Russia and the Caucasus
A. Official Documents and
Declarations
I. Southern Caucasus
1. Background
1.1 Security Issues in the Region
The Georgian-Abkhazian Conflict
In July 1992 Abkhazian separatists declared their independence
from Georgia, leading to a war between the Abkhazians and Georgian
Government forces. Supported by volunteers, partly from other
countries, Abkhazian forces gained territory within their region.
Looking for a way out, Georgia asked Russia to mediate as a regional
power. This gave Russia the opportunity to expand its influence on the
non-CIS state Georgia. After the failure of the first agreement between
the separatists, Georgia and Russia, a second ceasefire was signed by
all three parties on July 27th, 1993. The agreement favours the
separatist side, which at the present moment controls all of Abkhazia.
On May 14th, 1994, the Abkhazian and Georgian parties met in Moscow and
signed an agreement
on the deployment of CIS peacekeeping troops in the region.
More information on the AKUF
site (German only)
The Georgian-Ossetian conflict
Following ethnic tensions and the abolition of the autonomous
status of South Ossetia by the Georgian government in December 1990,
Ossetian separatists began an armed revolt in the spring of 1992. They
demanded the unification of North and South Ossetia, with the
consequence of integrating the region into the Russian Federation. As a
result of negotiations between Georgian President Shevarnadze and
Russian President Yeltsin a ceasefire agreement was signed in June
1992, and a joint Russian-Georgian-Ossetian peacekeeping force was
deployed.
The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
The conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh started in 1988 following a
vote by the regional Soviet authorities, that mandated the transfer of
the predominantly ethnic Armenian province from Azerbaijan to Armenia.
As a result, war broke out in 1989 between Azerbaijani forces and
Karabakh militias supported by Armenia. On January 18th, 1992 the
Republic of Nagorno Karabakh declared its independence. On May 12th,
1994 a ceasefire agreement was signed with the mediation from
Russia.
1.2 International Missions in the Region
*The CSCE renamed itself OSCE at the
Budapest Summit in Dec. 1994*
OSCE Mission in Georgia
The OSCE mission in Georgia was established in December 1992
to reach a peaceful political settlement to the Georgian-Ossetian
conflict and to help define the political status of the South-Ossetian
region within Georgia. In Abkhazia the OSCE supports the UN in its
efforts to maintain the territorial sovereignty of Georgia, while at
the same time taking into account the interests of the Abkhazian
population, a position that is expressed in the CSCE Declaration at the
Budapest Summit of December 1994. Cooperation between the OSCE and
the CIS peacekeeping forces deployed in the Georgian territories of
Abkhazia and South Ossetia is an issue that is addressed in Chapter III of the
Helsinki Document of 1992. Click here for the OSCE Declaration on Georgia
from November 1999. On December 15th, 1999 the mission was extended to
monitor the border between Georgia and the Chechen Republic.
The United Nations Observer Mission in Georgia (UNOMIG)
UNOMIG was
established on August 24th, 1993 by Security
Council Resolution 858. Following the Abkhazian-Georgian Agreement
signed in Moscow in May 1994, the mandate of UNOMIG was extended by Security
Council Resolution 937 (1994), which included the monitoring and
verification of the agreement's implementation by the involved parties,
as well as providing for cooperation between UNOMIG and CIS
peacekeeping forces. The mandate of UNOMIG has been repeatedly
extended, most recently until January 31st, 2003 by Security
Council Resolution 1427 (2002).
In December 2001 the Secretary-General's Special Representative D.
Boden presented the document "Basic Principles
for the Distribution of Competences between Tbilisi and Sukhumi" to
provide a basis for negotiations between the Abkhaz and Georgian leaders
on the future political status of Abkhazia within the State of Georgia.
Despite the support of the "Friends of Georgia", a group including the
United States, France, Britain, Germany, Russia, and Bulgaria,
objections are still being made by the Abkhaz side to use the paper as
a basis for negotiations.
OSCE mediation in Nagorno-Karabakh
The CSCE
Ministerial Council in Helsinki decided in March 1992 to convene a
conference in order to promote the negotiation of a peaceful settlement
of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The Minsk Conference did not take
place since Azerbaijan wanted the occupied territories to be returned
first, but this initiative gave birth to the Minsk Group. The Minsk
Group, now comprising Austria, Belarus, France, Germany, Italy,
Portugal, Romania, Russia, Sweden, Turkey, the United States as well as
Armenia and Azerbaijan, aims for a political solution to the conflict
and to let the Minsk Conference take place.
The December 1994 Budapest
Summit expressed the will to set up a multinational CSCE
peacekeeping force in the region. A high-level planning group (HLPG)
was established in Vienna to examine the modalities of a deployment if
the two conflicting parties reach an agreement. Additionally, a
Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office on the conflict
was appointed in August 1995 to assist in achieving this agreement. At
the December 1996 Lisbon Summit the Chairman-in-Office defined in a statement, supported by all
participating states except Armenia, the
principles to be part of the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict. The OSCE has so far not managed to reach a consensus on a
basis for negotiations between the parties.
1.3 Relations among the Southern Caucasus States and
Cooperation in the Context of Regional Organisations
In the Southern Caucasus Armenia remains a close ally of
Russia, whereas Georgia and Azerbaijan increasingly cooperate with NATO
and other international organisations, distancing themselves from
Russia.
Armenia wants to keep close relations with Russia to
protect itself from potential threats coming from its neighbours
Azerbaijan and Turkey. Relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan are
still problematic regarding the Nagorno Karabakh issue. Click here for
a statement
by Armenian President R. Kocharian on Nagorno Karabakh.
Georgia maintains good relations with both Azerbaijan and
Armenia, stressing the need for cooperation to improve the stability of
the Caucasus. Georgia considers strengthening the relations with the
European Union and the United States and its integration into European
and Euro-Atlantic structures as a major objective of its foreign
policy. From this cooperation, Georgia expects to eventually obtain
security guarantees. Click here for references to the EU and the United
States in the Foreign Policy
Concept of the Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Azerbaijan follows the same foreign policy line as Georgia,
trying to develop close relations with its neighbours Georgia and
Turkey, for instance through the agreement on a Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
pipeline project which was signed in 1999. Azerbaijan evoked the
possibility of membership in NATO and of accepting NATO military bases
on its territory. In view of this, Russia is trying to improve its
relations with Azerbaijan.
Regional organisations like GUUAM and the Black Sea Economic
Cooperation (BSEC) were created as an alternative to the CIS, which is
perceived to be dominated by Russian interests. Both organisations view
the future security of the region as depending first upon economic and
technical cooperation, as well as the development of infrastructure
between the countries in order to facilitate the access to European and
international markets. GUUAM countries, particularly Ukraine, are
willing to reduce their dependence on energy and pipeline
infrastructure from Russia and are therefore promoting a Eurasian
Transportation Corridor for energy and goods.
For its part, the BSEC is trying to bring Russia to adopt a cooperative
policy towards countries in the Black Sea region. The BSEC, which became
an international economic regional organisation in April 1999, is
developing communication networks and transport infrastructure between
its members.
GUUAM (Georgia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and
Moldova)
GUAM, an organisation whose name is made up of the initials of
its member states, was founded in 1997 by the former Soviet Republics
of Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Moldova. Its goal is to establish
cooperation between these four states on political, economic and
security issues, with the objective of strengthening their independence
and sovereignty. During the NATO Summit in Washington in April 1999
Uzbekistan joined the organisation, resulting in the change of the
organisation's name from GUAM to GUUAM. On this occasion GUUAM member
states expressed their wish to cooperate closely with NATO within the
framework of the EAPC and PfP Programmes in a joint statement. Click
here for an older GUAM
statement on cooperation with NATO (1997).
In the security field, cooperation among GUUAM states is based on a
commitment to the peaceful settlement of regional conflicts based on a
respect for territorial sovereignty. This position includes common
peacekeeping activities, the fight against international terrorism and
extremism and the adoption of Euro-Atlantic and European structures of
security. GUUAM states also expressed their wish to cooperate in the
security of transport corridors and pipelines. GUUAM expressed a
critical view of the CIS peacekeeping mechanism's efficiency in
securing stability in the region in a joint statement
at the special meeting of the OSCE security model committee in July
1998.
The New York
Memorandum was signed by the Presidents of the GUUAM states on
September 6th, 2000 at the UN Millennium Summit in order to
institutionalise GUUAM consulting mechanisms. During the Yalta Summit
in Ukraine in June 2001 GUUAM member states signed the Yalta Charter
(in Russian). Following September 11th, a joint
statement was issued with the United States on cooperation to fight
terrorism. At the Yalta Summit of July 2002, an agreement establishing a
Free Trade Area (FTA) was signed by the four countries of Georgia,
Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Moldova. The ineffectiveness of GUUAM in
implementing its decisions since its creation in 1997 was underlined
with the decision of Uzbekistan to suspend its membership in the
organization in June 2002.
The Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC)
The BSEC, founded in 1992 by eleven states, is aimed primarily
at increasing economic cooperation and development in the Black Sea
region. Click here for the Declaration of the
BSEC at its founding summit in Istanbul. Its membership comprises
Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Georgia, Greece, Moldova,
Romania, Russia, Turkey and Ukraine. BSEC objectives are not restricted
to the economic field, but consider economic cooperation to be a basis
for the promotion of peace and security within the region. The Southern
Caucasus states are also trying to increase their cooperation with the
European Union through the BSEC. Click here for references to the BSEC
in the Foreign
Policy Concept of Georgia.
Click here for the Bosphorus Statement
of June 25th, 1992 and the Istanbul Summit
Declaration of November 18th, 1999.
The Agreement on the Black Sea Naval Cooperation Task Group
(BLACKSEAFOR) was signed on April 2nd, 2001 in Istanbul by six member
states of the BSEC: Turkey, Russia, Ukraine, Romania, Bulgaria and
Georgia. BLACKSEAFOR will pool the naval forces of these countries in
order to respond to emergency situations, its tasks including search
and rescue, humanitarian assistance, mine countermeasures and
environmental protection. Click here for the statement
by Georgian Minister of Defence D. Tevzadze on Blackseafor at the
EAPC Meeting of Defence Ministers, June 8th, 2001. A document on
confidence- and security-building measures in the Black Sea area was
signed in Kiev on April 25th, 2002. In its Istanbul
Decennial Summit Declaration of June 2002, the BSEC expressed its
will to build stronger ties with the EU.
2. Russia and the Southern Caucasus
Russia tried to keep its historical control of the Caucasus
region by integrating the former Soviet Republics into a security
system in which it took the role of a "security manager". However, the
CIS did not succeed at gaining credibility as a regional peacekeeping
system, which gave some member states the incentive to explore other
options for conflict settlement. Some of the CIS member states are
opening up to the influence of Western organisations (primarily to
NATO), and are furthermore seeking alliances with neighbouring states
like Turkey as well as cooperating in subregional organisations like
GUUAM.
In the aftermath of September 11th, the presence of U.S. military
advisers in Georgia appears to be further reducing Russian influence in
the region. At the US-Russian Summit of May 2002, U.S. President George
W. Bush and Russian President V. Putin recognized in a joint
declaration the common interest of their countries in the stability
and security of Central Asia and the Caucasus and affirmed cooperation
in the resolution of regional conflicts.
2.1 The Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)
The Agreement
on the Establishment of the Commonwealth of Independent States was
signed on December 8th, 1991 by the presidents of Belarus, Russia and
the Ukraine. Later on the Almaty
Declaration and Protocol to the Agreement on Establishment of the
Commonwealth of Independent States was adopted on December 21st, 1991
by the eleven republics: Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Russia, Moldova, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan and
Azerbaijan as an observer. Azerbaijan joined the CIS on September 24th,
1993 and Georgia on December 9th, 1993.
The CIS Collective Security Treaty was signed in Tashkent, Uzbekistan
on May 15th, 1992 by six of its members: Armenia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan. Georgia, Azerbaijan and
Belarus joined later.
However, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan decided in April 1999 not
to renew the CIS Collective Security Treaty.
The activities of this group have concentrated on two issues:
peacekeeping operations and the fight against terrorism.
- An Agreement on Groups of Military Observers and Collective
Peacekeeping Forces in the CIS was signed during the Kiev Summit on
March 20th, 1992 by all CIS members except Turkmenistan.
- A CIS
Antiterrorist Center was established on December 1st, 2000 during
the CIS Summit Meeting in Minsk. Azerbaijan, Georgia and Ukraine
expressed reservations to the founding of this organisation, and
refused to participate in all of its prescribed activities. On May
25th, 2001 the states parties to the Collective Security Treaty met in
Yerevan and issued a joint
statement in which they declared international terrorism and
extremism to be a major challenge to the security of CIS countries.
2.2 Relations with Southern Caucasus states
Russian-Georgian relations
Following its independence in April 1991, Georgia accused
Russia of supporting the separatist movements in Abkhazia and
South-Ossetia in order to destabilise the country's internal political
situation. In Georgia's view, it was the aim of Russia to thereby
strengthen its influence in the region. At the same time, Georgia is in
a position to accept the military presence of the CIS peacekeeping
forces within its territory in order to maintain the ceasefire in
Abkhazia. This presence implies a degree of Russian political and
military influence within Georgia.
The following issues are now determining the relations between
Russia and Georgia:
The withdrawal by the Russian Federation of troops and
military equipment from Georgia
In the context of the adaptation of the Treaty on Conventional
Forces in Europe (CFE) undertaken during the OSCE Istanbul Summit of
1999, the Russian Federation agreed to withdraw part of its military
equipment from Georgian territory in a joint
statement with Georgia. Russia undertook to close the military bases
of Gudauta and Vaziani by July 1st, 2001, while Georgia granted Russia
the right to basic temporary deployment at the bases at Batumi and
Akhalkalaki. But as of now, Russia is still procrastinating on the
withdrawal from Gudauta. In the NATO
Prague Summit Declaration adopted on November 21st, 2002, the
Russian government was urged to fulfil the Istanbul commitments on
Georgia and Moldova.
Tension over border control
The presence of Chechen rebels in the Pankisi gorge and of
Georgian armed groups in the Kodori valley is a primary source of
tension between Russia and Georgia. The Pankisi gorge, a region
bordering Chechnya, became a home for Chechen refugees following the
Chechen war. The Kodori valley is the only area in Abkhazia, which is
still under the control of the Georgian government. The Russian
government repeatedly accused the Georgian government of allowing
Chechen fighters to use the Pankisi gorge as a safe haven and announced
their intention to lead a counterterrorist operation in this area. The
Georgian government, for its part, denounced the attempt made by the
Russian government to interfere with its sovereignty. Following
September 11th and in the context of the U.S. military aid to Georgia
regarding counterterrorist activities, the mutual accusations are
intensifying.
Two issues are raised by Russia in its criticism of Georgian
policy
a) The presence of Chechen rebels in the Pankisi gorge
In an official
declaration regarding an incident on the Russian-Georgian border
dating back to 2000, the Russian Foreign Ministry urged the Georgian
government to cooperate in operations against terrorist activities.
Following September 11th, the Russian Foreign Ministry issued a statement
warning of the spread of international terrorism into Georgian
territory. The Russian Foreign Ministry asked repeatedly for the
extradition of Chechen rebels arrested by Georgian border guards while
crossing the Russian-Georgian border, most recently in August 2002. The
refusal by the Georgian government led the Russian government to
question Georgia´s goodwill in participating in the fight against
international terrorism.
On August 25th the Georgian government, under the leadership of
Georgian law-enforcement agencies, launched a security operation in the
Pankisi gorge. In an appeal
to the UN Secretary General and to the UN Security Council and heads of
OSCE countries on September 12th Russian President V. Putin
criticized the Georgian security operation which failed to arrest the
Chechen fighters and international terrorists who allegedly moved to
other areas. He declared the intention of the Russian government to
expand its anti-terrorist operation in Chechnya to the Georgian
territory by citing UN Security
Council Resolution 1373 (2001) on anti-terrorism and the right of
"self-defense" under the UN Charter. This appeal followed a statement
by V. Putin in Sochi on September 11th, threatening to launch preemptive
strikes against Chechen fighters in the Pankisi gorge, which provoked a
prompt reaction from the Georgian side in a statement
by the Georgian Foreign Ministry. The Russian Duma declared in a statement
on September 13th its support for a Russian military operation in the
Pankisi gorge. Already on August 26th the Russian Foreign Ministry
called in a statement
for a joint Georgian-Russian counterterrorist operation in the
area.
During a meeting in Chisinau on October 6th, Russian President V. Putin
and Georgian President E. Shevarnadze agreed in a joint
statement on joint military patrols of the Russian-Georgian border
and on closer cooperation between their countries´ special
services. On this occasion Georgian President E. Shevarnadze announced
the extradition of the 13 Chechen suspects detained in Georgian custody
since August 2002 to Moscow on terrorism charges. After the extradition
of five detainees, the Georgian government suspended its decision to
hand over the remaining eight suspects to the Russian authorities
following an appeal
from the European Court of Human Rights. The recent Moscow hostage
crisis in October 2002 renewed the pressure of Russian authorities on
Georgia to extradite the Chechen suspects still in custody. After
having received guarantees from the Russian government regarding the
future treatment of the prisoners, the European Court of Human Rights
announced in a communique
on November 26th that it no longer has any objection to the extradition
of the Chechen suspects.
On December 7th, an anti-crime operation was conducted by Georgian
law-enforcers in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi resulting in the
arrests of 80 people and the extradition to Russia of one Chechen
suspected of being involved in the Moscow apartment house bombings of
1999. The Georgian Ministry of State Security disclosed in January 2003
classified materials, including video tapes, in proof of
the presence of Chechen and Arab fighters and their training camps in
the Pankisi Gorge.
b) The support for armed groups in the Kodori valley
A series of incidents in the Kodori valley of Abkhazia,
ranging from the shooting down of a UN helicopter and violation of
Georgian airspace by Russian military jets in October and November 2001
to a quick deployment of Russian peacekeeping troops in April 2002, led
to tensions between Russia and Georgia. The Russian Foreign Ministry
issued a statement
criticizing the Georgian policy of tolerance towards terrorist groups.
The Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs reacted by accusing Russia of
interfering with its sovereignty in a statement on October 10th,
2001 and a following statement
on November 28th, 2001. The Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued
another statement
on September 3rd in reaction to the civil casualties resulting from a
bombing raid by the Russian military aircraft on Georgian territory on
August 23rd.
In the context of alleged support by the Georgian government to
guerrilla groups, Russia accused Georgia of increasing the
instability in the Kodori valley as preparation for military operations
in Abkhazia. In a statement
by the Georgian Foreign Ministry these accusations were rejected as
groundless and mainly motivated by Russian concerns over
Georgian-American military cooperation in counter-terrorist
activities.
c) Special visa regime for breakaway regions
In December 2000, the Russian Federation granted a special
visa arrangement to the Abkhazian and South-Ossetian regions, which
undermined Georgia's control over transit across its borders. Click
here for the corresponding statement
on the introduction of a new visa regime between the Russian Federation
and Georgia from the Russian Foreign Ministry and a statement
by the Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs from June 2002 on the
negative consequences of this special regime for the resolution of the
Georgian-Abkhaz conflict.
Nagorno Karabakh
In January 2000 Russia expressed its readiness to act as a
guarantor if a settlement to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict could be
reached. In this way, Russia hoped to regain influence over Azerbaijan
and to profile itself as a peacemaker in the region. Click here for Russia's
declaration on acting as a guarantor.
3. NATO and the Caucasus
3.1 Cooperation between the Southern Caucasus states and
NATO
The signing of the Partnership
for Peace (PfP) Framework Document by Azerbaijan on May 4th, 1994, by
Georgia on May 23rd, 1994 and by Armenia on October 5th, 1994
institutionalised the cooperation of the Southern Caucasus states with
NATO. This strategy of cooperation had first been developed within the
EAPC (Euro-Atlantic Partnership Joint Council). The Southern Caucasus
countries have recently begun to participate in the peacekeeping
operation in Kosovo (KFOR), Azerbaijan having troops within the Turkish
Battalion. Click here for references to NATO international peacekeeping
forces in the Foreign
Policy Concept of the Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Click here for the statements by the Foreign Ministers of Georgia
and Azerbaijan
on NATO's role in the Caucasus at the meeting of the EAPC on December
15th, 2000 and references to NATO in the Foreign Policy Concept of
the Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
On September 13th, 2002 the Parliament of Georgia adopted a resolution
urging the Georgian government to take the necessary steps to start the
accession process to NATO. On October 1st, a memorandum of understanding
on logistic cooperation was signed between
Georgia and the NATO Maintenance and Supply Organisation (NAMSO),
opening the way for the implementation of a PfP Trust Fund Project for
the demilitarization and disposal of missile stockpiles and the
remediation of Georgian military sites. Georgia and Azerbaijan
officially applied for joining NATO at the NATO Prague Summit of
November 21st-22nd, 2002 as declared in a statement
by Georgian President E. Shevarnadze and a statement
by the President of Azerbaijan H. Aliyev.
3.2 U.S. Interests in the Caucasus
In the Caucasus - and generally in the Caspian area - the
objective of the U.S. until recently was primarily to maintain access
to the region, particularly to its oil and gas resources, while at the
same time avoiding involvement in regional conflicts or direct
confrontation with other major powers. The United States is mainly
interested in assuring the security conditions that are necessary for
oil production and export.
However, this policy of neutrality is likely to change with the sending
of U.S. military advisers to Georgia in April 2002.
U.S. involvement in the Caucasus
Following September 11th the United States increased its
involvement in the Caucasus. Click here for a statement
on U.S. Policy in the Caucasus by Assistant Secretary of State for
European and Eurasian Affairs, E. Jones, from March 13th, 2002.
The U.S. policy in the Caucasus focuses on two issues:
- Counterterrorism: With the Georgian
Train-and-Equip Program, which was launched on April 29th, 2002,
the United States offered military assistance in counter-terrorism to
Georgia in response to the growing instability of the Pankisi Valley, a
region bordering Chechnya on Georgian territory. At the U.S.-Russian
Summit of May 2002 the United States affirmed its commitment to work
along with Russia on the elimination of terrorism in Georgia in a joint
statement by President George W. Bush and President Vladimir V. Putin
on counterterrorism cooperation. In a statement
on September 14th, U.S. President G. W. Bush affirmed its full support
for the Georgian government security operation in the Pankisi gorge and
appealed to Russian President V. Putin to allow the Georgian government
to fulfill this task. On September 26th the U.S. Mission to the OSCE
outlined in a statement
the opposition of the United States to any unilateral Russian military
action inside Georgian territory. Click here for a description of
terrorist activities in Georgia in the report Patterns
of Global Terrorism 2001-Eurasia Overview issued by the U.S.
Department of State on May 24th, 2002. See the testimony
by Deputy Assistant Secretary for European and Eurasian Affairs L.
Pascoe from September 24th, 2002 for an overview of Georgia´s
strategic importance for the United States.
Pipeline projects
The transport of Caspian energy resources to international
markets is an issue that involves the interests of all major powers
acting in the region: Russia, the United States, Turkey, Iran and
China. The aim of U.S. involvement in oil production and export in the
Caspian Region is to reduce the its future dependence on oil resources
in the Persian Gulf. The two major oil exporting countries in the
Caspian region are Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan. In 1994 the Azeri State
Oil Company (SOCAR) signed the "Contract of the Century"
with an international consortium of foreign oil companies. Click here
for information about participation of
foreign oil companies in Azerbaijan.
Under the Clinton Administration, a Caspian energy diplomacy effort was
initiated as described in a statement
by the Secretary of State for Caspian Basin energy diplomacy, J. Wolf,
from October 4th, 2000. A general description of the U.S. interests in
the Caspian region can be found in a statement
by Under Secretary S. Eizenstat on Caspian energy development from
October 23rd, 1997. The Clinton Administration followed a "Caspian
strategy", which consisted in the promotion of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
(BTC) oil pipeline through Turkey. An alternative to this plan would be
the Baku-Supsa route on the Georgian Black Sea coast. For its part,
Russia is seeking to promote the use of the existing oil pipeline which
runs through Grozny between Baku and Novorossiysk on the Russian Black
Sea coast. This option has the advantage of being cheaper than the
construction of a new pipeline through Georgia, but both the United
States and the countries in the region are trying to avoid a Russian
monopoly. Also, due to the volatile political situation there, the
route through Chechnya is not secure; the pipelines have been subject
to numerous terrorist attacks during the Chechen crisis. The security
of pipelines is of concern to all of the countries involved, as
pipelines can become the target for terrorist activities. Click here
for references to pipeline security in the Foreign Policy
Concept of the Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In September
2001, Azerbaijan and Georgia signed an agreement on the construction of
a gas pipeline from Azerbaijan through Georgia to Turkey. This agreement
was welcomed in a statement
by the U.S. Department of State.
There seems to be a general preference for the existence of
multiple pipelines because this would allow the Caspian states to
escape foreign influence and to facilitate their global economic
integration. In a joint
statement of U.S. President G.W. Bush and Russian President V. Putin
at the U.S.-Russia summit of May 2002, a New Energy Dialogue between the
United States and Russia was announced, centering on cooperation in
their energy sectors by promoting joint projects. On November 22nd, a joint statement
was made in St. Petersburg on the first results in the development of
the U.S.-Russian Energy Dialogue.
Map
of existing and proposed pipelines in the Caspian region
Two main projects are emerging from the different options:
- The
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) Project: During the OSCE Istanbul
Summit on November 17th, 1999 the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan framework
agreements were signed. This route would make it possible to link
Georgia and Azerbaijan with NATO ally Turkey and, consequently, with
the West. Despite objections based on its commercial viability, the
construction of the pipeline will begin soon. An official ceremony was
held in Baku in September 2002 to mark the start of its construction.
The U.S. Department of State welcomed the official approval of the
Georgian government of the BTC oil pipeline in a press statement.
The Bush Administration is now actively supporting the development of a
Aktau-Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan route, which would allow the inclusion of
Kazakhstan in the BTC project.
- The Caspian Pipeline
Consortium (CPC) Project: The CPC Project involves the
governments of Kazakhstan, Russia and Oman as well as American oil
companies (Chevron and ExxonMobil). Click here for a press
statement by U.S. Deputy Spokesman P. Reeker on CPC from November
2000. The CPC Project was officially launched in November 2001 and
welcomed in a statement
by U.S. President G.W. Bush as a means to enhance U.S. energy security.
The CPC pipeline links the Tengiz oil field in western Kazakhstan to the
Russian port of Anapa on the Black Sea Coast.
Support for NIS sovereignty
Until recently U.S. policy was to help the Newly Independent
States (NIS) to assert their independence and sovereignty and to escape
the influence of Russia, as expressed in a statement by U.S.
Ambassador-at-Large and Special Adviser for the NIS States S.
Sestanovich on U.S.
Policy Toward Russia from July 16th, 1998. The U.S. Department of
State criticized the Russian Federation's threat to the territorial
sovereignty of Georgia following the war in Chechnya. Click here for a
selection of Press statements by the U.S. Department of State on the
following topics:
4. Cooperation with the European Union and
the Council of Europe
Georgia was admitted to the Council of Europe in April 1999.
Accession of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been voted respectively on
January 17th and January 25th, 2001.
The European Union (EU) signed Partnership and Cooperation
Agreements with Armenia,Azerbaijan
and Georgia
during the visit of the three Caucasian presidents in Luxembourg in
April 1996, which entered into force on July 1st, 1999. The EU is
active in the Caucasus along two different lines:
- Cooperation with the OSCE: The EU cooperates with
the OSCE in the Caucasus by promoting confidence-building and through
the implementation of special actions in conflict areas. The European
Union supplied equipment to the Georgian Border Guard on the Chechen
border in order to support OSCE monitoring operations and signed an
assistance agreement with the OSCE in December 2001. The EU Presidency
issued two declarations respectively on August
12th and August
28th on the violations of the Georgian airspace by military
aircraft. The EU expressed its concern over the exacerbation of tension
between Russia and Georgia and declared its support to the Georgian
government in its efforts to restore order in the Pankisi valley.
- The TRACECA
Programme: The EU is supporting the project of a transport corridor
connecting Europe and Asia through the Caucasus. See the Basic Multilateral
Agreement on International Transport for the Development of the
Transport Corridor Europe-Caucasus-Asia, its Technical Annexes and
the Baku
Declaration issued at the Conference "TRACECA - Restoration of the
Historic Silk Route" held in Baku on September 8th, 1998.
II. The Conflict in Chechnya
In contrast to the states of the Southern Caucasus, Chechnya
remains part of the Russian Federation. Since the disintegration of the
Soviet Union, two wars have taken place between separatist rebels and
Russian federal forces in the region.
The first Chechen war broke out in December 1994, when Russia
intervened in the armed conflict between forces supporting President
General Dudayev, elected in 1991, and his Islamic fundamentalist
opponents. The Khasavjurt
Agreement, signed in August 1996, brought an end to the First
Chechen war. The Russian-Chechen
Treaty, signed in Moscow on May 12th, 1997, established the
framework for relations between the Russian Federation and the Chechen
Republic; however, a decision on the final status of the Republic was
postponed until five years later. As provided for in the Treaty,
Russian troops were withdrawn by the end of 1996.
Click here for further agreements between the Russian
Federation and the Chechen Republic:
The Second Chechen war was sparked in the summer of 1999, when Chechen
rebel forces lead by Basajev entered Dagestan and proclaimed an Islamic
republic. Russia intervened with a bombing campaign and eventually
deployed ground troops. Although Russian forces managed to expel the
rebels from Dagestan as well as from most of the territory in Chechnya,
some separatist elements still remain in the Argun valley.
1. International Reactions to the Conflict in Chechnya
In reaction to the war in Chechnya, the international
community has repeatedly condemned the Russian forces´ attacks on
civilian population as well as human rights violations committed by
them. A number of declarations by various international bodies call
upon Russia to search for a political solution to the conflict while
recognising its right to defend its territorial integrity. See Recommendation
1456 of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe of June
27th, 2001.
Further resolutions and declarations on Chechnya:
- Opinion
on the draft constitution of the Chechen Republic, adopted by the
Venice Commission at its 54th plenary meeting, Venice, March, 14th-15th
March, 2003
- Evaluation
of the prospects of a political solution to the conflict in the Chechen
Republic, Resolution 1315 of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe, 2003
- Statement by Deputy Assistant Secretary for European and
Eurasian Affairs S. Pifer: U.S. Policy on
Chechnya, May 9th, 2002
- European
Parliament Resolution on the Situation in Chechnya, April 8th, 2002
(pdf)
- European
Parliament Resolution on the Situation in Chechnya, February 15th,
2001 (pdf)
- NATO
Parliamentary Assembly Resolution on Chechnya, November 5th, 1999
- Resolution 1201 of
the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe on the Conflict in
Chechnya, November 4th, 1999 (pdf)
Russian military operations conducted in Chechnya have cast doubts as
to the good will of Russia's peacekeeping role in the Caucasus.
Three Chechen organizations - the Islamic International Brigade, the
Special Purpose Islamic Regiment, and the Riyadus-Salikhin
Reconnaissance and Sabotage Battalion of Chechen Martyrs - were
designated as foreign terrorist groups with links to Al Qaeda under Executive
Order 13224 on terrorist financing by the United States on February
14th, 2003 as declared in a press statement
by the U.S. Department of State Spokesman R. Boucher.
The constitutional referendum held on March 23rd, 2003 resulted in the
adoption of a new constitution.
It declares the Chechen Republic as being an integral part of the
Russian Federation. Strong objections were voiced by the Chechen
fighters and international bodies like the Council of Europe regarding
the validity of a referendum in times of war and the absence of
international observers to monitor it. The Legal Affairs Committee of
the Parliamentary of the Council of Europe called
for an international war crimes tribunal for Chechnya to be set up if
the "climate of impunity" should continue. Click here for the
corresponding report
on the human rights situation in the Chechen Republic of the
Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights by Rapporteur R. Binding
from March 13rd. A new peace proposal
was presented by the Chechen Foreign Minister I. Akhmadov at two press
conferences in Washington on March 18th.
2. The Position of Russia
Russia justifies its military intervention in Chechnya as the
defence of its territorial sovereignty and as an anti-terrorist
operation directed against "bandit formations", as proclaimed in the Statement of the
Russian State Duma on Chechnya. Click here for Resolution No 1040 of the
Russian Government on "Measures of Terrorism Control" of September
15th, 1999. Following the events of September 11th, Russia argues that
this intervention takes place in the context of the fight against
international terrorism. Click here for
The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs criticized in January 2002 the meeting
of a U.S. State Department Official with Chechen Official I. Akhmadov
and the reception
of Chechen Official A. Zakayev by the British Foreign Office as
contrary to the spirit of the coalition against terrorism by arguing of
direct links between the terrorist organisation Al Qaeda and Chechen
fighters.
Following the recent hostage incident in Moscow, when a group of armed
Chechen militants took some 700 hostages in a Moscow theater demanding
the withdrawal of the Russian troops from Chechnya, Russian President V.
Putin announced in a statement
at a meeting with government members on October 28th new measures aimed
at reinforcing the anti-terrorist campaign against the Chechen
separatists. These measures include broadening the power of the
military in the breakaway republic of Chechnya and increasing efforts
to close Chechen information centers abroad. Russian President V. Putin
further ordered the Chief General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces to
prepare for new anti-terrorist operations possibly to be conducted
abroad. On October 30th, A. Zakhayev, special envoy of Chechen
President A. Maskhadov, was arrested in Denmark at the request of
Russian authorities, while attending the Chechen World Congress.
However, the Danish authorities rejected the extradition request on
terrorism charges of the Russian authorities for lack of evidence and
released him on December 2nd.
See further official Russian documents and declarations on
Chechnya:
B. Speeches
1. Georgia
2. Armenia
3. Azerbaijan
4. Chechnya
5. Southern
Caucasus
1. Georgia
- Georgian President E. Shevarnadze: Statement at
the EAPC Summit Meeting, Prague, 22 November 2002
- Minister of Foreign Affairs of Georgia I. Menagarishvili: Speech
at the 57th Session of the UN General Assembly, New York, 19
September 2002
- Minister of Defence of Georgia D. Tevzadze: EAPCs Role in
the International Fight Against Terrorism, Meeting of the EAPC in
Defence Ministers session, Brussels, 7 June 2002
- Minister of Foreign Affairs of Georgia I. Menagarishvili: Statement at
the EAPC Foreign Ministers Meeting, Rekyavik, 15 May 2002
- Russian President V. Putin: Statement on
Meeting with Georgian President E. Shevarnadze, Almaty, 1 March
2002 (Russian)
- Georgian President E. Shevarnadze and Secretary of Defense
D. H. Rumsfeld: Joint
Press Conference, Tbilisi, 15 December 2001
- Georgian Minister of Foreign Affairs I.Menagarishvili: Speech at the
EAPC Foreign Ministers Meeting, 7 December 2001
- Georgian President E. Shevarnadze: "Searching
for Security in a Changing World", Harvard University, 3 October
2001
- Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs I. Ivanov: Interview
on Russian-Georgian relations, 28 May 2001
- Georgian Minister of Foreign Affairs Irakli Machavariani: Conflicts
in Georgia: Effects on Energy Transport and Regional Security,
Unpublished Rapporteur's Report, Caspian Studies Program, 24 May 2001
- Official Spokesman of Russia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs
A. Yakovenko: Interview
on Russia's Position on Georgian-Abkhaz Settlement, 28 April 2001
- Georgian President E. Shevarnadze: Address to
the Conference "Georgia and its Partners: Directions for the New
Millennium", Tbilisi, 5 October 2000
- Secretary General of NATO G. Robertson at the Conference "Caucasus
today: Perspectives of Regional Cooperation and Partnership with the
NATO", Tbilisi, 26 September 2000
2. Armenia
3. Azerbaijan
4. Chechnya
- Russian President V. Putin: Remarks
at Meeting with Head of the Administration of Chechnya Akhmed Kadyrov,
Moscow, 27 March 2003
- Russian President V. Putin: Speech
at Meeting with Spiritual Leaders of the Chechen Republic, Moscow,
17 March 2003
- Russian President V. Putin: Address
to the Inhabitants of the Chechen Republic, 17 March 2003
- Russian President V. Putin: Speech
at Meeting with Representatives of Chechen Public, Moscow, 10
November 2002
- Russian President V. Putin: Speech
at Meeting with Members of Chechen Diaspora in Russia, Moscow, 17
April 2002
- Russian President V. Putin: Speech at Meeting with FSB,
18 January 2002 (Russian)
- Secretary General of the Council of Europe W. Schwimmer: One
year presence in the Chechen Republic, Strasbourg, 28 June
2001
- Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs I. Ivanov: Speech at the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe about the situation in the North Caucasus, 26
January 2001
- Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs I. Ivanov: Speech
at the 106th Session of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of
Europe, Strasbourg, 11 May 2000
- Federal Assembly State Duma Chairman G. Seleznev: Address
at the Conference of Speakers and Presidents of the European
Parliamentary Assemblies, Strasbourg, 5-6 May 2000
- US Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott: Address on Russia about
Crisis in North Caucasus, Harvard University, 1 October 1999 (pdf)
5. Southern Caucasus
- Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs I. Ivanov: Remarks
at Press Conference Following Russia-NATO Council Meeting, Prague,
22 November 2002
- Russian President V. Putin: Opening
Remarks at Security Council Meeting, Moscow, 31 October 2002
- Deputy Assistant Secretary for European and Eurasian
Affairs L. Pascoe: Security,
Stability, Prosperity: Engaging the Eurasian Front-Line States, Yale
Center for the Study of Globalization, 20 September 2002
- Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs I. Ivanov: Remarks
at Press Conference Following CIS Foreign Ministers Council Session,
Moscow, 30 May 2002
- Russian President V. Putin: Statement at the
Caucasus Four Meeting of the National Security Council Secretaries of
Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia and the Russian Federation, Sochi, 30
March 2002 (Russian)
- Russian First Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs V.
Trubnikov: Interview
on the Occasion of the Tenth Anniversary of the Establishment of the CIS,
10 December 2001
- Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs I. Ivanov: Remarks
on Results of the Meeting of Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of
CIS Member States, Minsk, 31 May 2001
- Russian President V. Putin: Interview on the
Commonwealth of Independent States Collective Security Treaty,
Yerevan, 25 May 2001 (Russian)
- U.S. Deputy Secretary of State S. Talbott: A Farewell
to Flashman: American Policy in the Caucasus and Central Asia,
Adress at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies,
Baltimore, Maryland, 21 July 1997
C. Research Studies
1. Georgia
2. Regional
Conflicts
3. Southern
Caucasus
4. Caspian
Pipelines
5. Chechnya
1. Georgia
- Larsson, R.L.: Georgia´s
Missing Security Compass, Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 2 July 2003
- Darchiashvili, D.: Dilemmas
for the Future of Georgia, Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 21 May
2003
- Devdariani, J.: Georgia on a
Fault Line, Perspective, Vol. XIII/No. 3, January-February
2003
- Anjaparidze, Z.: Will
Georgia cut the Pankisi knot?, The Jamestown Foundation Russian and
Eurasian Review, Vol. 1/Issue 12, 19 November 2002
- Baran, Z.: Despite
ongoing Russian Pressure, Time for Real Change in Georgia, CSIS - Georgia
Update, 4 November 2002
- Di Puppo, L.: Die Pankisi
Schlucht und die russisch-georgischen Beziehungen, antimilitarismus
information 11/02, November 2002 (German only)
- Blank, S.: The
Russian Bourbons: Civil-Military Relations and Pressure on Georgia,
Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 9 October 2002
- Blum, D.: The
Russian-Georgian Crisis and Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, CSIS Russia/Eurasia
Program, PONARS Policy Memo No 252, October 2002 (pdf)
- Baev, P.: Russia´s
Virtual War against Georgia: Risks of a PR Offensive, CSIS
Russia/Eurasia Program, PONARS Policy Memo No 251, October 2002
(pdf)
- Devdariani, J.: Georgia Reacts to
Russian Pressure, Perspective, Vol. XIII/No. 1,
September-October 2002
- Hancilova, B.: Russia´s
Grab for Pankisi: Domestic Diversion or Oil Politics?, Central
Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 25 September 2002
- Bayran, Z.: Georgian-Russian
Tension on the Rise, CSIS - Georgia Update, 21 August
2002
- Devdariani, J./ Hancilova, B.: Georgia´s
Pankisi Gorge - Russian, U.S. and European Connections, Center for
European Policy Studies, Policy Brief No 23, June 2002 (pdf)
- Baev, P.: Georgia's
Pankisi Gorge and the Global War against Terrorism, Summary of
Event, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs: Caspian
Studies Program, 12 April 2002
- Baran, Z.: Tension
Increasing in Abkhazia - Georgia Restates Commitment to Non-Military
Solution, CSIS - Georgia Update, 1 April 2002
- Schmidt, Jürgen: Krieg
gegen den Terrorismus im Südkaukasus ? Die USA entsenden
Militärberater nach Georgien, SWP-Brennpunkte, Stiftung
Wissenschaft und Politik, 22 March 2002 (German only)
- Baran, Z.: United
States Will Help Georgia Fight Terrorism and Strengthen Internally,
CSIS - Georgia Update, 4 March 2002
- Blandy, C.W.: Pankisskoye Gorge:
Residents, Refugees & Fighters, Conflict Studies Research
Center, March 2002 (pdf)
- Kurtsikidze, S. / Chikovani, V.: Georgia´s
Pankisi Gorge: An Ethnographic Survey, Berkeley Program in Soviet
and Post-Soviet Studies Working Paper, Spring 2002 (pdf)
- Areshidze, I.G.: Helping Georgia ?,Perspective,
Vol. XII/No. 4, February-March 2002
- Blank, Stephen: The
Prospects of Russian-American Partnership: The Georgian Litmus Test,
Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 30 January 2002
- Pataraia, T.: Impact
of the Conflict in Chechnya on Georgian Security System, Caucasian
Institute For Peace, Democracy and Development, 14 March 2001
- Feinberg, J.: The Armed Forces
in Georgia, CDI Monograph, Center for Defense Information, March
1999 (pdf)
2. Regional conflicts
- Martirosyan, T.: Nagorno-Karabakh:
Toward Stalemate or Settlement ?, The Jamestown Foundation, Russia
and Eurasia Review, Vol 2, Issue 1, 7 January 2003
- Ismailzade, F: Latest
Efforts to Solve Nagorno-Karabakh Dispute Fails, Killing Talk of
Economic Cooperation, Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 9 October
2002
- Martirosyan, T.: Land
Swap in Nagorno-Karabakh: Much Noise over an Unrealistic Option,
Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 14 August 2002
- Ismailzade, F.: The
OSCE Minsk Group: Is There Space for Improvement ?, Central
Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 19 June 2002
- Shahnazarian, D.: Prospects
for the Peaceful Resolution of the Nagorno Karabagh Problem,
Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 5 June 2002
- Baev, P./Koehler, J./Zuercher, C.: Civil
Wars in the Caucasus, World Bank Development Economics Research
Group (DECRG)/Yale University, UN Studies Program, 15 March 2002
- Cvetovski, N.: The Georgian-South
Ossetian Conflict, Dissertation Aalborg University, 13 March 2002
- Sabanadze, N: International
Involvement in the South Caucasus, European Center for Minority
Issues, ECMI Working Paper # 15, February 2002 (pdf)
- Amirbayov, E.: Shusha's
Pivotal Role in a Nagorno-Karabagh Settlement, Belfer Center for
Science and International Affairs: Caspian Studies Program Policy Brief
No 6, December 2001 (pdf)
- Darchiashvili, D.: Some
considerations about ways to solve the conflict in Abkhazia,
Caucasian Institute For Peace, Democracy and Development, 14 March 2001
- Tavitian, N.: An
irrestible force meets an immovable object: The Minsk Group negotiations
on the status of Nagorno Karabakh, Woodrow Wilson School of Public
and International Affairs, Case Studies in International Diplomacy, Case
1/00, 2000 (pdf)
- Cohen, J. (ed): A Question
of Sovereignty: The Georgia-Abkhazia Peace Process, Accord 7,
Conciliation Resources, September 1999 (Russian
version)
- Coppieters, B. / Darchiashvili, D. / Akaba, N. (eds): Federal
Practice - Exploring alternatives for Georgia and Abkhazia, Vrije
Universiteit Brussel University Press, 1999
- Carley, P.: Nagorno-Karabakh:
Searching for a Solution, United States Institute of Peace,
Peaceworks No. 25, December 1998
- Coppieters, B. / Nodia, G. / Anchabadze, Y. (eds): Georgians
and Abkhazians. The Search for a Peace Settlement, Caucasian
Regional Studies Vol. 3, No 2 & 3, August 1998
- Derluguian, G.M.: The
Tale of Two Resorts: Abkhazia and Ajaria Before and Since and the
Soviet Collapse, in: Crawford, B. / Lipschutz, R.D. (ed.): The
Myth of "Ethnic Conflict": Politics, Economics, and "Cultural" Violence,
University of California International and Area Studies Digital
Collection, Research Series #98, 1998 (pdf)
- Manutscharjan, A.: Der
Konflikt um Berg-Karabach: Grundproblematik und Lösungsperspektiven,
ZEI Discussion Paper C 18, Center for European Integration Studies,
1998 (pdf) (German only)
- Hansen, G.: Humanitarian
Action in the Caucasus: A Guide for Practitioners, Occasional Paper
No 32, Watson Institute for International Studies, 1998 (pdf)
- Nodia, G.: Causes
and Visions of Conflict in Abkhazia, Berkeley Program in Soviet and
Post-Soviet Studies Working Paper, Winter 1997-1998 (pdf)
- MacFarlane, N. / Minear, L. / Shenfield, S.: Armed
Conflict in Georgia: A Case Study in Humanitarian Action and
Peacekeeping, Occasional Paper No 21, Watson Institute for
International Studies, 1996 (pdf)
- MacFarlane, N. / Minear, L: Humanitarian
Action and Politics: The Case of Nagorno-Karabakh, Occasional Paper
No 25, Watson Institute for International Studies, 1996 (pdf)
3. Southern Caucasus
- Huseyinov, T.: Towards
Crafting a National Security Doctrine in Azerbaijan, Central
Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 26 March 2003
- Ismailova, G.: Will
Azerbaijan Join The War on Iraq?, Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 29
January 2003
- Cohen, A.: Regional
Security Implications of the Moscow Hostage-Taking, Central
Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 20 November 2002
- Devdariani, J./ Hancilova, B.: U.S.
Involvement in Caucasian Security Architecture Grows, Central
Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 23 October 2002
- "South
Caucasus and the Caspian: A View from Baku", Adress by I. Aliyev,
Summary of Event, BSCIA Caspian Studies Program, 22 October 2002
- Linotte, D./ Aune, L.: The
GUUAM Free Trade Agreement: A Concrete Step Forward, Central
Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 25 September 2002
- Blank, S.: The
Future of Transcaspian Security, U.S. Army War College, Strategic
Studies Institute Regional Studies, August 2002 (pdf)
- Valiyev, A.: Azerbaijani-Turkmen
Relations: Quarreling Brothers, Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 31
July 2002
- Sherr, J.: Democracy in the Black
Sea Region: The Missing Link in Regional Security, Conflict Studies
Research Center, July 2002 (pdf)
- Blank, S.: U.S.
Military in Azerbaijan To Counter Iranian Threat, Central
Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 10 April 2002
- Ulusoy, H.: A New
Formation in the Black Sea: BLACKSEAFOR, Perceptions, Vol VI / No
4, December 2001- February 2002
- Ferrari, M.-P.: Les
Républiques du Caucase entre passé soviétique et
mondialisation, Mémoire, Institut Européen des Hautes
Études Internationales Nices, 2002 (pdf) (French only)
- Black
Sea Basin regional profile: The security situation and the
region-building evolution of South-Eastern Europe, Institute for
Security and International Studies, Research Study 13, January-March
2002
- Shaffer, B.: U.S.
Policy toward the Caspian Region: Recommendations for the Bush
Administration, Belfer Center for Science and International
Affairs: Caspian Studies Program, July 2001
- Baev, P.: Russia
Refocuses its Policies in the Southern Caucasus, Belfer Center for
Science and International Affairs: Caspian Studies Program, July 2001
- U.S.-Russian
Relations: Implications for the Caspian Region (Conference Report),
Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs: Caspian Studies
Program, 11 July 2001
- Fairbanks, C. / Nelson, R. / Starr, F. / Weisbrode, K.: Strategic
Assessment of Central Eurasia, The Atlantic Council of the United
States / Central Asia-Caucasus Institute, SAIS, January 2001 (pdf)
- Valášek, T.: Military
Cooperation between Georgia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and
Moldova in the GUUAM Framework, Belfer Center for Science and
International Affairs: Caspian Studies Program Policy Brief No 2,
December 2000
- Smith, M.: Russian
Foreign Policy 2000: The Near Abroad, Conflict Studies Research
Center, December 2000 (pdf)
- Central
Asia and the South Caucasus: Reorientations, Internal Transitions, and
Strategic Dynamics, Conference Report, National Intelligence
Council, October 2000
- Blank, S.: U.S. Military
Engagement with Transcaucasia and Central Asia, Strategic Studies
Institute, US Army War College, June 2000 (pdf)
- Herd, G. / Moustakis, F.: Black Sea Geopolitics:
Dilemmas, Obstacles & Prospects, Conflict Studies Research
Center, June 2000
- A
Stability Pact for the Caucasus, Center for European Policy
Studies, Working Document No.145, May 2000
- New
Political Aspects of GUUAM development, Monitoring - Foreign &
Security Policy of Ukraine, Occasional Paper 48/00, 2000
- Oliker, O.: Ukraine and the
Caspian - An Opportunity for the United States, RAND - Center for
Russia and Eurasia, 2000
- Lanskoy, M.: Anti-Terrorism
as Pretext: Russia taking Aim at the South Caucasus?, Central
Asia-Caucasus Analyst, February 2000
- Thomas, T.: Russian National
Interests and the Caspian Sea, Foreign Military Studies Office,
1999-2000
- Alieva, L.: Reshaping
Eurasia: Foreign Policy Strategies and Leadership Assets in post-Soviet
South Caucasus, Berkeley Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies
Working Paper Series, Winter 1999-2000 (pdf)
- Sokolsky, R. / Charlick-Paley, T.: NATO and Caspian
security: A Mission Too Far?, RAND - Center for Russia and Eurasia,
1999
- Blank, S.: NATO after
Enlargement: New Challenges, New Missions, New Forces, Strategic
Studies Institute, US Army War College, September 1998 (pdf)
- Garnett, S.W.: Russia
and its Borderlands: A Geography of Violence, U.S. Army War
College, Parameters, Spring 1997
- Hopmann, T./Shenfield, S./Arel, D.: Integration
and Disintegration in the Former Soviet Union: Implications for
Regional and Global Security, Occasional Paper No 30, Watson
Institute for International Studies, 1997 (pdf)
4. Caspian Pipelines
- Tsereteli, M.: Russia
Close to Regaining Control over Strategic Georgian Assets, Central
Asia - Caucasus Analyst, 11 September 2002
- Aliriza, B. / Ciftci, S.: Turkey´s Caspian
Energy Quandry, CSIS - Caspian Energy Update, 13 August
2002 (pdf)
- Azerbaijan,
Georgia, Turkey Pipelines project - Georgian Section, International
Fact Finding Mission Preliminary Report, CEE Bankwatch Network, 31 July
2002 (pdf)
- Allison, G. / Grennan, J.: U.S.
Policy on Russian and Caspian Oil Exports: Addressing America's Oil
Addiction, Discussion Paper, Belfer Center for Science and
International Affairs: Caspian Studies Program, July 2002 (pdf)
- Spector, R.: The
North-South Transport Corridor, Central Asia - Caucasus Analyst, 3
July 2002
- Müller, F.: Entwicklungspotentiale
und Wirtschaftsinteressen, Jour Fixe Zentralasien / Kaukasus,
SWP-Brennpunkte, Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik, 16 June 2002
(German only)
- Kiesling, L. / Becker, J.: Russia's
Role in the Shifting World Oil Market, Belfer Center for Science
and International Affairs: Caspian Studies Program Policy Brief No 8,
May 2002
- Kochladze, M.: Pocketing Caspian
Black Gold: Who are the Real Beneficiaries of Oil Infrastructure
Development in Georgia and Azerbaijan?, Transnational Institute /
CEE Bankwatch Network, April 2002 (pdf)
- Udum, S.: The
Politics of Caspian Region Energy Ressources: A Challenge for Turkish
Foreign Policy, Perceptions, Vol VI / No 4, December 2001- February
2002
- Cutler, R.: The
Caspian Pipeline Consortium Beats the Skeptics, Central Asia -
Caucasus Analyst, 12 September 2001
- McKeeby, D.: "Crude Business":
Corruption and Caspian Oil, CSIS - Caspian Energy Update, 1
September 2001
- Pamir, N.: Turkey: The
Key to Caspian Oil and Gas, IASPS Strategic Research Papers,
September 2001 (pdf)
- Allison, G. / Van Buskirk, E.: Mini-Case and Illustrative
Paradigm, U.S. Policy on Caspian Energy Development and Exports,
Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs: Caspian Studies
Program, May 2001 (pdf)
- Walters, J.: Caspian
Oil and Gas: Mitigating Political Risks for Private Participation,
World Bank Group, June 2000 (pdf)
- Cordersman, A.H.: The
US Government View of Energy Developments in the Caspian, Central Asia
and Iran, CSIS, 27 April 2000 (pdf)
- Rubin, Vadim: The Geopolitics of
Energy Development in the Caspian Region: Regional Cooperation or
Conflict ?, Center for International Security and Cooperation
(CISAC), December 1999 (pdf)
- Rosenthal, S.: NATO, Russia,
and Oil pipelines, Stratfor, 15 June 1999
- Joseph, J.: Pipeline
Diplomacy: The Clinton Administration's Fight for Baku-Ceyhan,
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Case Studies
in International Diplomacy, Case 1/99, 1999 (pdf)
- Cohen, A.: The
New "Great Game": Oil Politics in the Caucasus and Central Asia,
Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 1065, 25 January 1996 (pdf)
- Raptis, K.: Nagorno
Karabakh and the Eurasian Transport Corridor, Occasional Paper,
Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP), March
1998 (pdf)
- Oil and
Gas Resources of the Fergana Basin (Uzbekistan, Tadzhikistan, and
Kyrgyzstan), Energy Information Administration, US Department of
Energy, December 1994 (pdf)
5. Chechnya
- Chiharro, Roustam: More Questions
about Terrorism, Perspective, Vol. XIII/No. 3,
January-February 2003
- de Haas, M.: The Use of Russian
Airpower in the Second Chechen War, Conflict Studies Research
Center, January 2003 (pdf)
- Mc Gregor, A.: Amir
Abu Al-Walid and the Islamic Component of the Chechen War, Central
Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 26 February 2003
- Petrov, N.: Troshev
Ouster and the Chechnya Policy, The Jamestown Foundation Russian
and Eurasian Review, Vol 2/Issue 3, 4 February 2003
- Trifonov, D.: Did
the Sacking of General Troshev Signal a Policy Change in Chechnya?,
Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 15 January 2003
- Trifonov, D.: Moscow
Hostage Crisis Prompts New Offensive in Chechnya, Central
Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 18 December 2002
- Baev, P.: A
Useful War?, Russia and Eurasia Review, Vol 1, Issue 14, 13 December
2002
- Halbach, U.: Krieg
am Rande Europas - Der Tschetschenienkonflikt in neuem Licht?,
SWP-Aktuell 45/02, Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik, November 2002
(German only) (pdf)
- Blank, S.: The
Chechen Theater of War, Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 23 October
2002
- Towards
Peace in Chechnya, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
Summary of Event, 23 October 2002
- Cornell, S.: Is
Russia´s Pressure on Georgia Backfiring in Chechnya?, Central
Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 9 October 2002
- Malashenko, A./Trenin, D.: The
Time of the South: Russia in Chechnya, Chechnya in Russia, Carnegie
Moscow Center, September 2002 (pdf) (Russian)
- Chechnya
in a New Global Context, IREX Policy Forum, 4 March 2002 (pdf)
- Akhmadov, Ilias: The
Prospects for Peace in Chechnya, Belfer Center for Science and
International Affairs: Caspian Studies Program, 4 February 2002
- Kaliyev, R.: Chechen Reality: GRU
vs. FSB, Perspective, Vol. XII/No. 1, September-October 2001
- Kaliyev, R.: The Particulars of
a `Cleansing´, Perspective, Vol. XII/No. 1,
September-October 2001
- Blandy, C.W.: Chechnya: Federal
Retribution part 1/ part 2/ part3, Conflict
Studies Research Center, March 2001 (pdf)
- Thomas, J.: President Putin´s
North Caucasus Challenge, CSIS Russia/Eurasia Program, Islam
Program, March 2001 (pdf)
- Arbatov, A.: The
Transformation of Russian Military Doctrine: Lessons learned from
Kosovo and Chechnya, Marshall Center Papers, No. 2, 2001 (pdf)
- Trenin, D.: Chechnya:
Effects of the War and Prospects for Peace, Carnegie Moscow Center,
January 2000
- Baev, P.: Will
Russia Go for a Military Victory in Chechnya ?, Conflict Studies
Research Center, January 2000 (pdf)
- Jonson, L. / Esenov, M. (ed.): Chechnya: The
International Community and Strategies for Peace and Stability, The
Swedish Institute of International Affairs / Central Asia and the
Caucasus, Stockholm 2000
- Walker, E.W.: Russia's
soft Underbelly: The Stability of Instability in Dagestan, Berkeley
Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies Working Paper, Winter
1999-2000 (pdf)
- Cohen, A.: The
War in Chechnya: What is at Stake?, Heritage Foundation
Backgrounder No. 1339, 30 November 1999 (pdf)
- Thomas, T.L.: The
Battle of Grozny: Deadly Classroom for Urban Combat, U.S. Army War
College, Parameters, Vol. XXIX, No. 2, Summer 1999
- Hansen, G. / Seely, R.: War
and Humanitarian Action in Chechnya, Occasional Paper No 26, Watson
Institute for International Studies, 1996
D. Parliamentary Reports
- The
human rights situation in the Chechen Republic, Committee on Legal
Affairs and Human Rights, Parliamentary Assembly oh the Council of
Europe, 13 March 2003
- New Developments in Russia, Belarus and Ukraine, Political
Committee Reports, WEU Assembly, 4 December 2001. Excerpts on Conflict
in Chechnya and Russia's
Relations with Georgia.
- The
Role of NATO in the Security of the Black Sea Region, Rose Roth
Seminar, NATO Parliamentary Assembly, 25-27 October 2001
- NATO
Relations with EAPC Member Countries, Political Committee Reports,
NATO Parliamentary Assembly, November 2000
- The
Conflict in Chechnya, Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
Europe, 25 January 2000
- The
Security Landscape in Azerbaijan, Secretariat Report of NATO
Parliamentary Assembly, 12-14 May 1999
- Azerbaijan's
necessity of a special partnership role with NATO, Secretariat
Report of NATO Parliamentary Assembly, 22-24 October 1998
- The situation in central Asia and the Caucasus and European
Security [Part
1] [Part
2] [Part
3] , Political Committee Reports, WEU Assembly, 19 November 1997
- Economic
and Strategic Stakes in Caspian Energy Markets, Economic Committee
Reports, NATO Parliamentary Assembly, 23 September 1999
- Conflicts in
Transcaucasia, Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, 10
April 1997 (pdf)
- Report on the
conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe, 17 October 1994 (pdf)
E. Links
EurasiaNet provides information and analysis
about political, economic, environmental and social developments in the
countries of Central Asia and the Caucasus, as well as in Russia, the
Middle East, and Southwest Asia. |
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Civil Georgia, an online magazine and
information service, provides information about Georgia. |
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The weekly Caucasus Reporting Service provides
on-the-spot coverage and an unbiased analysis of events across the
region. |
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