Russia & Central Asia

See All Press
Khodorkovsky: A Prisoner of the 90s
June 29, 2009 3 min. read

For his birthday on Friday, Russia’s most famous prisoner Mikhail Khodorkovsky held an online Q&A with readers of Gazeta.ru, a popular online daily. In it he defends himself against allegations of robber-baronism and asset stripping, and says: “I decided to take the risk and have never felt sorry for that”. But much more interesting than […]

Read more
Putin's New Gravediggers?
June 25, 2009 2 min. read

“What the bourgeoisie therefore produces, above all, are its own grave-diggers”, wrote two men much wiser and more bearded than I. “But not only has the bourgeoisie forged the weapons that bring death to itself; it has also called into existence the men who are to wield those weapons: the proletarians”. It looks as though […]

Read more
Kyrgyzstan's Manas Air Base: The Americans Got To Keep Their Base But Who Really Won?
June 25, 2009 2 min. read

Just days after American military officials stated their readiness to logistically remove their presence from the Manas air base in Kyrgyzstan, it appears they can unpack their bags, or at least the ones without weapons. The Kyrgyz parliament has approved a more limited American presence in the country and has received a hefty raise on […]

Read more
A Melting Russia Asks: What Global Warming?
June 24, 2009 4 min. read

“It might seem impolitic to embrace what many regard as a looming global catastrophe. But this has not stopped the Russians”. So begins an article in the Abu Dhabi based National about the future of my arctic hometown of Murmansk in the age of global warming. Feted in Soviet times as the largest populated point […]

Read more
The Caucasus Strikes Back
June 23, 2009 3 min. read

Most English-speaking readers didn’t know about Ingushetia until this morning, when its president Yunus-Bek Yevkurov miraculously and barely survived a massive suicide bomb that nearly levelled a whole city block (lending added weight, if any were needed, to Russian officials’ traffic aversion). The headline grabbing stunt, on the anniversary of a bloody 2004 raid on […]

Read more
Russia's Take on Iran's Coloured Revolution
June 22, 2009 2 min. read

Amidst all the media intoxication with the Iran protests, you can count on Russia to deliver a well-advised downer. Sean at Sean’s Russia Blog helpfully provides a digested read of the press reactions to the post-election unrest. “Iran”, Sean writes, “only highlights the nadir of political change in Russia.  “Perhaps,” Kolesnikov writes, “one of the […]

Read more
Check Out: Afghan Info War
June 22, 2009 2 min. read

Check out this Council on Foreign Relations report on Winning the Information War in Afghanistan and Pakistan.  The work analyzes both American and Taliban/Al Qaeda media usage and effectiveness.  Here’s an Exerpt: With overwhelming firepower, Western armies rarely lose in combat to Taliban fighters in Afghanistan. But in the communications battle, the militants appear to […]

Read more
Shanghai-ing Over in Central Asia
June 19, 2009 1 min. read

Check out my review of the latest Shanghai Cooperation Organization Summit in Yekaterinburg, Russia over at FPA’s Central Asia blog.  I’m not cheating on you Afghanistan, I just think we should see other regions once in a while.

Read more
Shanghai Cooperating in Yekaterinburg
June 19, 2009 6 min. read

First off, my friends at Rising Powers beat me to a SCO Summit report. In the shadow of the Iranian election drama and the first real BRIC get together, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (Don’t know what the SCO is?) held their annual Heads of State Summit in the Russian Ural city of Yekaterinburg. The Heads […]

Read more
Poverty and the Post-Soviet Potato
June 19, 2009 2 min. read

Amidst the economic collapse, something is blooming in Russia: Potatoes! In yet another unmissable tidbit of post-Soviet life from Laurie Taylor’s excellent Thinking Allowed show on BBC Radio 4, he interviews a Syracuse university professor who claims that a boom in potato cultivation since 1991 reflects Russia’s spiralling poverty and social stratification since the collapse […]

Read more
From the Internationale to The Independent
June 19, 2009 2 min. read

Why would a shrewd Russian oligarch want to buy two notoriously loss making English newspapers? According to billionaire Alexander Lebedev, it was his fond memories of scouring the London dailies for information as a young Soviet spy, as well as being a “good way to waste money”. But really he just wanted to hang out […]

Read more
Afghan Rodeo
June 18, 2009 1 min. read

Quick little round up… McKiernan officially out, McChrystal officially in as the top US and overall commander of forces in Afghanistan.  McChrystal, known for his special ops strategic strikes in Iraq, has been hammering the point that protecting Afghan civilians is what will bring a change in the conflict’s direction.  He is already reviewing troop […]

Read more

Popular from Press