IMPLICATIONS: The previous leadership of Azerbaijan and Georgia had established a relative balance of power in the Caucasus. With them gone, geopolitical competition between Russia and the U.S. risks increasing. Russia seems to utilize several traditional mechanisms in order to check a further increase of U.S. influence in the region, including support for ethnic separatism and economic pressures. In Azerbaijan, Russia is more likely to turn to economic factors. Approximately two million Azeris live and work in Russia, and their legal status remains vague. Should the Azerbaijani government allow U.S. military bases in the country, Russia might threaten to deport those Azeris, thus breeding socio-economic tensions in Azerbaijan due to the increase in the numbers of unemployed people and a loss of income. At the same time, pressures on the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, currently under construction and expected to be completed by 2005, will increase. Azerbaijani newspapers have reported of Russian sabotage threats to the pipelines, and Azerbaijan’s Minister of National Security Namik Abbasov, two weeks ago ordered an increase of security measures in the pipeline areas. In Georgia, Russia seems to focus on the Ajaria card, implicitly threatening the new Georgian government. Nino Burjanadze, interim President of Georgia, traveled to Ajaria to convince the regional leader Aslan Abashidze to recognize the new Georgia government, but failed to do so. On the other hand, Russia is also likely to use its influence over the peace process in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and could thereby obstruct, as it has done before, a final solution. Moscow could hinder the work of the OSCE Minsk group and pressure Armenia away from making concessions to Azerbaijan. The recent visit of the Minsk group\'s co-chairs to the region brought no new proposals and ideas and further strengthened the impression among the general public that the co-chairs are neither able nor willing to solve the conflict. Russia uses this avenue purely for the purposes of controlling the peace process. With these circumstances, it is likely that the solution of the Abkhazia and Nagorno-Karabakh conflicts will be delayed for several more years, while the likelihood of separatism in Ajaria will increase. This will add further political instability to already war-torn and fragmented Georgia.
CONCLUSIONS: With the construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, the integration of Azerbaijan and Georgia into the Western markets will be irreversible. At the same time, the continued war on terror pushes the U.S. to increase its security and military presence in the Caucasus region. This will lead to more military cooperation between the U.S. and Azerbaijan and Georgia. Russia, in its turn, is disposed to preventing this from happening, and under these circumstances the security of the regional energy projects could come under serious threat. The new Azerbaijani and Georgian leadership will need urgent Western, primarily American, political and economic support to overcome and withstand Russian pressures. Meanwhile, it is imperative that the West push for the solution of regional conflicts, as they remain a useful and effective tool in the hands of Moscow policy-makers to pressure the Caucasian republics. Revived geo-political competition will not bring positive changes to the region. Local governments could, to avoid this, pursue a policy of \"balance of powers\" and the outside powers should avoid making radical demands on the local leaders at the expense of other powers. Otherwise, the current fragile stability in the region could get out of control, serving neither the national interest of the U.S. or Russia.
AUTHOR’S BIO: Fariz Ismailzade is a freelance writer on Caucasus geopolitics and economics based in Baku. He holds a master\'s degree from Washington University in St. Louis.