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The conflict that has erupted in the Caucasus has set alarm bells ringing because of Georgia's pivotal role in the global energy market.
Georgia has no significant oil or gas reserves of its own but it is a key transit point for oil from the Caspian and central Asia destined for Europe and the US.
Crucially, it is the only practical route from this increasingly important producer region that avoids both Russia and Iran.
The 1,770km (1,100 miles) Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, which entered service only last year, pumps up to 1 million barrels of oil per day from Baku in Azerbaijan to Yumurtalik, Turkey, where it is loaded on to supertankers for delivery to Europe and the US. Around 249km of the route passes through Georgia, with parts running only 55km from South Ossetia.
The security of the BTC pipeline, depicted in the James Bond film The World is Not Enough, has been a primary concern since before its construction.
The first major attack on the pipeline took place only last week - not in Georgia but in Turkey where part of it was destroyed by PKK separatist rebels.
Output from the pipeline, which is 30 per cent owned by BP and carries more than 1 per cent of the world's supply, is likely to be on hold for several weeks while the fire is extinguished and the damage repaired.
But the threat of another attack by separatists in Georgia itself is very real.
Only a few days before the Turkish explosion, Georgian separatists threatened to sabotage the pipeline if hostilities continued.
The latest eruption of violence could easily spur fresh attacks. The BTC pipeline, which is buried throughout most of its length to make sabotage more difficult, was a politically highly charged project. It was firmly opposed by Russia, which views the Caucasus as its own sphere of influence and wants central Asian oil to be exported via its own territory.
Russia also backs the South Ossetian and Abkhazian separatists in Georgia and relations between Moscow and Tbilisi have curdled into outright hostility in recent months.
The BTC pipeline, which cost $3 billion to build, is a key plank of US foreign policy because it reduces Western reliance on oil from both the Middle East and Russia.
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I doubt Russia will tactically seek to destroy the BTC pipelines, knowingly quite well the interest of the major Oil companies of the Western Nations.
On the other hand, I'm appalled by the assertions of many in Western Europe that Georgia has no right to defend its Sovereignty.
Joshua, New York, USA
The BTC pipeline will be connected to the TAP pipeline through a pipeline through the Caspian Sea to Turkmenistan. That much is patently obvious.
James, Woodward, USA
What doesn't make sense to me about it, though, is if the US is trying to cut out Russia, why does Russia's pipeline run into the SAME place that the BTC pipeline runs. Also, why did Georgia attack Russia knowing it would lose? It doesn't make sense.
James, Woodward, USA
That's all provided that Georgia was the one that attacked first. The more reasonable answer is that Russia attacked Georgia to destroy the BTC pipeline and push America out of Georgia knowing the US wouldn't want to be in a direct war with Russia so close to their nation.
James, Woodward, USA
This is yet another example of why it's urgently important for the United States get a serious energy policy in place, and start a relentless effort to get the heck off of fossil fuels as much as possible and as soon as possible. The so-called "energy bubble" will be reinflated starting Monday.
Latega Powell, Raleigh, USA
Indeed Mark, a new world order in which Russia and China wil be the princpal commanders, not EU and US anymore....
Mark, London,
Perfect! Just what is needed right now... watch the oil prices fly off the scale again brother. Welcome to the New World Order 2008.
Mark, London,
South Ossetia was taken over by Russia militarily during the summer of the Beslan massacre. South Ossetians don't care for independence. The threats from the "separatists" are pure Kremlin. Russia wants the pipeline to strangle Central Asia with, and to raise the price of oil.
David Thompson, Chicago, USA
Alexey, the first is between two nations, the second is between separatists and the nation of Georgia. Significant difference.
This all plays to the goals of the Kremlin which wants to punish Georgia for braking rank with Russia and also to control the flow of energy throughout the area.
J. Russell, Houston, USA
So what's the difference then between Iran who's threatened to bombard Israel an Georgia shooting rockets to Ossetia? Both control oil transit and demonstrating aggressive politics.
Alexey L.N., Novosibirsk, Russia