Russian-Azerbaijani Relations: All Change after the August War of 2008?

Author First name, Last name, Institution

Li-Chen Sim

Document Type

Conference Proceeding

Source of Publication

2006 Annual meeting of the American Political Science Association

Publication Date

8-13-2009

Abstract

The headlines are attention grabbing seductively simplistic "“ "Don't Let Russia Turn Gas into a New Weapon"; "Russia's Powerful Weapon: Oil and Natural Gas"; "Russia seeks Global Influence by Exploiting Energy Geopolitics". Recently published books, such as Gazprom: The New Russian Weapon and Power, Energy, and the New Russian Imperialism, lend credence to claims that energy is a tool of Russian foreign policy. Even Condoleeza Rice, the former American Secretary of State, made similar allegations when she chided Russia for "politically motivated efforts to constrain energy supply to Ukraine". Hence, the inescapable conclusion that thanks to its sizeable oil and gas resources and a propensity to deploy these in pursuit of foreign policy objectives, Russia "has gone from the sick man of Europe to boss man". This paper will examine Russian-Azerbaijani relations since 1992, particularly in the context of the role that energy has played in transforming a relationship based largely on 'securitization' to one founded on 'economization'. It will focus on how and why this evolution occurred, as well as the interplay between strategic and commercial goals of an energy foreign policy. Finally, the paper will also consider the extent to which Russia's war with Georgia in August 2008 has altered the tenor of Russian-Azerbaijani relations.

Disciplines

Social and Behavioral Sciences

Indexed in Scopus

no

Open Access

no

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