By Ian Pryde on March 19, 2018
in Africa, Americas, Asia, BRIC, BRICS, Canada, Central Asia, China, Economics, Business, Finance, Economy, Energy, Eurasia, Europe, Gas, India, International Relations/Geopolitics, Islam, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Migration & Immigration, Oil, One Belt-One Road, Russia, South Korea, Tajikistan, The Middle East, The West, Trans-Caucasus, Transport, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, United States, Uzbekistan
China’s Long-Term Strategy vs The West’s Civil War and Short-Termism While the effectively bankrupt West is tearing itself apart and undermining its society, economy and science, China is not just getting on with it, but forging ahead. A good starting point in understanding what is happening now, with all the…
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By Ian Pryde on May 31, 2007
in Azerbaijan, Central Asia, China, Energy, International Relations/Geopolitics, Kazakhstan, Oil, Russia, Turkmenistan, United States
The Caspian Basin’s large oil and gas reserves have not only been long coveted by the United States, Europe, China and India, but are also seen as the means by which the region can be lifted out of poverty. At the same time, the desire for influence in the Trans-Caucasus…
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By Ian Pryde on May 14, 2007
in Azerbaijan, Central Asia, Energy, Europe, Gas, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Oil, Poland, Russia, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan
MOSCOW. (Ian Pryde for RIA-Novosti) – Last Thursday, Russia’s President Putin arrived in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, for the start of a week-long visit to Central Asia, which will focus on energy. But the visit is not just about oil and gas. Electricity generation and transmission and atomic energy…
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MOSCOW. (Ian Pryde for RIA Novosti) – Russia’s already poor image took another hit last weekend with the arrest of former world chess champion Garry Kasparov and the heavy-handed tactics of the police against demonstrators in Moscow, pictures of which went around the world. Despite the claims about the Kremlin’s…
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