Aliyev At Munich: Azerbaijan’s Emerging Place In The New Eurasian Geopolitics

Aliyev At Munich: Azerbaijan’s Emerging Place In The New Eurasian Geopolitics

By Andrew Korybko

Azerbaijan’s pivotal role in TRIPP, which is the new means through which the US aims to encircle Russia along its entire southern periphery, is why it’s important to pay attention to his views.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev participated in a panel discussion at this year’s Munich Security Conference. It’s important to draw greater attention to the highlights given the role that Azerbaijan now plays in the expansion of US influence along Russia’s entire southern periphery. This is being achieved through the “Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity” (TRIPP), which readers can learn more about here, as well as in the context of Vance’s recent trip to the South Caucasus herehere, and here.

Aliyev began by trumpeting Azerbaijan’s role in the “Middle Corridor” (MC) between the EU, Turkiye, the South Caucasus, the Central Asian Republics (CARs), and China. TRIPP complements the existing Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway and will thus result in Azerbaijan hosting two extensions of the MC on its territory. Over the past year, he said that his country invested considerably in regional connectivity projects, including plans for a fibre optic cable under the Caspian Sea to the CARs.

In his words, “All the countries on the route will be more politically and economically integrated” upon TRIPP’s completion, but this requires the signing of an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty. Aliyev has made that conditional on Armenia removing its Constitutional preamble’s reference to the Declaration of Independence whose own preamble makes claim to Karabakh. He doesn’t say so, but the aforesaid comprehensive integration would also include military-security aspects, thus threatening Russia.

Aliyev then affirmed his belief that the US’ interest in TRIPP will continue across future administrations due to its agreement with Armenia for the US to own the majority stake (albeit at a different ratio after 49 years) in its operating company for the next 99 years. In his view, Trump made this commitment due to the enormous regional connectivity assets that Azerbaijan, Turkiye, Georgia, and the CARs already developed up until this point, which enable the US to more easily scale them all through TRIPP.

Azerbaijan is now poised to play a more active role in the CARs’ such projects after joining their consultative council last year, which is now rebranded as the “Community of Central Asia”. Of relevance, Aliyev mentioned how China is now financing a complementary trans-CARs corridor through Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan, with the innuendo being that Azerbaijan could play a role in this too. The overall impression is that Azerbaijan is indispensable to the West’s future plans in the CARs.

The last question concerned Russian strikes against the State Oil Company Of Azerbaijan’s assets in Ukraine, which prompted Aliyev to claim that Russia damaged its embassy there three times, the last two of which allegedly occurred after the coordinates were shared with it. Accordingly, one could interpret this as Azerbaijan’s implied justification for helping the US encircle Russia via TRIPP, though there might be a lot more to it than he’s letting on (regardless of whether or not he’s being truthful).

Altogether, nothing that Aliyev shared should come as a surprise to astute observers, but casual ones who haven’t been following regional events can more easily be brought up to speed by reviewing these highlights. As it stands, Azerbaijan is poised to play a pivotal role in facilitating the expansion of US influence along Russia’s entire southern periphery after the Ukrainian Conflict ends, but this risks dangerously worsening the Azerbaijani-Russian security dilemma at the expense of regional stability.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Voice of East.

 

#Azerbaijan #CentralAsianRepublics #EU #Geopolitics #Russia #SouthCaucasus #Turkey #Turkiye #Ukraine #USA

Kazakhstan Might Have Just Placed Itself On An Irreversible Collision Course With Russia

Kazakhstan Might Have Just Placed Itself On An Irreversible Collision Course With Russia

By Andrew Korybko

The production of NATO-standard shells hints that Kazakhstan plans to follow in Azerbaijan’s footsteps by having its armed forces conform with the bloc’s standards ahead of what its leadership might have been duped by the West to believe will be an inevitable crisis with Russia after the Ukrainian Conflict ends.

Background Briefing

Sputnik reported in early December that Kazakhstan will build four factories that’ll produce Russian- and NATO-standard shells, which prompted First Deputy Chairman of the Duma Defence Committee Alexei Zhuravlev to harshly condemn this development. In his words, “We try to ignore how a seemingly fraternal republic has swiftly abandoned not only the Russian language but also the Cyrillic alphabet. How they’re creating ‘yurts of invincibility’ while supporting Ukraine.”

He added that “now they’re switching to NATO ammunition standards, clearly intending to abandon Russian weapons in the future, replacing them with Western ones. Astana may not have been the largest buyer of Russian military-industrial complex equipment, but the move itself is certainly unfriendly and must be responded to accordingly. We all know what such cooperation with NATO has meant for Kiev.” This is the latest manifestation of Kazakhstan’s pro-Western pivot that accelerated in recent months:

* 30 September 2023: “Kazakhstan’s Pro-EU Pivot Poses A Challenge For The Sino-Russo Entente

* 2 July 2025: “Why’d Erdogan Decide To Expand Turkiye’s Sphere Of Influence Eastwards?

* 9 August 2025: “The TRIPP Corridor Threatens To Undermine Russia’s Broader Regional Position

* 2 November 2025: “The West Is Posing New Challenges To Russia Along Its Entire Southern Periphery

* 12 November 2025: “A US Think Tank Considers Armenia & Kazakhstan To Be Key Players For Containing Russia

* 13 November 2025: “The US’ Central Asian Minerals Deals Could Put More Pressure On Russia & Afghanistan

* 23 November 2025: “Why’d Kazakhstan Join The Abraham Accords When It Already Recognizes Israel?

* 2 December 2025: “The ‘Community Of Central Asia’ Could Reduce Russia’s Regional Influence

* 19 December 2025: “Turkish Curriculum’s Renaming Of Central Asia To Turkistan Is Turkiye’s Latest Soft Power Flex

In brief, the “Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity” (TRIPP) will turbocharge the Turkish-led injection of Western influence along Russia’s entire southern periphery by creating a military logistics corridor between NATO member Turkiye and the Central Asian Republics. Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan are part of the Russian-led CSTO mutual defence bloc and the Turkish-led “Organization of Turkic States” (OTS) socio-economic one that’s recently begun discussing a joint military structure and drills.

Azerbaijan, whose armed forces completed their conformation to NATO standards in early November, will help those two follow suit through its role in the “Community of Central Asia” (CCA, the newly rebranded annual Consultative Meeting of Heads of State) that it joined later that same month. The CCA is therefore expected to function as the means for the NATO-backed OTS to “poach” Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan from the CSTO for irreversibly shattering Russia’s “sphere of influence” in Central Asia.

Grand Strategic Context

The context within which these newly accelerated processes are occurring, which were unleashed by TRIPP (and its origins in turn stem from Nikol Pashinyan seizing the Armenian premiership in 2018 after his successful Colour Revolution that later led to the next Karabakh Conflict), is the Ukrainian peace talks. The US is essentially relying on the Azeri-Turkish Axis (ATA) to jointly pressure Russia along its entire southern periphery for raising the odds of Putin agreeing to a lopsided peace deal in Ukraine’s favour.

He’s thus far refused, but Kazakhstan’s planned production of NATO-standard shells adds a sense of urgency to ending the special operation so as to refocus Russia’s strategic attention towards its entire southern periphery in the hopes of averting the irreversible shattering of its “sphere of influence” there. Ideally, the US would help manage Turkish-Russian tensions in this space through the five means described here as part of a grand deal detailed herehere, and here, but that can’t be taken for granted.

Kazakhstan’s Anti-Russian Plans

Russia must therefore prepare itself for the possibility of an inevitable crisis with Kazakhstan, and also ATA by extension that might then come to involve NATO as a whole due to Turkiye’s membership therein, after it just decided to build NATO-standard shells. Its new factories’ purpose is to stockpile these shells ahead of what Kazakhstan appears to have already concluded will be an inevitable crisis with Russia sparked by the undeclared plan to have its armed forces conform to NATO standards.

The only reason why it’s setting this scenario sequence into motion is because its leadership has been duped by the West (including ATA and Ukraine) to believe that Russia will set its sights on historically Russian territory within Kazakhstan’s Soviet-drawn borders after the special operation ends. Kazakhstan thus no longer wants to be dependent on Russian military-technical equipment and has instead quietly decided to transition to NATO wares instead with ATA’s help.

This is expected to occur in parallel with its armed forces conforming with NATO standards under the cover of closer cooperation within the OTS or at least within the CCA, which includes Azerbaijan with whom it, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan now jointly drill and consult each other. Conforming with NATO standards, transitioning to its wares, and stockpiling its shells are meant to help Kazakhstan’s armed forces hold out long enough in a conflict with Russia for more NATO-backed ATA support to arrive.

ATA In Action

If Turkish and/or Azeri troops (respectively formal and informal NATO troops who have mutual defence obligations) aren’t already deployed to Kazakhstan by the time that a crisis erupts, and such an advance deployment could also trigger a crisis, then they’d have to speedily be dispatched there afterwards. The only realistic way in crisis conditions is by air over the Caspian Sea, possibly under the cover of civilian airliners to deter Russia from shooting them down, but another supplementary route is also possible.

Casual observers don’t know that ATA is allied with Pakistan, which can be considered an unofficial member of the OTS, so any troops that they might have already deployed there by that time could be airlifted from there to Kazakhstan. This could also be done under civilian cover to deter Russian jets from shooting them down from their airbase in Kyrgyzstan’s Kant. If Afghan-Pak ties stabilize and the PAKAFUZ railway is built by then, Pakistan could also ship military equipment to Kazakhstan that way too.

As a means for either “deterring” or at least “restraining” Russia, ATA might also try to stir trouble in the North Caucasus, which could provoke a Russian response for invoking their mutual defence obligations and thus draw NATO member Turkiye and “Major Non-NATO Ally” Pakistan into the fray. A multi-front conflict with Turkiye in the Black Sea, Azerbaijan in the North Caucasus, it and Kazakhstan in the Caspian Sea, and Kazakhstan in Central Asia (with aid from ATA and Pakistan) could easily overextend Russia.

Trigger Events

The following events could contribute to sparking the worst-case scenario of a Russian-Kazakh crisis:

* Kazakhstan making tangible progress on conforming its armed forces to NATO standards;

* Its increased import of US, Turkish, Azeri, and/or Pakistani weaponry (all increasingly standardized);

* More drills between its armed forces and the aforesaid countries’;

* Freezing its membership in the CSTO just like already “poached” Armenia has done;

* The deployment of US, Turkish, Azeri, and/or Pakistani advisors/troops (even under PMC cover);

* The passing of Ukrainian-like discriminatory legislation against Kazakhstan’s Russian minority;

* Pogroms against them;

* And/or meddling in the “Orenburg Corridor” amidst the external revival of “Idel-Ural” separatism.

Depending on what happens, Russia’s kinetic response could be framed as preventive or preemptive.

Concluding Thoughts

The Kazakh leadership’s threat perception of Russia that’s responsible for its decision to produce NATO-standard shells is based on the false premise that the Kremlin has revanchist plans for re-incorporating historically Russian land within Kazakhstan. This shows that they never took seriously Russia’s reason for the special operation, namely to neutralize Ukrainian-emanating threats from NATO precisely of the sort that Kazakhstan is now on the path to produce in the same mistaken belief that this will “deter” Russia.

So long as Kazakhstan doesn’t pose a security threat to Russia and treats its minority with respect, Russia doesn’t care what else Kazakhstan does, but its decision to produce NATO-standard shells indisputably poses a latent security threat to Russia as explained. Kazakhstan therefore risks creating the same crisis with Russia that its aforesaid decision and consequent military-strategic trajectory are meant to avert all because it let itself be duped by the US, Turkiye, Azerbaijan, and Ukraine unless it soon changes course.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Voice of East.

 

#Afghanistan #Azerbaijan #CentralAsia #CentralAsianRepublics #CSTO #Geopolitics #Kazakhstan #NATO #OrganizationOfTurkicStates #Pakistan #Russia #Turkey #Turkiye #Ukraine #USA