
Latest Eurasia Daily Monitor Articles
WILL FIRED GEORGIAN FOREIGN MINISTER BECOME OPPOSITION LEADER?
Late on Wednesday, October 19, Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Nogaideli announced the dismissal of Foreign Minister Salome Zourabichvili. Nogaideli, who was forced to postpone a scheduled trip to the United States because of the situation, said that he had experienced "a very difficult conversation" with... MORE
GEORGIA DE-FREEZES THE CONFLICT-SETTLEMENT PROCESSES
Interviewed in the October 17 issue of the Kyiv daily Den, Georgia's National Security Council Secretary Gela Bezhuashvili underscores a point that many in Russia and some in international diplomatic chancelleries seem disinclined to acknowledge openly: Georgia has succeeded in "de-freezing" the conflict-settlement processes regarding... MORE
RUSSIAN FOREIGN POLICY EXPERTS DEBATE INTERACTION WITH AMERICA IN GREATER CENTRAL ASIA
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov's trip to Central Asia on October 20-21 reinvigorated the already lively discussion over the true nature of Russian-U.S. interaction in the strategic region. Most Moscow analysts tend to view Lavrov's quick regional tour as the Kremlin's "asymmetrical response" to U.S.... MORE
KABARDINO-BALKARIA FACES LONG-TERM GUERRILLA WAR
Russian authorities are hailing their handling of the October 13 rebel attack on Nalchik, the capital of the Caucasian republic of Kabardino-Balkaria, as a "great success." Russian Minister of Internal Affairs Rashid Nurgaliev called the attack an "act of desperation" on the part of the... MORE
REBUFF FROM EU PUSHES KARIMOV FURTHER INTO MOSCOW’S ARMS
Meeting October 3 Luxembourg, the European Union Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs voted to impose sanctions against Uzbekistan. They banned the sale of weapons and military equipment to Tashkent, specifically anything that the army could use for "internal repressions," and sought to also reduce... MORE
ASTANA TAKES NEW DIRECTION FOR RAILWAY CONSTRUCTION
In addition to developing the Aktau seaport on the Caspian Sea, Kazakhstan is also putting more emphasis on developing domestic and international rail lines. In recent years the government has made significant strides toward reducing Kazakhstan's dependence on the Russian transport network. A railway line... MORE
TNK-BP, LUKOIL, ROSNEFT VIE FOR YUKOS LEGACY IN LITHUANIA
On October 18, the Lithuanian government decided unanimously to begin negotiations with TNK-BP regarding the sale of a majority stake in Lithuania's oil-refining and oil-transport sector, the last major remaining asset of Yukos. The government's decision follows Prime Minister Algirdas Brazauskas' unexpected October 11 statement... MORE
GULIYEV STOPPED BEFORE REACHING BAKU
As Azerbaijan's November 6 parliamentary elections draw near, public interest in election-related events has increased dramatically. Perhaps counting on this heightened public attention, the chairman of the Azerbaijan Democratic Party (ADP), Rasul Guliyev, recently announced that he would return to his country. Guliyev has been... MORE
“MULTICULTURALISM” FORUM GATHERS MOSCOW’S SUPPORTERS
On October 15 in Moscow, officials from the presidential administration and other Kremlin-connected figures hosted a "Forum on Democracy and Multiculturalism in the Euro-East." The participants included representatives of Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Transnistria, and Karabakh, activists of pro-Russia parties and associations from several post-Soviet countries,... MORE
GEORGIA’S OPPOSITION TAKES STEPS AGAINST SAAKASHVILI, SOROS
Two separate events affecting Georgia's opposition groups vividly demonstrate the extremes of contemporary political life in Georgia. On October 17, the Conservative and Republican parties announced the establishment of a new parliamentary faction composed of former members of the ruling National Movement and former allies... MORE