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh.
    Armenia is the only Caucasian country to back Russia. So far, peace
    negotiations have been carried out by the so-called Minsk Peace group
    led by Russia, the US and France. Given the sanctions imposed by the
    West against Russia and a possible escalation of the conflict,
    however, it is unlikely that this fragile framework will be able to
    stabilize the situation.

    Decades of Stalinist rule, the destruction of the Soviet Union and the
    restoration of capitalism have transformed the entire region into a
    powder keg that could explode at any time. As was the case in
    Yugoslavia, the imperialist powers are exploiting national and ethnic
    tensions in Russia and the entire post-Soviet sphere to prepare
    military action aimed at imposing their control over the vast
    resources of the region.

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2014/03/29/cauc-m29.html


    From: Baghdasarian
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