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15 Brown J. World Aff. 131 (2008-2009)
The Geopolitics of the Caucasus

handle is hein.journals/brownjwa15 and id is 433 raw text is: The Geopolitics of the Caucasus
BRENDA SHAFFER
School of Political Science
University of Haifa
STUDENTS AND SCHOLARS OF INTERNATIONAL relations should regularly call to mind
the city of Gori. They should remember this city not only as the birthplace of Joseph
Stalin, but also as a reminder of the centrality of geography to international politics
and security. Gori was the center of the August 2008 war in the Caucasus. However,
the city is not a historical symbol, nor the location of some important monastery or
mosque. It does not hold any great meaning in the identity of Russians, Ossetians,
or Georgians. Gori was central to the 2008 war simply because it is located at the
center of the Caucasus. Russian control of Gori meant that Tbilisi, as well as all the   131
land-locked states of Central Asia and the Caucasus, had no access to Georgia's Black
Sea ports. These ports have become, in recent years, an important trade outlet for the
land-locked Caspian region. Once Moscow had control of Gori, there was no need to
conquer Tbilisi, or to apply pressure on the states of the Caspian region in order to get
its way on a variety of economic and security issues on its policy agenda.
A look at a map illustrates the strategic importance of the Caucasus region for
Russia and other powers. Not only is the Caucasus adjacent to Russia's southern border,
but it is the essential outlet of the landlocked Caspian region to open seas. Control of
Georgia determines the flow of trade patterns and venues of infrastructures for all of
the Caucasus and Central Asia. The Caucasus is also the physical meeting ground of
a number of powers: Russia, Turkey, and Iran. Moreover, it serves as an important air
corridor from the United States and Europe to destinations in the Middle East and
Asia, including Afghanistan.
In addition to external powers such as Russia, the unique geographic locations of
the three states of the Caucasus (Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia) have had consider-
DR BRENDA SHAFFER is a faculty member at the University of Haifa, and she is currently the President
of the American Political Science Association's Foreign Policy Section. She is the author of Energy Politics
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009).
Copyright © 2009 by the BrowniJournml of WorldAffairs

SPRING/SUMMER 2009 - VOLUME XV, ISSUE II

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