Steve LeVine covers foreign affairs for BusinessWeek. He previously was correspondent for Central Asia and the Caucasus for The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times for 11 years. His first book, The Oil and the Glory, a history of the former Soviet Union through the lens of oil, was published in October 2007. Putin’s Labyrinth, his new book, profiles Russia through the lives and deaths of six Russians. It was released this week.

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A Blog on Russia, Central Asia and
the Caucasus

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Is America's Dethroned King of Kazakhstan on his Way Back?

After four years of ignominious exile from his powerful perch in Kazakhstan, New York lawyer James Giffen may have an opening for a revival.

Those who have read The Oil and the Glory are familiar with the outsized Giffen, its garrulous principal character. Born to relatively humble roots in Stockton, Ca., the 66-year-old Giffen had a spectacular rise after marrying into American society, eventually becoming the go-to man for American blue chip companies wishing to trade in the Soviet Union. After the Soviet collapse, Giffen gained a similar gatekeeper role in Kazakhstan, where at one point he controlled the world's biggest oil deals.

All that crashed in 2003 with Giffen's indictment in the largest foreign bribery case in U.S. history, what's known in Central Asia as Kazakhgate. On Friday, there's a hearing in New York in the case, in which Giffen is accused of channeling some $80 million in payments from U.S. oil companies to Kazakhs including President Nursultan Nazarbayev and former Prime Minister Nurlan Balgimbayev. Meanwhile Giffen is stuck in New York, his passport confiscated, and by appearances no longer in contact with his old pal Nazarbayev.

It's Balgimbayev who's the key to my suspicion that Giffen may regain, or have already regained, some influence in Kazakhstan. Yesterday, Farkhad Sharip at the Jamestown Monitor reported that Nazarbayev had appointed Balgimbayev as an adviser. And that is Giffen's opening.

The 60-year-old Balgimbayev lost his power at about the same time as his mentor, Giffen. The two were rightly seen as a pair, with Giffen providing intellectual heft to Balgimbayev -- who headed Kazakhstan's oil industry when he wasn't prime minister -- and Balgimbayev supplying Giffen a place to channel his genius. Balgimbayev gave Giffen a hilltop house overlooking Almaty right next door to his, the properties connected by a gate. After the U.S. bribery scandal, Balgimbayev also vanished; some said he had moved to Dubai for awhile.

But now that he's back, I'd say Giffen may not be far behind.

As long as we're on the topic, I had already sensed Giffen's presence over the last couple of months in Kazakh affairs, specifically in the country's dispute with the Italian-led consortium developing the Kashagan oilfield.

The original Kazakh demands, and the style in which they've pursued them, remind me of previous, Giffen-led battles with the companies. One of Giffen's signatures is the use of meticulously prepared reports, done usually by western contractors in London and elsewhere, containing every conceivable profit formula, cross referenced for every conceivable production volume, and so on, all of them beautifully packaged in color and with the rest of the graphic design bells and whistles. Another is the juxtapositioning of these reports with extremely well-reasoned, breathtakingly ambitious, hardball demands.

Sound familiar?

We know that the Kazakhs have allowed Giffen's company, Mercator, to continue operating in Kazakhstan because they don't want him to become tempted to spill some of his many secrets about the First Family. So it's not a stretch to imagine the former King of Kazakhstan providing expert strategic advice from his distant exile, either directly or through his representatives.

Whatever the case, the Kazakhs have clearly been holding their own.

Photo: Andy Freeburg

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