
Latest Articles about Middle East
RUSSIAN WOMEN: A MIXED RECORD
March 8 is an official holiday in Russia to mark International Women's Day. It is one of the most popular holidays on the calendar, with men buying flowers and chocolates for the "fairer sex" and doing some symbolic cooking and cleaning. Although Valentine's Day has... MORE
RUSSIA EYES CHINA AND OTHER ELECTRICITY MARKETS
Unified Energy Systems, the Russian electricity giant, has pledged to capitalize on China's fast growing energy needs by exporting Siberian electricity to China. In the meantime, Russia's pro-active approach to energy projects in Central Asia has begun to take on geopolitical dimensions. UES says its... MORE
RUSSIAN ARMS AND THE SEARCH FOR PEACE IN THE MIDDLE EAST
By all accounts, events in the Middle East are moving in a direction that could lead to significant breakthroughs in Iraq, Lebanon, and Israel-Palestinian relations. Yet Moscow, while claiming support for them, seems eager to undermine these moves toward peace and democracy in order to... MORE
PUTIN’S “WALKING TOGETHER” MOVEMENT COMES UP SHORT
A specter is haunting Russia's political class -- the specter of Ukraine's Orange Revolution. The Putinists seem hell-bent on preventing any repetition of Ukrainian or Georgian events in Russia. On March 1, the pro-Putin youth movement Walking Together announced that it "had launched a new... MORE
RUSSIA SENDS MIXED SIGNALS ON IRAN’S NUCLEAR AMBITIONS
Russian officials have hailed Moscow's announcement of a potentially historic deal with Iran, concerning its continued involvement in developing the nuclear power facility at Bushehr, as a breakthrough. Alexander Maryasov, Russia's ambassador to Iran, believes it removes all concerns about the possibility of Tehran utilizing... MORE
MOSCOW INSISTS ON SEEING NO EVIL IN IRAN
Russia's position on Iran, as presented by President Vladimir Putin to President George W. Bush in Bratislava and by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to the EU "troika" in Luxembourg, is crystal clear and rock solid. Their nuclear cooperation is strictly commercial and has absolutely no... MORE
CIS ECONOMIES: GROWTH WITHOUT PROSPERITY?
The economies of the Commonwealth of Independent States have seen five years of steady growth and low inflation, a welcome contrast to the economic slump and financial instability of the early 1990s. They have also managed to shift their trade patterns away from their former... MORE
MOSCOW OFFERS MUTED RESPONSE TO POSSIBLE END OF EU ARMS EMBARGO AGAINST CHINA
Despite U.S. opposition, the European Union is proceeding with plans to lift the arms embargo against China by June 2005. The ban had been imposed following the June 1989 crackdown on democracy protestors in Tiananmen Square. Beijing is looking for alternative sources for the arms... MORE
IS EUROPE TOO SMALL FOR BOTH BUSH AND PUTIN?
"Disappointing" may be the common post-mortem on the Bratislava summit, but it would still be unfair to call the meeting a non-event. Reviewing the unresolved issues, it is now possible to see that the preparations on the Russian side were rather unconventional: it appeared that... MORE
INDIA’S QUEST FOR CENTRAL ASIAN ENERGY
India, the world's second fastest growing economy, relies on oil and gas imports for its economic development. And, as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh observed, it can no longer remain complacent in the face of China's global campaign to acquire reliable energy supplies. Thus India has... MORE