News: Bush Creating New Position Of Senior Envoy For Russia, Caspian
The Bush Administration is about to appoint a retired senior diplomat to a newly created position to try to advance ambitious U.S. aims in Russia and on the Caspian Sea. Like the 11th-hour push on Israel and Palestine, it's an example of Bush's determination to stay relevant by attacking the thorny global problems he largely sidestepped until now.Thomas Pickering, a former U.S. ambassador to Russia and among the country's most respected statesmen, has been asked to return to the State Department as a special envoy with a broad portfolio in the Eurasian region, according to people with whom I've been talking.
I met Pickering in 1993, when he was ambassador to Russia, and he's an extremely smooth, well-connected, mannerly fellow. He's suited for his leading tasks -- to help smooth over some of the friction with Russia's Vladimir Putin, and work on getting Caspian natural gas to the West via a trans-Caspian pipeline from Turkmenistan.
Pickering's deputy would be Steven Mann, a Central Asia specialist with among the longest titles in the State Department -- principal deputy assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asian affairs. I've met Mann numerous times, and find him extremely knowledgeable and realistic without being cynical.
The twin appointments amount to a resurrection -- and elevation -- of the old job of Caspian Sea czar, a post that Mann previously held. It's a Clinton-era position that Colin Powell abolished as unnecessary when he became secretary of state.
One seasoned Washington hand with whom I exchanged messages said the Bush administration is re-inventing the job because it doesn't know what else to do in Moscow and on the Caspian. "They have run out of options and need someone with more gravitas to show they are serious and not irrelevant," he said. " The question is why Pickering would come back for this."
I'd say Condoleeza Rice must have seriously flattered Pickering that only he could salvage the situation. But we will wait for Pickering himself to speak after his appointment becomes official.
Labels: Caspian, central asia, Nabucco, oil, oil book, oil pipelines, pickering, Putin, Russia, Turkmenistan


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