Foreign Policy Blogs

Russia & Central Asia

Mark Seidenfeld: Kazakhstan's two marathoners

Well, Mark Seidenfeld's trial did indeed begin (at last) on Friday June 15th.   The judge ordered that the initial complainant, Mr. Zhunssov, be present on Monday, June 18th, the second day of the new trial. On Monday, Mr. Zhunussov, the complainant, was nowhere in court.  Instead, he was in China, running in a Marathon.  Marathon No. […]

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Turkmenistan: new gas contracts, new talks

On June 12, Lukoil cemented a contract with Turkmenistan to develop three offshore fields .   LUKOil joins the UAE's Dragon Oil PLC and Malaysia's Petronas as foreign direct investors in Turkmenistan's petrochemical industry.  LUKoil currently produces 19% of Russia's crude oil, and operates in 25 other states besides the Russian Federation. Last month, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Russia developed a […]

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Kazakhstan: new oil pipeline to China

Kazakhstan’s President has announced a new phase of pipeline construction for oil shipments to China.  The previously-constructed Atasu-Alashankou pipeline will be extended to the Caspian.  Atasu is in Central Kazakhstan. The existing phase of transit was certified in July of last year, and shipped 1.1 million tons of oil to China in the first quarter of this year.  (88,000 […]

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Western Literature: good and great leaders?

Somehow the confluence of my pleasure reading seems to bear directly on events that we explore repeatedly in international politics.  Recently, I have read two books that portray Western attitudes about corruption, lack of transparency, election abuses, and the relationships between politicians and their consituencies.  I am not going to do a full book review here–just a few quotes from […]

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Tajikistan: explosive devices & volatile substances

Tajikistan: explosive devices & volatile substances

 1. On Saturday, a bomb exploded close to Tajikistan's highest court in Dushanbe.  No person was hurt, and the bomb only damaged windows.  It could have been so much worse.  The city's chief prosecutor, Kurbanali Mukhammetov, said that the motive for the bombing was not clear, but he suspects IMU activity.  However, it might also have to do […]

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Kazakhstan: The royal dust-up

Hasten his musters and conduct his powers: I must change arms at home, and give the distaff Into my husband's hands.    –King Lear, (IV, ii)  The personal, the private, the political, the public, and the press issues are nearly inseparable in the Aliev-Nazarbaev contretemps.  I feel we are at once watching for gossip, witnessing a future […]

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Afghanistan: polio vaccines & other efforts

Here is a short, 1.5 minute video, produced by UNICEF, that illustrates the conduct of polio immunization in Afghanistan.  I alluded to this immunization drive in a previous post.    [kml_flashembed movie=”http://www.youtube.com/v/SrQtRYjjLPM” width=”425″ height=”350″ wmode=”transparent” /] The details such as the chalk markers are very interesting procedural points that you rarely get in news articles or scholarly papers–the details, […]

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Afghanistan's Opium, part 2: Aspirational incentives

Afghanistan's Opium, part 2: Aspirational incentives

In part 1 of this series, I described the extremely desirable and/or risk-reducing incentives that make Afghanistan's opium production persistent.  Changing opium production requires a different landscape of economic incentives and disincentives, which is what Afghanistan's agricultural aid programs aim to provide on many levels. Chief among the disincentives include poppy eradication and other law enforcement measures; […]

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Kyrgyzstan: The Epic of Manas

Kyrgyzstan: The Epic of Manas

Kyrgyzstan's schools will now teach the Epic of Manas as a required component of the curriculum.   IWPR did not say whether this was to go to grade school, secondary school, or university (or all of the above).  Like Homer's epics, the Epic of Manas is part of an oral tradition; unlike Homer, his work is still […]

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Kazakhstan roundup: Courts, causes, and canals

Kazakhstan roundup: Courts, causes, and canals

Something new and significant: a possible two-party state?  Recently Nur-Otan, President Nazarbaev's party, has consolidated with some smaller opposition parties.  Now the opposition takes steps: Kazakhstan's opposition parties, Ak Zhol and the National Social Democrats, have merged.  The new opposition party hopes to make a difference in the next Parliamentary elections. While we’re all waiting […]

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Dateline, Bishkek: Superhero no. 2 versus SCO

Dateline, Bishkek: Superhero no. 2 versus SCO

Last week, Secretary of Defense Gates measured the costs of Ganci AFB in Manas against the costs of other bases maintained by foreign powers in Kyrgyzstan.  This whirlwind trip-with-comparative analysis, designed to keep Ganci open, was followed by today's visit from a high-ranking U.S. official, Undersecretary of State Boucher.  Mr. Boucher made the U.S. position quite clear […]

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Afghanistan: battles for public health

Afghanistan: battles for public health

Through twenty-six years of war and repression, Afghanistan has lost its ability to meet its public health needs.  The efforts to rebuild health care systems continues, with mixed results.   This was illustrated for me yesterday, when I read Asne Seierstad's The Bookseller of Kabul. Though Seierstad's book focused upon family relations, disease just kept cropping up over […]

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Central Asia: U.S. updates H5N1 measures

Central Asia: U.S. updates H5N1 measures

This week I received a flock of new State Department fact sheets on H5N1 Avian influenza.  The leader of these flying missives was : U.S. Government Support to Combat Avian and Pandemic Influenza — An Update , which reminds us of the potential seriousness of any viral mutation in creating a human flu pandemic.  In the […]

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Casual Friday: Nazarbaev campaigns

With everything else going on in Kazakhstan right now, the following video is a nice reminder that elections still have to go to the people.  Here is one of Mr. Nazarbaev's election videos in a series called: Don't Change Horses, or perhaps, Don't Change the Horse that has Carried You.  I particularly like this one because it […]

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Kyrgyzstan: A bird, a plane, no. . . Secretary Gates

Kyrgyzstan: A bird, a plane, no. . . Secretary Gates

I couldn't tell if Ferghana.ru was laughing or cursing (maybe both) when they wrote this article: Bob Gates saves US base from Kyrgyz authorities. Secretary Gates flew in from Afghanistan, compared base agreements between the U.S. and other countries with base arrangements in Kyrgyzstan, and then announced their parity to the Kyrgyz press.  After the […]

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