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  • Kazakhstan questions US military role in Central Asia

    KAZAKHSTAN QUESTIONS U.S. MILITARY ROLE IN CENTRAL ASIA
    By Roger McDermott

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    The Jamestown Foundation
    Aug 17 2005

    Tuesday, August 16, 2005

    Kazakhstan's delicate foreign policy, predicated upon balancing
    its relations among China, Russia, and the United States, has come
    under increased pressure both from its involvement in the Shanghai
    Cooperation Organization (SCO) and the growing tendency within the
    region to question the long-term strategic role of the U.S. military
    in Central Asia. The SCO's request that Washington set a deadline
    for its military presence in the region has exposed Astana's foreign
    policy paradigm to a severe test. Equally, senior and well-placed
    Kazakhstani analysts have raised objections to the need for a sustained
    U.S. military presence in the region and praised President Nursultan
    Nazarbayev's efforts to avoid basing American forces in Kazakhstan.

    Kazakhstan has developed a close bilateral defense relationship with
    the U.S. and deepened its commitment to NATO's Partnership for Peace
    (PfP). Its open demonstration of supporting the war on terror has
    been shown by steadfast adherence to the deployment of elements of
    its peacekeeping unit (KAZBAT) in Iraq. There are no tangible signs
    that Astana is considering backtracking on any of these steps; it has
    no need to do so. Nevertheless, Kazakhstan's support for the SCO's
    call for the U.S. to think in terms of a timetable for getting out of
    Central Asia has been explained by reference to pressure from China
    and Russia. General Richard Myers, Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs
    of Staff, has reportedly interpreted the position of the Central
    Asian members of the SCO in precisely this manner.

    However, the Kazakhstani media has presented an alternative
    interpretation. According to Delovaya nedelya, the driving force behind
    Astana's strategic choice in favor of the SCO is rooted in its fear
    of the potential spread of "color revolutions." Such fears predispose
    the Nazarbayev regime to open a more constructive dialogue on the
    region's future with Beijing and Moscow. Simultaneously, the same
    article argues the existence of the link between Britain's support
    for the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and the recent London bombings,
    pointing to the level of risk to Kazakh security taken in its current
    deployment of KAZBAT in Iraq. Such articles are not anti-American,
    as they also offer the other side of Kazakhstan's dilemma: falling
    hostage to China and Russia (Delovaya nedelya, July 22).

    Bolat Sultanov, director of Kazakhstan's Institute for Strategic
    Studies under the Kazakh president, has gone much further in his
    opposition to any continued American military presence in Central
    Asia. He objects that it undermines Russian and Chinese security.
    Convinced that the United States must withdraw its military personnel,
    he argues that the spirit of the SCO is contravened by the presence
    of foreign military bases. "I am categorically against the presence
    of the military bases in Central Asia because any military base is
    an occupation base. By the way, I cannot understand Central Asian
    countries' euphoria about the military bases. Everywhere there
    are military bases people are demanding that the bases be pulled
    out. Look at Europe, South Korea, and Japan," explained Sultanov
    (Interfax-Kazakhstan, August 10). Sultanov's position is not entirely
    new, having previously postulated such ideas, but what is unclear is
    the role and influence his open and public hostility towards the U.S.
    military presence will have on domestic public opinion and, perhaps
    more significantly, within the Nazarbayev regime itself.

    Kazakhstan is also observing the difficulties relating to the
    issues emerging from the U.S. military deployment in Central Asia.
    Uzbekistan's decision to terminate its agreement with the U.S.
    concerning Karshi-Khanabad has had implications for the renegotiation
    of the bilateral agreement with Kyrgyzstan regarding the Ganci base
    in Bishkek; already plans are being mooted about elements of the
    Karshi-Khanabad deployment being relocated to Ganci. These agreements,
    as important as they are, now seem a little shakier than they once did,
    especially when compared to the Collective Security Treaty Organization
    (CSTO). On August 11, Bishkek ratified the CSTO agreement on the joint
    use of military infrastructure facilities in member countries. In
    this context, the deployment of elements of the Russian Air Force at
    Kant now appears more durable. Armenia, Belarus, and Kazakhstan had
    already ratified the agreement (Interfax, August 11).

    Other multilateral organizations, such as NATO and the OSCE, are also
    doing much to improve security structures in the region, which benefits
    Kazakhstan. Its emerging defense relationship with the United States
    has resulted in clear advances in its process of military reform
    and the preparedness of its security forces to cope with terrorist
    activity. Kazakhstan will continue to attach importance to its links
    with Washington, seeing training and education and other forms of
    security assistance as a vital part of improving its own anti-terrorist
    capabilities. But at the strategic level, it is unlikely to seek to
    favor any one of the great powers at the expense of the others. Astana
    is now displaying interest in multilateral organizations including the
    CSTO and SCO, since the latter serves as a forum through which Beijing
    is involved, as well as enhancing its cooperation with NATO. It may
    be possible to defuse tension over the U.S. military involvement in
    Central Asia by promoting more practical multilateral cooperation,
    among NATO, the CSTO, and SCO. Any approach that gives the impression
    of the United States dealing on its own with individual countries in
    the region at the possible expense of China and Russia will be doomed
    to failure.
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