Eurasia Security Watch: No. 213
Riyadh and Tehran take sides in Yemen civil war;
Hezbollah has a new military strategy...;
...and a new political one
Riyadh and Tehran take sides in Yemen civil war;
Hezbollah has a new military strategy...;
...and a new political one
Beijing's "
Great Firewall"
stifling China's netizens;
Washington neutral on South China Sea spat
Special Issue: China's Troubled Educational System
Vietnam may use ASEAN chairmanship to confront Beijing;
Crackdown in Xinjiang continues unabated  
When the eight states that now constitute Central Asia and the Caucasus freed themselves from the grip of the Soviet Union in 1991, it was perhaps inevitable that outside powers would rush to fill the vacuum. Of the eight at least three, the Caspian Basin states (Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan) found themselves awash in natural resources. The remaining five (Georgia, Armenia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan), though less endowed materially, are strategically situated along crucial energy, trade, and logistics corridors. The combination of renewed interest and a reopened playing field in the heart of Eurasia resulted in the rise of a new “Great Game,” reminiscent of the great-power contest of the 19th century between the British and Russian empires over access to India glorified by Rudyard Kipling in his day. A decade-and-a-half on, this Great Game has matured, and undergone important changes. More important, however, as the energy struggle evolved a new front in the Game emerged out of the ashes of the September 11th terrorist attacks: one that pits the United States against Russia for influence and basing rights in Central Asia.