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

Monday, February 4, 2008

Becoming Quieter on the Caspian

The prize in the Pipeline War is Turkmenistan. Russia and China -- especially the former -- are far ahead of the West in the contest. One reason has been their willingness to look the other way on the issues of human rights, rigged elections and presidents for life.

Chris Chivers of The New York Times weighed in over the weekend on the American response, which is to lower the volume on the moralizing.

There has been a U.S. policy shift on the Caspian, and that's to tell the presidents that they don't have to be like Norway to get along with Washington. As long as they stay on the good-behavior -end of the spectrum of the generally badboy former Soviet states, they're all right.

Some quiet diplomacy is needed in the region. The U.S. is right to give the benefit of the doubt, for instance, to Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov as long as he continues to methodically dismantle the legacy of his predecessor, Saparmurat Niyazov.

The aim of the U.S. policy is to help to continue to carve out some long-term breathing room for the region from Russia by championing the trans-Caspian and Nabucco natural gas pipelines to Europe. So far, Turkmenistan has been more favorable toward Russia's competing system, the Nord Stream and South Stream pipelines.

Yet there's a line not to be crossed.

One is pandering. Chivers provides an astonishing public remark by Julie Finley, U.S. ambassador to the OSCE. Speaking to Kazakhs in Europe a couple of years ago about their seizure of unflattering newspapers, Finley said, “Maybe you saved some readers some waste of time, anyway.”

And a second is Uzbekistan. Chivers describes a recent visit to Tashkent by the apparently irrepressible Admiral William Fallon, commander of the U.S. Central Command. Fallon is seeking to help thaw currently frozen relations with Uzbekistan's Islam Karimov, who holds the distinction of being the former Soviet Union's most brutal dictator.

“I told them that we couldn’t do much about the past, but that we could look at the future,” Fallon said of his discussion with the Uzbeks.

With respect, that's incorrect, Admiral Fallon. There is no respectable future relationship with Karimov until, for starters, he proves that he has stopped torturing and killing his people.

Unlike some of the region's other leaders, Karimov took no road to post-Soviet ruthlessness. He began there. My own initial sign of that was back in January 1992, two weeks after the Soviet collapse, when I crossed the street from the Hotel Uzbekistan to talk to the Pulatov brothers at Birlik, the then-Tashkent-based opposition group whose office was across the street. At the bottom of the stairs was a pool of blood. Inside, I learned from the more active of the two Pulatovs -- Abdumanop -- that his brother Abdurahim had been knocked on the head with a pipe by an unknown assailant.

The situation has declined since. Karimov regards entreaties by westerners such as Fallon not as an opportunity to re-open a perhaps positive economic path for his people, but a display of weakness, evidence that he still calls the shots in the dance with the foreigners.

It will probably require Karimov going the way of Niyazov before normal relations with the West can resume.

Photo: saidanddone
Rights: Creative Commons

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posted by Steve at

9 Comments:

Blogger Chris said...

Uzbekistan pardoned two human rights activists on Monday.

Quid pro huh?

February 4, 2008 8:42 AM  
Anonymous James said...

Great post, Steve. Perhaps you recall that amusing Harper's article back when Ken Silverstein posed as a representative for the Turkmenistan government seeking lobbyists in Washington, and then described the program proposals and unflattering conduct of some well known consultants.

According to these candid camera lobbyists, their key hook to get Washington to ignore human rights abuses was to concentrate on "energy security."

More than just a kernel of truth in that satire....

February 4, 2008 10:47 AM  
Anonymous pms said...

steve, I don't think the US has ever told the Caspian heads of state to "behave like Norway". Just look at the way Washington rolled out the carpet for Ilham Aliev just a few months after the shamelessly rigged parl. elections of autumn, 2005. I'm not sure if the US actually has a policy towards the Caspian -- they seem to be making it up as they go along.

February 4, 2008 11:36 AM  
Blogger fh said...

Genuinely troubling stuff. We flatter some and demonize others depending on our needs and priorities, inviting cynicism and disbelief amongst all. On a similar subject, a piece today by Christopher Hitchens on Slate regarding N. Korea: http://www.slate.com/id/2183541/fr/.

February 4, 2008 2:03 PM  
Blogger fh said...

James - Funny, but not a satire. http://www.harpers.org/archive/2007/07/0081591

Ken's fictitious "Maldon Group" fooled DC lobbyists because it is indistinguishable from scores of murky but real firms I've personally encountered over the years. I still have their business cards. I could send you their URLs. They mostly look like http://themaldongroup.com.

February 4, 2008 2:32 PM  
Blogger Steve said...

Silverstein has done a masterful job on his offbeat coverage of the 'Stans. And, Borat-like, using them as a foil to satire Americans. Thanks for the comments, Steve

February 4, 2008 4:10 PM  
Anonymous laszlo tenkes said...

Steve:

Nice post and I have also enjoyed the New York Times article.

The policy options in the Caspian region are indeed sombre. One can be forgiven for feeling a bit mixed up and some smart manoeuvring is probably unavoidable.

I reckon the approach that is being undertaken is correct but its application is wrong. The new policy ought to centre on building closer and better ties with Kazakhstan. That country will be the biggest economy in the region very soon. That means it will also be influencing everyone else there. Kazakhstan also has a small population. Pair that with the fast GDP growth. Then what you have got is the indication that Kazakhstan could become a middle income country in just a few years. The US can help. Instead of wagging their finger at their democracy record, the West can push the Kazakhs to invest their petrodollars in non-energy sectors. Especially, into schools and hospitals. That will create a large middle class in no time. Countries with a large middle class tend to be more stable and more prone to liberalise politically.

The US should also focus on Azerbajian, for the same reasons and in the same manner.

On Turkmenistan, I am with you. Give the man a chance to show what he means really. Use any opening to increase contacts with the outside world without trying to push through big political changes. Just help with educational and cultural programmes for now.

Building ties with Uzbekistan is pointless under the current regime there. They have gone back politically even compared to the late Soviet era. Under Gorbachev, apparently, there more freedoms there: you mention an opposition party actually having an office there. Economically, they have refused to reform. All Western companies, the IMF and the World Bank have pulled out. Uzbekistan will not be a reasonable partner with the current leadership. The US will end up being just a cash machine and the payback will be nil.

February 4, 2008 5:51 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

"The aim of the U.S. policy is to help to continue to carve out some long-term breathing room for the region from Russia by championing the trans-Caspian and Nabucco natural gas pipelines to Europe."

Why?

Is there the slightest reason to believe that the United States, in its present financial condition, can match the Russian government in the credibility of the financial committments it makes? Is there the slightest reason to believe this will do anything but enrich a few elites? Will this effect the fact that everything these countries import from anywhere but their immediate neighbors will either have to come expensively by air or, much less expensively, over Russian rails? Can you seriously believe that these pipelines will accomplish anything other than to deprive Ukraine of the cheap Central Asian gas they have come to depend on?

Face facts. The United States has no credibility in Central Asia, especially given the growing liklihood that we are going to get kicked out of Afghanistan, with a broken NATO alliance trailing behind us. Yes, that will do wonders for our position in Central Asia.

February 5, 2008 6:05 AM  
Blogger Steve said...

Hi Anonymous. "Russia" is not putting up financial commitments to any of the countries. Like the U.S. and the EU, it is suggesting that these countries favor their home companies and preferred pipeline routes. In Russia's case, Gazprom (state-owned but with its own financial wherewithal separate from the government) would be putting its name behind the construction of Nord Stream, etc. In the case of the trans-Caspian and Nabucco, if one went on the Baku model, then take-or-pay contracts would be collatoral for small EBRD loans that would provide the political risk cover for commercial banks to finance. And perhaps Export-Import Bank seed money for engineering studies.

I did see Ukraine's competing proposal for a White Stream line. It's interesting. But the economic leverage to be derived from alternative energy routes to the Russian one is not parochial, or beneficial only to elites.

Nor does the introduction of the market to east Caspian energy economics imply a divorce from the reality of trade with Russia. Russia will remain a prime trading partner with Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan (with China coming up fast). But there will be more equilibrium in the relationship.

Thanks for the comment and best, Steve

February 5, 2008 1:27 PM  

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