The Caspian Sea,
long a Russian lake, is now witnessing a naval arms race. Before the
Soviet Union broke up in 1991, the only nations bordering the Caspian
were Russia (with most of the coastline) and Iran. But now those two
nations have been joined by parts of the Soviet Union that have become
independent states (Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan). It goes
downhill from there.
Iran shares a land border with Azerbaijan and has a historical
claim on Azerbaijan. In the 19th century Azerbaijan (as in the area
occupied the Azeris, a Turkic people) was divided by Russia and Iran.
Currently about a quarter of the Iranian population is Azeri, but the
Azeris of Azerbaijan believe all Azeris should be part of an independent
Azerbaijan. This was how it was for centuries before Turkey, Russia and
Iran began seeking to conquer Azerbaijan. Some Iranian Azeris like this
idea and Iran is always looking for ways to make Azerbaijan back off.
So Iran is building up its Caspian naval forces, which is annoying
Russia more than Azerbaijan.
The Iranian buildup includes a new corvette, an Iranian built
1,400 ton ship. Azerbaijan responded by buying $1.6 billion worth of
weapons from Israel (which angered Iran a great deal.) Among the items
ordered were Gabriel anti-ship missiles. These are 522 kg (1,150 pound)
weapons with a range of 36 kilometers. Azerbaijan will use these to
protect its Caspian Sea coast from the growing number of Iranian
warships being introduced in the area. Most of the Iranian Caspian
“fleet” consists of small patrol boats. Some are armed with anti-ship
missiles but they are basically coast guard type craft.
What really controls the Caspian is aircraft and Russia has
the most of those. Russia also has the only water link to the ocean and
thus the ability to bring in more warships on short notice. These, plus
Russia’s larger air force gives Russia the edge.
This is not enough for the nations that used to be part of the
Soviet Union (and are still on good terms with Russia). That’s because
Iran has threatened all of its neighbors on the Caspian and has claims
on offshore oil fields that belong to Azerbaijan. There’s believed to be
another 40 billion barrels of oil under the Caspian, and Iran wants to
grab all it can. This makes all the other Caspian nations just a wee bit
nervous.
The Caspian Sea is the world's largest lake and it is huge, at
371,000 square kilometers (about the same size as Poland). It is about a
thousand kilometers long and 430 kilometers wide. It's saline, but only
has about a third as salty as ocean water. The Caspian has a 7,000
kilometer long coastline, with the largest chunk (1,900 kilometers)
belonging to Kazakhstan.
Since 1952, a canal, linking the Don and Volga rivers, gave
the Caspian Sea access to the Black Sea, and the world's oceans.
However, the largest ships that can use the canal must be no more than
140 meters (434 feet) long, 17 meters (52 feet wide) and a draft of no
more than 3.5 meters (10.8 feet). The canal moves over 12 million tons
of cargo a year. About half of that was oil, or oil products. The main
reason for buying the new warships is to protect the offshore oil
facilities, and the movement of oil cargoes.
Since the 19th century, a Russian (and later Soviet) flotilla
was the largest naval force in the Caspian. After the Soviet Union
dissolved in 1991, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan inherited
most of that. Although all Caspian nations have, sort of, pledged not to
get involved in a naval arms race. Iran has broken that arrangement and
everyone else responded by bringing more warships into the Caspian.
Russia and its three allies have an advantage because they can buy from
anywhere and bring the ships in via the Canal. Iran has to build larger
ships in Caspian Sea yards. Smaller ships, and subs, can be brought in
via train, which is what Iran is doing.
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