About Get Alerts Login
November 20, 2009
Browse by Regions and/or Topics

U.S. Energy Interests and the Caspian: The Free Ride is Over

Peter Kiernan | Bio | 27 Aug 2008
World Politics Review Exclusive

Login to Discuss EmailEmail | Print IconPrint | Share Icon Share | Reprint IconReprint

While control over routes for the export of oil and gas to Western markets was clearly not the primary cause of the recent hostilities between Moscow and Tbilisi, the vital role of the Caucasus as an energy transit route nevertheless cannot be ignored in the context of Russia's increasingly tense relationship with the United States and its European allies.

The collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1990s led to the formation of several breakaway republics in the Caspian region, an energy-rich area which had been off limits to Western investment. That these newly formed states with substantial reserves of hydrocarbons -- Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan in particular -- should open their doors to international energy companies was a high priority of the Clinton administration. ...

subscribe to World Politics Review

WPR

Subscribers receive:

  • Access to in-depth feature articles
  • Regular Strategic Posture Reviews
  • Regular WPR Special Reports
  • Access to our Document Center
  • Access to WPR’s entire archives
  • Enhanced search across the entire site
  • Participation in our discussion section

Click here to subscribe »
Click here to take a free trial »
Already a subscriber? Login here.

Login to Discuss EmailEmail | Print IconPrint | Share Icon Share | Reprint IconReprint