HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

1)The Times (London) 
March 30, 2002
Americans covertly training Kazakh troops
>From James Doran in Almaty, Kazakhstan
A PLATOON of American special forces is covertly
training Kazakh troops in counter-terrorism techniques
as part of a widening campaign against the threat of
fundamentalist attacks in the former Soviet Central
Asian states. 
Twelve US specialist soldiers, most of whom are
normally based in Denver, Colorado, started
instructing about 200 regular Kazakh soldiers and
teenage conscripts in basic training and
anti-guerrilla operations at secret locations last
month. 
A spokesman for the US Embassy in Almaty said:
"Soldiers attached to US special forces engaged in an
information exchange and training with the Kazakh
Mountain Chasseur Battalion on February 22. 
"The exercises were concerned with individual
soldiering techniques and soldiering in mountainous
terrain." 
He added that the "military to military co-operation"
with Kazakhstan is expected to continue. US troops
involved in the training programme said that the
scheme had been effective but arduous as the Kazakh
Army is poorly equipped and disorganised. 
Its men are young and inexperienced and have been
trained only with ageing weapons, most of which were
left by the former Soviet Army, which had a large
presence in the Almaty area in preperestroika
Kazakhstan. 
"Jimbo", a sergeant with the US force, forbidden from
giving his real name, said that many of the Kazakh
troops were "kids who knew close to nothing" about
combat techniques when they were delivered to the US
training camp last month. 
"Most of them are very young conscripts," he said. "It
is not any kind of an army. But that is why we are
here, I guess." But some of Jimbo's own comrades also
appear inexperienced, young and wide-eyed. 
One US soldier in his early twenties, who must also
remain anonymous, said that many young American troops
who had only recently finished their basic training,
volunteered for special forces missions in Central
Asia in an effort to get "close to the action". 
"There are guys who wanted to be there (in
Afghanistan). Everybody wants to fight for their
country. If this is as close as they can be right now,
that's good," he added. 
The American forces arrived in late February and are
pulling out this week after more than a month of
manoeuvres. 
They plan to return to Kazakhstan later in the year to
conduct further training missions. 
Kazakhstan, particularly the Almaty region, has a long
history of producing fierce fighters. 
At the end of the Second World War, a handful of
Kazakh soldiers held back advancing German tanks and
were credited with saving Moscow from Nazi invasion. 
But all that remains in Almaty today of the Kazakhs'
once-proud military past are a few former Soviet
helicopters, parked, albeit under guard, behind blocks
of crumbling Soviet-built civilian flats in the city. 
The US training campaign comes after the apparent
failure of an attempt by Nursultan Nazarbayev,
Kazakhstan's President, to create the country's own
special forces unit to provide support for the ongoing
conflict in Afghanistan. 
Advertisements ran in national newspapers late last
year urging "patriotic" former soldiers to join the
proposed battalion. The idea seems to have faded away
without explanation, however, to be replaced by the US
training mission. 
US officials examined airbases in Kazakhstan,
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Azerbaijan and Kyrgyzstan in
November last year, but they ruled out leaving a force
in Kazakhstan as the country does not border
Afghanistan and its airbases have fallen into
disrepair since independence.
   
2)Kazakh battalion may be sent to Afghanistan as part
of UN peacekeepers
Friday, 29-Mar-2002 
Alma-Ata, Mar 29 (Caspian News Agency) -- The armed
forces (AF) of Kazakhstan want to be among the reserve
force of the UN "Blue Helmets" peacekeeping forces,
Kazakh Defence Minister Mukhtar Altynbayev told
journalists in Alma-Ata today.
He thinks that the Kazakh armed forces involvement the
"Blue Helmets" peacekeeping activities will enable
them to gain "useful experience", and the country will
be better known in the world, Interfax reports.
Altynbayev has said that preparatory work for signing
appropriate documents with the UN is under way.
At the same time, according to information from the
defence minister, Kazakhstan has not yet decided to
send its Kazbat peacekeeping battalion abroad.
The question of sending the Kazakh battalion anywhere
has not been posed so far," Altynbayev said.
Meanwhile, as was reported earlier, the Kazakh
leadership declared on many occasions that Kazbat
would be sent to Afghanistan only under the aegis of
the UN, and not earlier than in April, and that it
would not be involved in combat operations but will
concentrate its efforts only on a humanitarian
peacekeeping mission in that country.
The Defence Ministry of Kazakhstan also believes that
if a need arises to send Kazbat to Afghanistan, then
all the legal aspects of this should be dealt with
first.
� 
� ��

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Greetings - send holiday greetings for Easter, Passover
http://greetings.yahoo.com/

---------------------------
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST

==^================================================================
This email was sent to: [email protected]

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?a84x2u.a9617B
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================

Reply via email to