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U.S. Engagement Towards Central Asia: No Great Game After All?

Date de publication
07 October 2015
Accroche

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1990s, Washington has defined general foreign policy objectives towards the Republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan.

Frontiers New and Old: Russia’s Policy in Central Asia

Date de publication
06 January 2015
Accroche

For much of the post-Soviet period, Central Asia has been a backwater of Russian foreign policy. But things are changing. Circumstances in and beyond the region are driving a more committed approach in Moscow. 

Asia-Pacific: China’s Foreign Policy Priority

Date de publication
01 September 2014
Accroche

China is increasingly active in the Asia-Pacific region, an area that makes up the main focus of its foreign policy.

Trans Caspian Gas: A Worthy Teething Ring for Europe's Energy Diplomats

Date de publication
21 September 2011
Accroche

As an early task in its efforts to build a common external energy policy, the Commission has announced it will turn its attention to bringing the vast gas resources of Turkmenistan to European consumers. This will be an excellent place for the Commission to test its ability to speak with one voice for its polyglot constituency. First, their task may be facilitated by the fact that on this topic, no European voices are yet particularly audible.

The Shanghai Cooperation Organization as "Geopolitical Bluff?" A View from Astana

Date de publication
06 July 2006
Accroche

Since the mid-1990s, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) has been an important factor in, and exerts significant influence on both Kazakhstan's international situation and geopolitical processes in Central Asia. Various aspects of Kazakhstan's interests are included in the SCO, among them geopolitics, security, the economy and regional politics. The topics addressed by the SCO can be divided into wide-ranging and often unconnected problems, which are more often than not solved outside the framework of the SCO. In the end, the SCO is only a great 'geopolitical bluff.' And while the USA seems to be almost an 'unofficial partner' because it so influences Central Asia as a whole, the European Union has almost entirely withdrawn from that geopolitical scene. As yet, the SCO poses more challenges and risks for Kazakhstan than it offers advantages.

Murat LAUMULIN

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