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The Dictators Of Central Asia On The Global Radar
June 6, 2011 3 min. read

Since the Arab Spring the global media seems to have found a new obsession – a preoccupation with the remaining ruling dictators, their powers, legitimacy, impending revolutions, and the viability of totalitarian regimes in general. By the “global media” here I mean the news media (TV, radio, newspapers) and the Internet which also includes social […]

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Nagorno-Karabakh: cause for optimism?
June 5, 2011 8 min. read

I wonder if something significant is brewing regarding the Karabakh issue.  Yes, yes, I know: “something significant” has seemed to be in the offing year after year after year.  And no breakthrough ever takes place. But I say this because the three OSCE Minsk Group presidents (Barack Obama, Dmitri Medvedev, and Nicolas Sarkozy) issued a very unusual […]

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Russia's EU Veg Ban: Public Health Meets Agri-Nationalism
June 2, 2011 5 min. read

Putin may have waited a week after the sinking of the Kursk to even comment on the submarine disaster that claimed 118 lives, but his government virtually leapt to ban all EU vegetables in response to an E Coli. outbreak that has not even reached Russia. If only the government were this fast at reacting […]

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NATO Mistakes Too Costly as July Drawdown Nears
May 31, 2011 3 min. read

The most difficult thing to countenance when one is an analyst-watcher-critic of Afghan politics and society is the nearly weekly news that some child or innocent woman has been killed in NATO airstrikes or nightly door to door counter-terrorist operations.  This, any time of the year, any year at all. But this is a different […]

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Abkhazia's Challenging Future After Bagapsh's Death
May 30, 2011 2 min. read

It was not easy being Sergei Bagapsh – the late, gregarious and moderate Abkhazian leader trapped between Georgia’s gun-sights and Russia’s self-serving, smothering embrace: even his last name suggests an exhalation of frustration. But it will be even harder to find a successor able enough to lead the tiny, mostly unrecognised country towards territorial security […]

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Two dead in Georgian protest violence
May 26, 2011 4 min. read

Reports out of Tbilisi indicate that at least two people were killed early today (26 May) during a police crackdown on demonstrators outside the Parliament building on Rustavelli Avenue.  Police moved in shortly after the midnight, when the permit for the opposition rally expired, intent on clearing the area for today’s Independence Day parade, which […]

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Azerbaijan: Fatullayev released from prison, Hajiyev sent to prison
May 26, 2011 1 min. read

Azeri journalist Eynullah Fatullayev, who has been serving a variety of prison sentences since April of 2007, was given his freedom today in one of President Aliyev’s amnesties.  As readers of this blog are aware, the charges against Fatullayev had ranged from libel to inciting terror to tax evasion – and more recently, to drug […]

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Georgia headed for violent confrontation as protests continue
May 26, 2011 5 min. read

Protest rallies in Georgia, begun over the weekend in Tbilisi and Batumi, seem to be headed for violent confrontation today (Wednesday afternoon in the US, early Thursday morning in Tbilisi) after apparently failing to achieve the goals of their organizers or to attract widespread public support. It’s not that the latest opposition movement (called the […]

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Medvedev's Freedom From the Press
May 22, 2011 3 min. read

He might have had no problems embracing iPad and Twitter, but the tech-savvy Medvedev seems to be a late adopter when it comes to good old fashioned press freedom. A Russian journalist who claims to have been barred from covering his recent news conference is suing the presidential press service and protection unit, reports Radio […]

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Afghanistan and President Obama's Articulated Foreign Policy
May 19, 2011 4 min. read

President Barack Obama today defended what he wants the young men on the street in far-flung countries to view as a new stripe of diplomacy, one that is informed by the value of self-determination and respect for those young millions hungry for it. One that does not contrast American interests from American values. Time will […]

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Medvedev's Non-Announcement: A Case of Virtual Politics?
May 18, 2011 4 min. read

President Medvedev’s  much anticipated news conference delivered nothing of substance (Putin’s random interview with a US nature magazine contained more meat), but that may  have been exactly the point: to obscure the real news happening behind the scenes. On the day Medvedev demurred from announcing his candidature in the next elections, St Petersburg’s duma recalled Federation Council Speaker […]

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Russia's Potemkin Modernisation
May 12, 2011 2 min. read

This is Russia’s timeless, quintessential paradox: the country has no problem building a state of the art stadium in Chechnya and bringing over international football legends Maradona, Figo and Steve McManaman all the way to Grozny for the inaugural exhibition match, but can’t manage the simple task of delivering an Amazon shipment to ordinary people trying […]

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