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Archived Project and Reports

Caspian Energy Project

Program Directors:
Bulent Aliriza

Foreign investor development of oil production in the Caspian Sea cannot proceed unless and until the means for moving this oil to markets are in place. Final route selection will reflect political considerations as much as economic justification. Foreign governments and private sectors alike are following the pipeline route selection negotiations with great interest. For interested parties to be able to make informed judgments, a clear understanding of all the issues on the table is essential. Unfortunately, the reliability of available information does not always match its abundance.

To bridge this gap, the Energy Security and Climate Change Program began the Caspian Energy Project in Spring 1994. The group focuses on foreign investor developments in oil production and export in the Caspian Sea littoral states, the Transcaucasus and Central Asia, with emphasis on the current political and economic climate. Under the joint direction of Bob Ebel, former director of the Energy Security and Climate Change Program, and Bulent Aliriza, director of the Turkey Project, the group examines recent events and trends in the Caucasus and Central Asia and evaluates the possibilities for oil exploration, production, and export in the region. Members of the group include high-level officials from the private sector, foreign governments and embassies, U.S. government offices, and independent agencies. The Caspian Energy Project invites speakers with expertise in politics, economics, and industry to discuss the challenges foreign investors face in the region.

The Turkey, Russia, Iran Nexus

This project is developing a comprehensive assessment of the geostrategic impact of evolving relations between these three pivotal countries and the implications for the United States.

This multi-program CSIS project is developing a comprehensive assessment of the nexus of relations between Turkey, Russia, and Iran. Competitive and cooperative interactions among these three countries in economic, energy, political, and security affairs is having a major influence on developments in the Eastern Mediterranean, Caucasus, and Central Asia. The project is assessing the geostrategic impact of these dynamics and their implications for U.S. interests and policy.

The project aims to provide practical recommendations to policymakers for managing U.S. relations with each of the three countries, influencing regional developments, and advancing several critical U.S. interests impacted by these dynamics—including dealing with the effects of the Syria crisis; stabilization of Afghanistan, Iraq, and the Caucasus; preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons; promoting positive change and peace in the Middle East; and diversification of energy sources. The project final report will integrate independent analysis by CSIS scholars with perspectives from Turkish, Russian, and Iranian counterparts. It will also offer insights into how neighbors in the Caucasus, Central Asia, and the Eastern Mediterranean are viewing and might react to various developments.

In the first phase of the project, CSIS scholars explored the domestic and international forces that are shaping bilateral relations and limited trilateral collaboration. We developed preliminary assessments of the future course of these relations based on convergences and divergences of interests and the impact of U.S. policy and other international developments. We continue to assess the policies of the three countries toward regional conflicts, ethnic minorities, security issues, and development of energy resources.

The project also seeks to promote understanding and dialogue among analysts from all three countries and the United States. In the second phase of the project, with support from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, CSIS scholars have partnered with research institutions in Turkey (The Economic Policy Research Foundation of Turkey, TEPAV), and Russia (the Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences), to organize two workshops—one focused on economic and energy issues, held in Ankara on March 29, 2012, and a second on political and security issues held in Moscow on June 18-19, 2012. We have also commissioned papers by Turkish, Russian, and Iranian analysts to solicit their perspectives on the drivers and long-term prospects of relations between these three countries. These exchanges with scholars and officials are designed to give our final analysis a deeper, multinational character. During the last half of 2012, the project will hold several Washington seminars on critical issues influenced by the Turkey-Russia-Iran nexus including the crisis in Syria, Iran’s quest for nuclear weapons, and developments in Central Asia and the Caucasus.

The project team is led by Stephen J. Flanagan, Henry A. Kissinger Chair, and includes Bulent Aliriza, Director and Senior Associate, Turkey Project; Jon B. Alterman, Director and Senior Fellow, Middle East Program; Edward C. Chow, Senior Fellow, Energy Security and Climate Change Program; and Andrew C. Kuchins, Director and Senior Fellow, Russia and Eurasia Program.
 

Former Programs

  • Strengthening of America—Our Children’s Future
  • Transnational Threats Project Archive
  • HIV/AIDS Task Force
  • Hills Program on Governance
  • The Embassy of the Future
  • Turkey Project
    • Turkey Update
    • Other Publications
    • Archived Project and Reports
    • Useful Links
  • Youth, Prosperity, and Security Initiative
  • Project in Southeast European Studies
  • Capacity and Resolve: Foreign Assessments of U.S. Power
  • Global Aging Initiative
  • New Defense Approaches Project
  • Project on Global Water Policy
  • CSIS Commission on Public Infrastructure
  • Our Global Challenges
  • Smart Power Initiative
  • Alliances and American Leadership Project
  • Cohen-Nunn Dialogues
  • Independent Commission on the Security Forces of Iraq
  • Open Dialogue Initiative
  • The Washington Quarterly
  • U.S. Nuclear Energy Project
  • Transatlantic Media Network
  • Williamsburg-CSIS Global Forum
  • HSEI: Governance, Finance, Public Support
  • Smart Power in Space
  • Nuclear Energy Program
Find Additional Content
Media Queries
Contact H. Andrew Schwartz
Chief Communications Officer
Tel: 202.775.3242

Contact Paige Montfort
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Tel: 202.775.3173
Related
Turkey Project

Most Recent

Report
The Turkey, Russia, Iran Nexus—Abbreviated Edition
By Jon B. Alterman
March 20, 2013
Report
U.S.-Turkish Relations
By Bulent Aliriza
November 13, 2012
Report
The End of Zero Problems? Turkey and Shifting Regional Dynamics
By Bulent Aliriza
April 12, 2012
Report
2011 Global Forecast
By Craig Cohen
June 15, 2011
Report
Turkey's Evolving Dynamics
By Bulent Aliriza, Edward C. Chow
March 30, 2009
View all content associated with this program
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Media Queries
Contact H. Andrew Schwartz
Chief Communications Officer
Tel: 202.775.3242

Contact Paige Montfort
Media Relations Coordinator, External Relations
Tel: 202.775.3173

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