Russia & Central Asia

See All Press
Georgia-Russian War – Implications for Central Asia and the World
August 13, 2008 4 min. read

Thankfully, a cease-fire in the Russian-Georgian conflict over the South Ossetia and Abkhazia territories has been agreed upon by both states, unfortunately fighting still seems to be occurring in the Georgian city of Gori. The conflict in Georgia has ramifications in Central Asia and for its nations’ governments in many important ways. As former Soviet […]

Read more
The CNN Effect: A Tale of Two Wars
August 13, 2008 11 min. read

Now that the artillery smoke has lifted and Sarkozy and Medvedev's 6 point ceasefire plan is imposed on Georgia, it's time to figure out: what the hell happened between last Thursday and now? Gary Brecher has the most elegant, if undeniably sociopathic, explanation: 1. The Georgians started it. 2. They lost. 3. What a beautiful […]

Read more
Xinjiang Province: Terror Across Central Asia
August 12, 2008 3 min. read

Well it looks like I didn't live up to my promise, but better late than never right?  The Olympics in China have made quite a splash; in the pool, in the Caucasus's, Bush's speeches and church visit, and in the Xinjiang Province, where on Sunday a multitude of attacks occurred all over the city of […]

Read more
With Truth the first casualty, Gori & Tskhinvali grieve for the others.
August 12, 2008 6 min. read

Symbolism seems to always precede Russia into war. In the winter of 1994-5, Chechnya's capital, Grozny, bloodily fulfilled its Russian translation as “fierce”: thousands died in the wake of Yeltsin's callous Christmas day invasion. But Gori, the name of the first Georgian city bombed by Russian aircraft this weekend, translates simply as ‘grief’. When, at […]

Read more
EU-Central Asia Strategy One Year Anniversary
August 11, 2008 3 min. read

The European Union's ‘Strategy for a New Partnership with Central Asia‘ has now passed its 1st year of existence and therefore must immediately be judged!  Here are its original stated goals and origins and here is a one year assessment by ISN's Robert M Cutler.  Now the 'strategy’ is a decade long process that hopefully […]

Read more
Ossetia as Falklands?
August 9, 2008 2 min. read

As the tragedy in Ossetia unfolds, Mark Almond's sobering and essential antidote to prevailing interpretation cautions against seeing the Russian incursion into Georgia as a replay of Prague 1968. Instead, he suggests a parallel with Britain's role in the Falkland War. Importantly, he also reminds readers that: Unlike in eastern Europe, for instance, today in […]

Read more
More Troops, More Speeches, and Oh Look at the Pretty Pink Color!
August 8, 2008 2 min. read

Defense Secretary Bob Gates has announced the US support for doubling the Afghan army to 120,000 troops in the next five years, a plan initially proposed by the Afghan government. The plan will require about $20 Billion dollars, which will mostly be paid by the US, but there will be some assistance from other NATO […]

Read more
Southern DIScomfort
August 8, 2008 1 min. read

Are things really coming to a head in the Caucuses? Violence is escalating in Ingushetia (bordering Chechnya), Sochi, South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Edward Lucas has written a lucid overview of the Russian conflict with Georgia and whether we are on a cusp of a major war. A Russian position on the Ossetia question is here, […]

Read more
China's Xinjiang Province: Openness Versus Resiliency
August 7, 2008 4 min. read

Xinjiang Shakeup Since Tuesday's terrorist attack on Chinese border patrol in Xinjiang Province's city of Kashgar, things have gotten rather tense in the region, as exile groups have claimed that China's government has sped up the detainment of suspected 'separatists and increased its presence of paramilitary forces as the Olympics draws near. The region's ethnic […]

Read more
Poppies for the Poor
August 5, 2008 5 min. read

With the Taliban showcasing great ‘tenacity‘ and ability to recruit new members from around the region to replace those lost, one must conclude that the Afghan government and its International supporters are in a fight for their lives. Hard decisions will have to made for them to win, including the eradication of the nation's poppy […]

Read more
Child Labor in Central Asia
August 4, 2008 3 min. read

Gulnoza Saidazimova of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty about a month ago catalogued the child labor situation in Central Asia. Unfortunately child labor is abused in all most all Central Asian states, but in different ways and to different degrees. Saidazimova first discusses Tajikistan's use of child labor as a ‘lifeline for their families’ who are […]

Read more
Used and Abused: Solzhenitsyn Joins Pawn Pantheon
August 4, 2008 4 min. read

Don't believe the gushing obituaries. Like Orwell and Sakharov before him, Alexander Solzhenitsyn had outlived his usefulness. Long since his art was sacrificed on the West's ideological altar, the courageous anti-Soviet dissident had become an embarassment; a Putin-friendly, anti-Semitic pan-Slavist with a Tolstoy complex. As a philistine, I’ve only ever read One Day in the […]

Read more

Popular from Press