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The New Great Game: Blood and Oil in Central Asia » (First Paperback Edition with New Afterwo)

Book cover image of The New Great Game: Blood and Oil in Central Asia by Lutz Kleveman

Authors: Lutz Kleveman
ISBN-13: 9780802141729, ISBN-10: 0802141722
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
Date Published: August 2004
Edition: First Paperback Edition with New Afterwo

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Author Biography: Lutz Kleveman

Lutz Kleveman was born in Germany and studied at the London School of Economics. He has reported from war zones for the Daily Telegraph, Newsweek, CNN, The Independent, Der Spiegel, and Die Zeit. He lives in New York.

Book Synopsis

In the tradition of The Prize, Lutz Kleveman gives us the twenty-first-century chapter on the history, passion, and politics of oil and gas resources, and the struggle to control them in a critical part of the world.
Using the concept of the "Great Game" that Rudyard Kipling immortalized in his novel Kim, Kleveman argues that there is now a new Great Game in the region, a modern variant of the nineteenth-century clash of imperial ambitions of Great Britain and Tsarist Russia. Traveling thousands of miles, from Turkmenistan (where statues of the country's leader are made of gold and line the thoroughfares) to the Afghan Hindu Kush, Kleveman met with the principal Great Game actors between Kabul and Moscow: oil barons, generals, diplomats, and warlords.
Based on extensive research and travel in the Caucasus, the Caspian, and Central Asia, The New Great Game is a thrilling travel narrative through one of the world's last unexplored frontiers, and a savvy and incisive analysis of the power struggle for the world's remaining energy resources.

Publishers Weekly

Conventional thinking on a possible confrontation between the U.S. and China assumes that the geography of conflict will be off of China's coast over the Taiwan issue or as competition for the Spratly Islands heats up. In his first book, veteran war correspondent Kleveman makes the intriguing argument that the challenge to U.S. primacy will in fact take place to the west of China's hinterland province Xingjiang over the resources of the energy-rich Caspian Sea and the surrounding Central Asian republics. The central thesis, that the U.S., China, Russia and Iran are now engaged in a New Great Game, a power struggle for control of the region's vast oil and gas reserves, is thinly woven through the narrative in what is largely a war zone travel diary. Kleveman, who readily admits his conviction that the recent war in Iraq was motivated by the interests of Houston oilmen, similarly treats the war on terrorism as little more than a pretext for the presence of U.S. troops in the region to secure oil interests and pipeline routes. Thus, the book gives the impression that Kleveman has selectively presented interviews with oil ministers and locals that lend his argument the most weight, while giving short shrift to those with opposing views. The work draws attention to a little understood and increasingly important part of the world where oil, Islam and terrorism converge to create havoc, but in the end, Kleveman fails to show that competition and not cooperation will mark the development of the region's resources. Agent, Emma Parry, Carlisle & Co. (Sept.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Table of Contents

The Devil's Tears: An Introduction1
Pipeline Poker: Baku's Oil Boom11
Stalin's Legacy: Georgia31
Bandits and Oil Barons: Chechnya51
The Big Pipeline: Decision in the Villa Petrolea65
The New Oil Dorado: Kazakhstan74
The Waking Giant: China96
Persian Trump Cards: Iran116
Stalin's Disneyland: Turkmenistan144
The Yankees Arrive: Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan165
Pipe Dreams: Afghanistan199
The Cradle of Terror: Pakistan234
Angry Young Men: An Epilogue255
Acknowledgments265
Notes267
Bibliography271
Index273

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