Strategic Security Dilemmas in the Caucasus and Central Asia
NBR Analysis vol. 14, no. 3

Strategic Security Dilemmas in the Caucasus and Central Asia

by Roy Allison and Svante E. Cornell
October 1, 2003

As the Central Asian and Caucasus countries enter the twenty-first century and are in their second decade of behaving as individual states, it is apparent that we need to modify our analytical approaches to understand how these states perceive their strategic interests. We need to re-evaluate how their political leaders assess threats to their countries’ security. We need to investigate how external influences from great and regional powers—Russia, China, India, Pakistan, Iran, Turkey, Europe, and the United States—are shaping the security landscape both within the Eurasian states and across regional boundaries. We also need to anticipate how the deployment of U.S. and other national forces on the territories of fragile states in the Caucasus and Central Asia, to fight the global war on terror, may produce unintended consequences—politically, economically, and socially—for longer-term regional stability. This first volume of the series examines “Strategic Security Dilemmas in the Caucasus and Central Asia.” Their research attempts to measure how current security dilemmas affect the future stability of the states situated at the crossroads of Europe, Asia, and the Middle East.