liBoRatoRio

March 4, 2006

Tajikistan, Iran, Afghanistan ministers to discuss energy projects

Dushanbe, February 16 (RIA Novosti) – Joint energy projects will be at the focus of a meeting between the energy ministers of Tajikistan, Iran and Afghanistan on Monday, a Tajik official said Thursday.
The discussion in the Tajik capital, Dushanbe, will cover a $200-million project to build a high-voltage electricity transmission line
to export energy from Tajikistan’s Sangtuda hydroelectric power plant to Iran via Afghanistan within five years, the press service of Tajikistan’s energy minister said. Iran, which is currently at the center of the world’s attention for its controversial nuclear energy plans, will officially start the construction of the Sangtuda-2 plant on February 20. Russia and Tajikistan began discussing the Sangtuda project in 2003, and Iran joined the negotiations in September 2004. In January 2005, Russia, Tajikistan and Iran signed a protocol to complete the plants, with Russia helping Tajikistan complete Sangtuda-1 project and Iran Sangtuda-2.
Under the agreement, Iran will reap the profits from Sangtuda-2 for 12 and a half years, and then the plant will come into Tajikistan’s property. The Sangtuda projects and the Rogunskaya plant currently being built near Dushanbe will allow the republic to increase its annual electric power output from 16 to 34 billion kilowatts and to export surplus energy to South Kazakhstan, Russia, China, Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan and India.
The three ministers will also discuss electric power imports from Tajikistan to Afghanistan in the summer period.
After the negotiations, Tajikistan’s Dzhurabek Nurmakhmadov, Afghanistan’s Ismail Khan and Iran’s Parviz Fatah are expected to sign a protocol on trilateral cooperation.
 
L’Iran si "sblinda", non solo riaprendo il canale di dialogo con l’Europa onde evitare la censura ufficiale dell’Onu, ma anche conducendo una strategica politica di rafforzamento proprio nel settore essenziale per la sopravvivenza di un regime incapace di dare risposte agli immensi problemi economici del Paese.
 

Uzbek parliament to ratify treaty on allied relations with Russia

TASHKENT, February 24 (Itar-Tass) – A plenary session of the Uzbek Senate is expected to ratify on Friday a treaty on allied relations
between Uzbekistan and Russia, sources from the Uzbek parliament’s press service told Itar-Tass. On Thursday, members of the Senate committee for foreign policy considered a draft treaty. They were unanimous in the opinion that the treaty, which envisages mutual assistance in case of military actions, will seriously strengthen Uzbekistan’s security, and thus its independence, the press service said. Prior to that the union treaty, signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin and Uzbek President Islam Karimov in Moscow in November 2005, was ratified by the lower house of Uzbek parliament. The Senate is also expected to legitimate Uzbekistan’s entry into the
EurasEC, the press service reported.
 
L’attivismo russo è forte e colpisce, soprattutto se messo in relazione con l’immobilismo opportunista di un’Europa ancora dominata dagli egoismi neo-nazionalisti. Come in una riedizione del vecchio conflitto freddo a giocare la partita decisiva nello scacchiere caucasico sono ancora una volta Russia e USA, i quali fanno leva sulle rispettive basi militari per espandere la propria influenza nella regione.
Gli Stati Uniti hanno guadagnato terreno grazie ai conflitti condotti nel medio-oriente e indirettamente grazie alle Rivoluzioni arancioni che hanno spostato l’asse di preferenza di diversi paesi strategici come l’Ucraina, verso l’Occidente euro-americano.
La reazione russa non si è fatta attendere: condotta sia con la pressione continua esercitata attraverso i gas-dotti, sia con il tentativo di blindare i paesi caucasici ancora fedeli al progetto CSI di una Russia neo-imperiale attraverso nuovi patti militare di difesa macroregionale, come quello che il Senato Uzbeko è reticente a ratificare. 
 

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