|
#9 - RW 11-19-04 - RW Home
Jamestown Foundation
www.jamestown.org
Eurasia Daily Monitor
Volume 1 Issue 138
December 2, 2004
RUSSIA'S SECURITY INFLUENCE IN CENTRAL ASIA INCREASES
AS UKRAINE CRISIS UNFOLDS
By Roger N. McDermott
Central Asian political leaders are watching events in Kyiv closely, as the
Ukrainian crisis may affect the future foreign policy choices they make between
the West and Russia. Meetings of the CIS Defense Ministers Council, at the Staff
for Coordinating Military Cooperation in Moscow on November 25, indicated a
strong desire for further strengthening the existing CSTO security mechanisms
within Central Asia. Indeed, these meetings, partly under the umbrella of the
Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), appear to pave the way for the
future expansion of the CSTO Rapid Deployment Forces (CRDF), to as much as
10,000 personnel (Nezavisimaya gazeta, November 26).
Nikolai Bordyuzha, Secretary-General of the CSTO, confirmed the interest in
enhanced levels of CSTO military cooperation, as member states examined a model
concept for forming a joint group of troops in the Central Asian region. In his
words, the document approved at the meeting provides for creating a large joint
group of troops including formations from the armed forces of CSTO states
(Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan). This potentially numbers a
total of 10,000 personnel. The group could therefore become up to four times the
current strength of the CRDF, currently tasked with operating in Central Asia
during a security crisis. Moscow's foothold in this mechanism is secure, since
it has guaranteed the main striking force of the group will be elements drawn
from the Russian military base in Tajikistan and its air force base in Kant,
Kyrgyzstan.
Of course, attempts to strengthen Russia's security influence within Central
Asia are not new, and have been a recurring theme in the region since the
deployment of U.S. and Western military forces into the region in support of
Operation Enduring Freedom in 2001. But recent developments within Central Asian
capitals seem to present a window of opportunity for Moscow to reclaim lost
ground in the region.
Kazakhstan has been the only Central Asian member of the CSTO that has
espoused clearly autonomous and pro-Western military cooperation policies. While
the others have more readily accepted collective-security arrangements with
Russia as the linchpin in this system, Kazakhstan, for instance, has advanced
its plans to forge ahead with reforming and building its Navy in the Caspian Sea
by 2007 with U.S. support. However, as the situation in Ukraine is played out,
there will be clear lessons for those pursuing pro-Western policies in
Kazakhstan, which may favor Moscow's efforts to stem the westward drift of the
former Soviet republics along its borders.
On November 25 in Moscow, a protocol was finally ratified that creates the
legal basis for increasing and offering supplies of military hardware to CSTO
countries at preferential financial rates. Valery Loshchinin, Russia's First
Deputy Foreign Minister, believes that the agreement will facilitate further
military integration among CSTO member states and compel greater levels of
security cooperation.
Kazakhstan's military reform priorities, announced on November 26, included a
commitment to raise the level of defense spending from one percent of GDP to 1.2
percent by 2007. The Kazakhstani Ministry of Defense also defined a set of
priority investment projects, which will be implemented in the next three years.
These include constructing housing in Astana, military facilities in the
country's south and west, improving the facilities of military airfields, and
building a national defense university, as well as developing modernized
communications systems. All these plans, from the Caspian-orientated military
facilities in Kazakhstan's western region to procurement of communications
equipment, demand closer cooperation with the United States and Western
countries in order to be effective.
Kozy-Korpesh Dzhanburchin, Deputy Defense Minister for Economy and Finance,
commented that Kazakhstan is determined to tailor its military development to
its security needs: "In accordance with national security priorities, close
attention is currently being paid to the southern and western directions, where
military and other facilities are planned to be built actively as well," (Interfax-Kazakhstan,
November 25).
The uncertain political situation in Ukraine, a key state for the future
transportation of Central Asian energy into European markets, has raised fears
among the governing elites in Central Asia considering overtly pursuing close
relations with the United States. The impetus towards democracy, notoriously
slow in these states, is a risk that each has weighed carefully in recent years,
while recognizing that similar pressures do not attend close relations with
Moscow. Elections looming in Uzbekistan later in December and those in 2005 in
Kyrgyzstan, coupled with the recent bombings of Otan offices in Almaty, (see EDM,
November 30) magnify still further the concerns in the regions' capitals. For
the Soviet-bred autocrats running these states, democracy may be coming too
close to the region. In security terms at least, Moscow has prepared the ground
for improved levels of security integration, should its uncertain allies in
Central Asia choose this option.
|