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STRATFOR.COM Global Intelligence Update
November 18, 1999


The High Price of Kazakstan's MiG Affair

Summary:

Kazakstan has announced that it has completed its investigation
into the illegal sale of MiG-21 fighters to North Korea. The
completion of the investigation is likely to defuse a threatened
U.S. suspension of aid. But the incident has weakened relations
between the Central Asian nation and the United States and will
push Kazakstan closer to a regional power, such as Russia and
China. Relations between Astana and Moscow are so strained right
now that the Kazak government will likely grow closer to China, at
least in the short term.


Analysis:

Kazakstan's intelligence service announced Nov. 17 that its
investigation into the illegal sale of MiG-21 fighter aircraft to
North Korea was complete and that senior government officials had
been involved, according to both local and international news
reports. The current scandal is the second incident involving MiGs
in the last six months, creating an ongoing embarrassment for
President Nursultan Nazarbayev, who has worked hard to establish
ties with the West.

Two recent scandals have revolved around Kazak MiG fighters. In
March, six jets were detained on a circuitous route to North Korea.
Transported aboard a Russian cargo plane, the crated jets were to
be taken through the Czech Republic to North Korea. But the cargo
plane was detained in Baku, Azerbaijan and routed back to
Kazakstan. Kazak authorities launched an investigation but halted
it in May, concluding that the shipment was just a huge
misunderstanding -- not a criminal offense. In August, news reports
indicated that North Korea had purchased 30 to 40 Kazak MiG-21s.

The sales so threatened to upset Kazakstan's ties with the West,
that Nazarbayev fired Defense Minister Mukhtar Altynbayev and the
chairman of the country's security committee, Nurlan Balgymbayev,
on Aug. 9 for failing to fully investigate the March incident
[ http://www.stratfor.com/cis/commentary/c9908102325 ]. Prime
Minister Kosymzhomart Tokayev assured Western countries that the
Kazak government had no knowledge of the sale, and requested that
North Korea return the planes. North Korea has at various times
declined to return them and even denied knowledge of the planes.

The sales and the recent conclusion of the investigation have upset
the delicate balance of Kazak foreign policy. Newly independent is
also newly deprived of its major customer for its heavy industrial
products, Russia. Kazakstan is rich in resources but dependent on
foreign investment to develop its infrastructure. Like its Central
Asian neighbors, Kazakstan is strategically located, but not
politically or economically strong enough to fend for itself. It
needs to ally itself with a stronger power, such as the United
States, Russia or China. So far, Nazarbayev has favored Washington.

But the MiG affair has thrown a wrench into relations with the
West. The United States has responded with threats to suspend the
$75 million in aid it supplies Kazakstan each year. In addition,
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe has alleged
that the government has tampered with elections, further cooling
relations between Washington and Astana. While the United States is
likely to continue aid - as long as Nazarbayev fires the implicated
officials - the flow of cash is unlikely to increase. The U.S.
Congress, already tightfisted on foreign aid, will not be easily
convinced to send more money to a nation, which has exported
weapons to a sworn enemy.

More importantly, the MiG scandals threaten the meager flow of
foreign investment that helps prop up Kazakstan's economy. Both
U.S. and South Korean investors - major investors in developing
Kazakstan's natural resources - are likely to be restrained by
their governments. This threatens millions of investment dollars
for the oil, gas and metallurgical industries; Kazakstan was
already strapped for funds before this crisis of confidence.

With Western help unlikely, Kazakstan will increasingly need to
turn to a regional power for both money and possibly security.
Relations with Russia are rocky. Russia is a major partner in Kazak
oil exploration and export but tensions have arisen in other areas,
such as the use of Kazakstan's Baikonur space launch facility.
[ http://www.stratfor.com/SERVICES/GIU/110499.ASP ] Following an
accident, the Kazak government banned Russia from using its launch
facilities until at least February 2000, and demanded financial
reparations. The two governments are still haggling.

This places China in a particularly favorable position. In the
absence of Western assistance, China by default is the best partner
around - at least in the short term. This would be great for China,
which needs fuel and is eager to invest in Kazakstan's vast,
undeveloped oil fields. As for the MiG issue, China is unlikely to
complain. Although the illegal exports were making their way to
North Korea via China's competitor in the region, Russia, China has
the closest ties to Pyongyang
[ http://www.stratfor.com/SERVICES/GIU/102699.ASP ]. Nor is Beijing
likely to be concerned about North Korea's arms, since Beijing uses
its neighbor's belligerence as a lever in negotiations with the
West [ http://www.stratfor.com/SERVICES/GIU/071299.ASP ].

China also has strategic interests in befriending its Central Asian
neighbor. Like Russia, China wishes to contain Islamic unrest in
Central Asia and to protect the integrity of its borders. China has
recently stepped up its efforts to befriend its neighbors, taking
part in talks to reduce military forces along the region's borders.
The wealth of Kazakstan's resources, waiting to be mined, is also a
major lure.

Black market weapons exports have become quite common in the former
Soviet states. Selling old tanks, small arms and even jets has
become a source of quick cash. But for Kazakstan, the sale of these
1960s-era jets has yielded an extraordinarily poor return on
investment; just $8 million may have gone either to government
coffers or the pockets of corrupt officials. The cost of this
transaction may now be calculated in the country's strategic
direction.





Editor's Note: The Global Intelligence Update of November 17, 1999
incorrectly characterized the composition of the Kuwait's air
force. The air force includes U.S.-made F/A-18 Hornet strike jets.


(c) 1999, Stratfor, Inc.


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