
#4
Izvestia
December 5, 2002
SHARING CENTRAL ASIA WITH AMERICA
Russia maintains its presence in Central Asia
Author: Valery Volkov, Nikolai Khorunzhii
[from WPS Monitoring Agency, www.wps.ru/e_index.html]
RUSSIA IS CURRENTLY BEING OFFERED THE ROLE OF "JUNIOR PARTNER" IN
THE NEW WORLD ORDER (AND APPEARS READY TO ACCEPT); BUT IN CENTRAL ASIA, THE
UNITED STATES ITSELF IS PREPARED TO PLAY THAT ROLE. RUSSIA'S CULTURAL INFLUENCE
COULD BE VITAL IN HALTING THE SPREAD OF ISLAMIC EXTREMISM.
President Putin is due to visit Bishkek today. His itinerary will include
watching demonstration flights by Su-27 fighters, whose range covers not only
the Central Asian member nations of the CIS Collective Security Treaty, but also
the adjacent territories of Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, and China. Putin's
visit may be interpreted as Russia's acknowledgement of the following: Central
Asia remains within the zone of interests of the CIS, and primarily of Russia
itself. And Bishkek is essentially becoming the outpost of Russia's presence in
the region.
GROWING STRENGTH
The CIS Collective Security Treaty includes Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Russia, and Tajikistan). On November 20, at a Moscow meeting of
defense ministers from all the Collective Security Treaty nations, a decision
was made to increase troop numbers in the Central Asian region. Ten days later,
the Russian Defense Ministry announced that a base for the Russian Armed Forces
was being set up near Bishkek. At the CIS summit in Chishinau, Moldova, in
October the heads of state of the Collective Security Treaty nations approved
the charter and legal status agreement for the treaty organization. These
documents were then sent to the cabinets of member nations, to be forwarded to
each nation's parliament for ratification. By the next meeting - in May 2003 -
it should be possible to speak of a new international regional security
organization coming into existence. Dmitry Trenin, deputy director of the
Carnegie Center in Moscow, says the rise in the status of the CIS Collective
Security Treaty will transform it into a military-political bloc, the role of
which is hard to overestimate, especially given that a substantial proportion of
current global threats are concentrated in Central Asia and the Middle East.
There is also another point of view. Andrei Grozin, an analyst with the CIS
Nations Institute, considers that the significance of regional alliances - the
Shanghai Cooperation Organization, the Collective Security Treaty, the
Euro-Asian Economic Community - is not comparable to the influence of the United
States. Political scientist Dmitry Simes (United States) adds that the combined
military efforts of the CIS in the region are insufficient to ensure stability
there.
There is indeed a power vacuum in the region. Specialists at the
International Politics Analysis Institute (United States) consider that Russia
does not have enough resources to restore its hegemony in Central Asia, while
the US and Europe have shown a lack of interest in establishing dominance there.
According to Nikolai Zlobin, director of Russian and Asian programs at the
Defense Information Center (Washington), in US policy on this region the
security factor still outweighs the factor of having an interest in diversifying
supply lines for energy resources. In other words, the interests of oil and gas
corporations do not prevail over Washington's decisions, as yet. And Russia
itself still has no clear policy on Caspian Sea oil.
How is the United States assisting Central Asian nations?
First: by improving the mobility of their armed forces and providing
communications infrastructure, which primarily involves supplying helicopters.
Russia is of little help here; everyone knows the problems it's having with its
own aging helicopter fleet.
Second: by strengthening borders with a view to non-proliferation of weapons,
including weapons of mass destruction, and halting drug trafficking. Here too,
Russia has huge problems along its own borders with other CIS nations.
In addition to defense aid, the US is also allocating substantial sums for
humanitarian programs. Last year, Central Asian nations received $230 million,
and this year they got almost $600 million.
MOSQUES FOR OSAMA BIN LADEN
While the great powers are providing defense aid to the region, the Arab
nations are strengthening the position of Islam. The number of mosques in
Kyrgyzstan has risen substantially. In Uzbekistan, five thousand mosques have
been built over the past decade of independence. According to President Emomali
Rakhmonov of Tajikistan, extremist propaganda is being disseminated via these
mosques, the number of which has increased in recent years. As an example, he
cites the Isfarinsk district - one of Tajikistan's largest districts, located at
the junction of Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan. Some mullahs in mosques
there are members of the Tajikistan Islamic Renaissance Party (the only
officially-registered Islamic party in any Central Asian nation), even though
it's against the law for clergy to be members of political parties. At present,
there is a slight decline in the number of mosques and Islamic schools in the
Central Asian nations - their governments are wary of any active promotion of
Islam, since they are aiming to live up to their role as participants in the
anti- terrorism coalition.
In speaking of a religious revival among Muslims in former Soviet states,
Imam-Khatyb Marat Murtazin, rector of the Moscow Islamic University, has noted
that in the early 1990s there was a shortage of imam preachers, teachers,
theologians, scholars of Shariah law and other Islamic studies. According to
Murtazin, it was thought back then that pure ideas, without any political
overtones, would come in from the Arab world. Murtazin admits: "The process
of religious revival by importing religious ideas turned out to be very painful
for us."
Nevertheless, many experts consider that the hundreds of thousands of dollars
spent by Arabs on setting up Islamic schools in Central Asia will show a much
higher strategic return than the American millions invested in armed forces.
After all, the American weapons will be wielded by people whose minds have been
filled with the ideals of the Arab world.
Tariq bin Laden, brother of Osama, was well aware of this when he visited
Russia in the early 1990s. Following his visits to Chechnya, Ingushetia,
Dagestan and other Caucasus republics, mosques, Islamic schools and cultural
centers sprang up like mushrooms. They were usually headed by bin Laden's
people.
This is precisely why Russia could play a key role in Central Asia: Russia
remains the sole influential cultural force in the region. There are hundreds of
thousands of ethnic Russians living there. Many of the region's intelligentsia
were educated in Russia and speak Russian. If Russia should withdraw from this
cultural territory, it would quickly be replaced by imported varieties of Islam,
including radical varieties. And the governments of the region would find it
difficult to neutralize these trends, even with American money available.
Hence, there is another essential task for Central Asian nations: organizing
training for "their own" imams and teachers. The Muslims of Central
Asia are being offered assistance in this by Russian Muslims. For example, there
are students from Central Asia at the Kazan Islamic University. Unfortunately,
there are few of them.
Ravil Gainutdin, head of the Russian Council of Muftis, says the main reason
why radical brands of Islam are appearing in Central Asia and Russia is the
"ill-informed and clumsy actions of foreign missionaries, which have done
harm to the revival of Islam" on former Soviet territory. Such preachers
and teachers "have been raised and educated in a mono-religious
environment, and the things they taught did not prepare young Muslims in the
former USSR for life in a poly- religious society".
Ravil Gainutdin: "What is happening in Chechnya is more than separatism
alone. Wahhabism is an ideology whose adherents are certain of victory. We must
also provide guarantees for our own ideology. But we are disastrously short of
resources for doing so."
For a few months, there were indeed discussions in senior political circles
in Washington about whether to include the Central Asian states in the US sphere
of responsibility. The outcome of the debate: the United States acknowledged
that Russia has priority for influence in Central Asia, wisely understanding
that links which go back decades can play a greater role than low-interest loans
for re- equipping armed forces. Russia is currently being offered the role of
"junior partner" in the new world order (and appears ready to accept);
but in Central Asia, the United States itself is prepared to play that role.
Both Washington and Moscow have realized that if the leaders of Central Asian
nations associate with pro-European states (including the US and Russia), this
will mean that radical forms of Islam will not penetrate the Central Asian
nations. And Central Asia itself will become a kind of civilizational barrier
between the radicalizing world of instability and the European brotherhood of
developed nations.
(Translated by P. Pikhnovsky)
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