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A not-so-quiet American: New York Times reporter writes
on Central Asia
By Alex Lantier
11 July 2007
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Recent weeks have seen a flurry of articles on two energy-rich
former Soviet republics of Central Asia, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan,
in the New York Times. They focus on the persona
of Turkmenistans new president, Garbanguly Berdymukhammedov,
and the ouster of Kazakh president Nursultan Nazarbayevs
son-in-law, Rakhat Aliyev. Ones attention is drawn to the
byline of the articles, which bear the name of New York Times
Moscow correspondent C.J. Chivers.
An examination of Chiverss military and journalistic
history lends an interesting insight into the personnel who prepare
and organize public opinion for the various twists and turns of
the US governments foreign policy.
Chivers graduated from Cornell University in 1987 and joined
the Marine Corps. His unit fought in the 1990-1991 Gulf War against
Iraq and reportedly returned to the US for police operations in
Los Angeles after the 1992 riots sparked by the beating of motorist
Rodney King. He then went to Columbia Universitys journalism
school, and in 1996 got a job on the police and organized crime
beat at the Providence Journal in Rhode Island.
In 1999, Chiverss career took a quick upwards turn when
he joined the New York Times crime section. This
was a time when, under then-New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani,
the police were a major element of the city administration. After
the September 11, 2001 attacks, he was embedded in US forces in
Afghanistan and then, in 2003, in the US invasion forces in Iraq.
While in Iraq, he wrote articles suggesting that US forces
might be finding the nonexistent weapons of mass destruction (WMD)
used by the Bush administration to justify its invasion of Iraqfor
example, Paratroopers Find Suspicious Warheads and Rocket
Parts in Kirkuk on April 23, 2003and what can only
be described as politically convenient evidence of Saddam Husseins
atrocitiesfor example, Atrocities: Huge Gravesite
Is Found in Northern Iraq on April 18, 2003.
After his Iraq coverage, his career made another major leap:
he was named Moscow correspondent for the New York Times.
He soon developed a specialty for praising US-backed color
revolutions in former Soviet republicsthe 2003 Rose
Revolution in Georgia, the 2004 Orange Revolution in Ukraine,
and the failed 2006 Denim Revolution in Belarus.
To select one example, on December 27, 2004 he wrote an article
(Pro-West Leader Appears to Win Election) in which
he attacks the pro-Russian premier, Viktor Yanukovich, for attracting
the backing of oligarchs who run Ukraine. He also
accused Yanukovich of perpetrating massive electoral fraud. The
article essentially accuses Russian President Vladimir Putin of
backing a candidate guilty of corruption, while dismissing a small
but fiercely fought argument in the West about whether the
challenger, Victor Yushchenko, was receiving US help.
The fact that Yushchenko was elected with the support of natural
gas oligarch and billionaire Yulia Tymoshenko, whom he later named
prime minister, did not bother Chivers. Nor did he report the
funding that was, in fact, funneled to the Orange Revolution
operatives by the US State Department.
On January 17, 2005 Chivers also published an insiders
account of how top Ukrainian generals and intelligence officials
collaborated to prevent a government crackdown on the Orange Revolution
operatives. The article, titled Back Channels: A Crackdown
Averted; How Top Spies in Ukraine Changed the Nations Path,
did not mention any US sources. It is unclear from whom Chivers
obtained such detailed information on the workings of the Ukrainian
military-espionage apparatus.
In Belarus in 2006, he dismissed the Russian-aligned government
as a police state and Soviet anachronism
and expressed his hope that US-backed candidate Alexander Milenkevich
would bring civil society and human rights.
The attempted Denim Revolution failed, however. The
incumbent, Alexander Lukashenko, was widely acknowledged to have
won the election, and a few hundred pro-Milenkevich demonstrators
in Minsk were quickly arrested by the police.
Chiverss failure to write anything about the failed March
24, 2005 Tulip Revolution in Kyrgyzstan is, if anything,
more telling. For one monthfrom March 18 to April 14he
wrote nothing in the Times, though normally he contributes
one article every two to three days. The byline of his first major
article after the Tulip Revolution, a May 18 criticism of Uzbek
President Islam Karimov, placed him in Osh, Kyrgyzstan, the headquarters
of the US-backed Kyrgyz opposition. One wonders what Chivers was
doing there.
Chiverss most revealing article concerning the color
revolutions was perhaps a July 12, 2005 article criticizing
Karimovs suppression of an uprising in Andijan, located
near Osh and across the border in Uzbekistan (Crackdown
in Uzbekistan Reopens Longstanding Debate on U.S. Military Aid).
He interviewed US military commanders who had developed links
with the Uzbek army and were furious that they had not heeded
US recommendations to stand aside during the uprising.
He quoted Lt. General Walter Sharp: We did some training
with the [Georgian] military before the Rose Revolution, and when
it came down to the day of the parliamentary elections and the
demonstrations, the military said, Were not going
to put the people down.... It was a key factor that the
military understood what their role was. In other words,
a key factor was that the US army ordered the Georgian
army to back the revolution.
Chivers noted that US military collaborations with the militaries
of former Soviet republics were often run at training facilities
like the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies,
a German-American institution set up after the fall of the USSR.
Chivers informed his readers that it is located in the famous
resort town of Garmisch-Partenkirchen in the German Alps. Coincidentally
or otherwise, his byline stated he was reporting from Garmisch-Partenkirchen.
The Times interest in the former Soviet republics
of Central Asiaand particularly Chiverss latest articles
on Kazakhstan and Turkmenistancomes at a critical time.
The US ruling elite, unhappy with the Bush administrations
conduct of the Iraq war, is considering a partial withdrawal of
troops from Iraq and, simultaneously, is seeking theaters where
US forces could be more profitably employed. Recent proposals
to increase US troop levels in Afghanistanthe southern gateway
to Central Asiamust be seen in this light.
Though Chivers typically does not spell out in too much detail
what is at stake, it is not hard for those with access to an Internet
search engine to find out. According to a 2005 US Department of
Energy report, Kazakhstans currently active oilfields total
between 26 billion and 34 billion barrels of oilworth between
$1.8 trillion and $2.4 trillion at current prices. Turkmenistan
has some of the worlds largest deposits of natural gas,
according to the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe,
at 101 trillion cubic feetworth substantially over $1 trillion
at current prices.
Nor are oil and gas the only attractions. The region is one
of the worlds top producers of cotton and a paradise for
mining companies (with substantial deposits of lead, zinc, copper,
titanium, bauxite, gold and silver, among others listed by the
CIA World Factbook). It sits along Afghan heroin export routes
to Europe, estimated to be worth tens of billions of dollars annually.
The region is also of paramount military and strategic importance.
It is located near many of Russias most sensitive military
bases, which were located in south-central Russia and Central
Asia (the center of the former USSR) in the Soviet era to force
potential attacking US missiles to travel the longest possible
distance.
It is also the setting for massive rivalry between all the
world powers for control of pipeline routes to export Central
Asian oil and gas to the world market. Russia controls a network
of pipelines built during the Soviet era; the US and Europe view
construction of competing westward pipeline routes through the
Caucasus or Afghanistan as essential tasks. Central Asia is also
of great importance to neighboring China, which hopes to use it
as a link to its main sources of oil in East Africa and the Persian
Gulf, and as a source of oil and an export market, as well.
Chiverss articles themselves are very odd pieces of work.
His latest article on Berdymukhammedov (Seeking the Persona
of the New Turkmen Leader, July 5) desperately seeks something
positive to say. He acknowledges that the new president sits
atop a personality cult inherited via a rigged election
from the recently departed president Saparmurat Niyazov, whom
he describes as a madman, sadist, freak, [and] thief.
He interviews several Turkmen on the streets, who speak of their
hatred and distrust of the regime.
Chivers is not deterred: In this uncertainty, everyone
reads signs. Some are promising, others not. He describes
Berdymukhammedov as a competent bureaucrat. He cites
Berdymukhammedovs decision to reinstate 10th grade (Niyazov
canceled the last three years of high school after the collapse
of the USSR), and a brief comment by Evan Feigenbaum, deputy assistant
secretary of state for South and Central Asia: By and large
the trajectory is a positive one.
A casual reader of the article could be forgiven for asking
what Chivers saw in the new Turkmen leader. Perhaps it was Berdymukhammedovs
July 5 announcement, which Chivers did not mention, that he supports
a plan for a natural gas pipeline from Turkmenistan south through
US-controlled Afghanistan.
Chiverss solicitude for the Turkmen president did not
extend, however, to Kazakh president Nazarbayev. Nazarbayev recently
beat back a political challenge from his son-in-law, Rakhat Aliyev,
who claimed that Kazakhstan was ready for a new generation
of leadership. Aliyev said in another context that republican
rule did not suit Kazakhstan, and that he preferred that the leader
of the new generation rule as a sultan. A former intelligence
official who amassed a business empire in media, banking and sugar
processing, Aliyev was exiled to the Kazakh embassy in Austria,
then indicted on quite possibly trumped-up charges, and now faces
possible extradition back to Kazakhstan.
Chiverss latest article on Aliyev (Former Son-in-Law
of Kazakh Leader Says He Was Framed, July 6) claims that
Aliyevs treatment raises fresh questions about
Kazakh political life. The article does not explain how such a
case is new or unusual for Central Asia, whose states are all
widely acknowledged to be dictatorships run by former Stalinist
apparatchiks. It does, however, present at length Aliyevs
claims of innocence and his desire to be reunited with his family.
His sympathetic treatment of the would-be sultan of Kazakhstan
does not prevent him from denouncing Nazarbayevs lust
for control.
Chivers thus reserves his criticism for a Central Asian president
whose energy policy currently is tilting away from the US and
towards Russia. On May 12 Nazarbayev signed an agreement with
Russia to continue exporting all Kazakhstans natural gas
through Russian pipelines and refineries, in return for a Russian
commitment to increase its transport and refining capacity. Nazarbayev
also recently signed a deal giving Russia access to Kazakh uranium
reserves, as Russia creates a new nuclear energy conglomerate,
Atomenergoprom.
See Also:
Putin, Bush talks fail to dispel mounting
tensions
[3 July 2007]
An appeal to the Orange
Revolutions paymaster: Ukraines president writes in
the Washington Post
[7 December 2006]
Wagging the dog in
Belarus
[27 May 2006]
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