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    • Chair: V.P. Dutt
      Discussants: Madhu Bhalla & Nandan Unnikrishnan

      June 06, 2008
      Events
    • Discussants: R.P. Kaushik & B.K. Sharma

      October 12, 2007
      Events
    • The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) is gradually gaining clout and influence in the Central Asian region, which is increasingly attracting international attention. Dramatic events during the course of 2005 in Uzbekistan, including the US withdrawal from the Manas base, and in Kyrgyzstan significantly changed the regional security architecture and provided a new geopolitical role for the SCO in the region. Russia and China have especially benefited from these changes and have increased their profiles in the region.

      August 21, 2007
      IDSA Comments
    • Vladimir Putin’s week-long visit to Central Asia in the second week of May 2007 was aimed at courting Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan as part of Russia’s future energy strategy in the region. Behind the visit lay the Kremlin’s desire to create a natural gas cartel in the region and maintain its monopoly over gas supplies to Europe. Moreover, despite its vast resources of oil and gas, Russia may actually face domestic shortages, at least of gas, because much of its own resources are in remote areas and need heavy investments to be made productive.

      June 11, 2007
      IDSA Comments
    • Discussant: Satish Kumar

      May 09, 2007
      Events
    • “Pakistan provides the natural link between the SCO states to connect the Eurasian heartland with the Arabian Sea and South Asia … We offer the critical overland routes and connectivity for mutually beneficial trade and energy transactions intra- regionally and interregionally”
      -- President Gen. Pervez Musharraf
      June 15, 2006

      Strategic Analysis
    • Discussants: Ajay Kumar Patnaik & Sanjeev Madhok

      September 20, 2006
      Events
    • Over the last three years, the Central Asian Republics (CARs) have witnessed significant geopolitical shifts in the region - the resurgence of Russia, China's increasing influence, a colour revolution in Kyrgyzstan, unrest and shift in Uzbekistan's foreign policy, and the growing prominence of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO). Since 2004, the SCO's influence and role has been growing in the Central Asian region and the last two summits of the SCO are significant in terms of making the international community take notice of this regional grouping.

      July 04, 2006
      IDSA Comments
    • Discussants: Kalim Bahadur & K Warikoo

      December 17, 2005
      Events
    • Discussants: Rajiv Dogra & Nirmala Joshi

      February 05, 2005
      Events

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