Latest Eurasia Daily Monitor Articles

KAZAKHSTAN’S TRANS-CASPIAN OIL EXPORT PLANS AND ITS COMPETITORS

Interviewed in the current issue of the Caspian Investor monthly, Kazakhstan's Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Vladimir Shkolnik confirms that negotiations are advancing toward an agreement on the transportation of oil from Kazakhstan to Azerbaijan and through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (Turkey) pipeline. At the same time,... MORE

CELL PHONE NETWORK FAILURE HIGHLIGHTS ARMENIA’S TELECOM WOES

The long-awaited liberalization of Armenia's underdeveloped mobile phone sector could not have had a more unexpected and illogical outcome: the near-collapse of the country's main wireless network. ArmenTel, the unpopular national telecommunications monopoly that operates the system, has still not clearly explained the causes of... MORE

KAZAKHSTAN QUESTIONS U.S. MILITARY ROLE IN CENTRAL ASIA

Kazakhstan's delicate foreign policy, predicated upon balancing its relations among China, Russia, and the United States, has come under increased pressure both from its involvement in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and the growing tendency within the region to question the long-term strategic role of... MORE

CHINA, INDIA LINE UP TO COMPETE FOR KAZAKH OIL DEALS

Kazakhstan's ongoing oil saga has experienced an unexpected turn of events in recent weeks. First, Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources Vladimir Shkolnik broke the news that Kazakhstan would sign an agreement on joining the much-debated Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline in October 2005. As recently as his... MORE

“PEACEKEEPERS” IN ABKHAZIA ARE OTHERWISE ENGAGED

Lt.-General Valery Yevnevich, responsible for "peacekeeping" operations as deputy commander-in-chief of Russia's Ground Forces, commented on the withdrawal from Georgia, "Russia does not withdraw, it consolidates." While Yevnevich is posted in Tbilisi to oversee the first phase of that withdrawal, his immediate subordinates in Russia's... MORE

MOSCOW DODGES IRAN’S NUCLEAR OFFENSIVE

The European troika (France, Germany, and the UK) was clearly taken by surprise last week by Iran's determined drive to resume its uranium enrichment program. Their proposal, delivered to the impatient new leaders in Tehran in early August, was far from convincing, but they had... MORE