http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/GH06Ag02.html


Cool-headed diplomacy
By Adam Wolfe 

Russia and China delivered a one-two punch to Washington's ambitions in Central 
Asia on the eve of the Group of Eight (G-8) summit with a joint statement on 
"international order" followed by a meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation 
Organization (SCO) that was hostile to US interests. While this combination was 
not enough to knock the US out of the region, it was the most forceful 
challenge to US interests in Central Asia since the invasion of Afghanistan in 
2001. 

Seeking to prevent any further damage to Washington's position in the "Great 
Game", US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld traveled to the region to shore 
up support for maintaining American bilateral agreements with the key players. 
This was followed by Uzbekistan announcing a deadline for US withdrawal from a 
military base in its territory. These moves indicate that even though fighting 
in Afghanistan has yet to cool down, the traditional power politics of Central 
Asia are heating up. 

China and Russia combine
Before the SCO meeting, Russia's and China's leaders met at the Kremlin on July 
1 to discuss their goals in Central Asia and the upcoming G8 summit. The 
meeting signaled a shift toward greater cooperation between the two states, 
completely solved their long-standing border disputes from the legal 
perspective and laid the foundation for greater integration of their 
state-controlled oil companies and banking sectors. One reason that the 
atmosphere in the Kremlin was so unusually amiable was the perception that a 
shared threat loomed larger than their differences in policy goals; that threat 
was Washington's role in Central Asia. 

The "Joint Statement of the People's Republic of China and the Russian 
Federation Regarding the International Order of the 21st Century", signed by 
Chinese President Hu Jintao and Russian President Vladimir Putin on July 2, 
addresses US hegemony in several less-than-oblique passages. The text 
emphasizes "non-interference in internal affairs"and "mutual respect" for other 
nations' "sovereignty", and stresses the role of "multipolarity" in dealing 
with conflicts. 

In a passage aimed at Washington's perceived encroachment in Central Asia, the 
document states, "The peoples of all countries should be allowed to decide the 
affairs of their own countries, and world affairs should be decided through 
dialogue and consultation on a multilateral and collective basis. The 
international community should thoroughly renounce the mentality of 
confrontation and alignment, should not pursue the right to monopolize or 
dominate world affairs, and should not divide countries into a leading camp and 
a subordinate camp." This last statement could also easily be read as a 
preemptive dismissal of the G-8 on the eve of the Scotland meeting. Though 
Russia is now a member and China an observer of the grouping, they feel that 
the organization is dominated by the West's agenda. 

This dismissal of Western-style multilateralism is further expanded in a 
passing broadside aimed at the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund 
(IMF) and their emphasis on reform in exchange for aid or loans: "The 
international community should establish an economic and trade regime that is 
comprehensive and widely accepted and that operates through the means of 
holding negotiations on an equal footing, discarding the practice of applying 
pressure and sanctions to coerce unilateral economic concessions, and bringing 
into play the roles of global and regional multilateral organizations and 
mechanisms." 

Beijing and Moscow resent the West demanding economic reforms before further 
integrating China and Russia into the existing globalization power structures. 
They wish to present an alternative marketplace for developing countries to 
sell their goods - one that does not tie economic access to reform or 
transparency. China has been able to successfully use the widely expected 
expansion of its domestic market to sell this alternative source of revenue to 
countries irked by the IMF or World Bank, from South America to Africa. Now it 
hopes to further cement such a relationship with the states of Central Asia. 

In the joint statement, China and Russia sent a clear message to the other 
members of the SCO - Washington poses a threat to Central Asia's sovereignty; 
China and Russia can offer a similar economic and security package, only it 
will be designed to preserve the current status quo not to encourage market 
economies or democratic reforms. Fearing future waves of "color" revolutions in 
the region, these states were eager to receive this message. 

A bigger and stronger SCO 
On July 5, the members of the SCO - China, Russia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, 
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan - met in Astana, Kazakhstan to discuss the changing 
political situation in Central Asia. While previous meetings focused nearly 
exclusively on the "three evil forces" - terrorism, separatism and extremism - 
and were dominated by China's desire to control the Uighur population in its 
Xinjiang region and protect its access to energy resources, this meeting 
demonstrated that the organization, which represents nearly 50% of the world's 
population, desires to be a serious force in international affairs. This can be 
seen in the granting of observer status to India (at Russia's request), 
Pakistan (at China's insistence) and Iran (to the delight of all members). 

The environment of the SCO meeting was most influenced by the reaction to 
Uzbekistan's violent suppression of the May rebellion in Andijan. Western 
criticism of Uzbek President Islam Karimov's tactics brought to the surface 
fears that the clan-based governments of Central Asia might fall in a wave of 
"color" or non-violent revolutions, similar to that of Ukraine's "orange" 
revolution. Russia and China provided blanket support for Karimov after the 
suppression, while Washington could only offer nuanced criticism, fearing that 
intense criticism of Karimov would result in the loss of access to the 
Karshi-Khanabad air base, or K2, used to support US operations in Afghanistan; 
nevertheless, the loss of this base now appears a likely scenario. 

Washington's criticism was enough to spread fear throughout the ruling clans of 
Central Asia that the US is engaged in covert operations to undermine or 
overthrow the current ruling regimes. This fear does not even escape 
Kyrgyzstan's subsequently elected government - which swept into power in a 
similar manner as Ukraine's government - because its support still rests on a 
shaky foundation of clan alliances. 

In this environment, the SCO sought to limit Washington's presence in the 
region - Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan shifted their 
support to China and Russia in order to protect their sovereignty from US 
meddling. The joint declaration issued at the end of the summit took aim at 
Washington by rejecting attempts at "monopolizing or dominating international 
affairs" and insisting on "non-interference in the internal affairs of 
sovereign states". The members further urged the US-led forces in Afghanistan 
to declare a timetable for withdrawal from Afghanistan and the Uzbek and Kyrgyz 
bases in the region that were established to support the Afghan operations. The 
Central Asian states see it in their interests to fill the power vacuum that 
the withdrawals would create with that of China and Russia, which they believe 
would better ensure the longevity of their regimes. 

Top US General Richard B Myers summed up Washington's interpretation of the 
shift in blunt terms: "It looks to me like two very large countries were trying 
to bully some smaller countries." Ten days later, Rumsfeld landed in Kyrgyzstan 
to ensure that the world's only superpower wasn't elbowed out of the region. 

Washington pushes back
The US secretary of defense's visit to Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan was aimed at 
shoring up support for the continuation of the US military presence in each 
country, which was successful at least for the mid-term. Kyrgyzstan hosts a US 
military base at the Manas air base, and Tajikistan offers the US military and 
NATO fly-over rights and hosts a small contingent of French soldiers involved 
in Afghan operations. French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie was in 
Dushanbe on July 21 to firm up that arrangement. Notably, Rumsfeld did not 
visit Uzbekistan, the other SCO member-state that hosts a US military base. 
Whether his absence was the result of an Uzbek request or a calculation of 
Washington's, it demonstrated how the US plans to address the shifting power 
relations in the region. Nevertheless, Uzbekistan subsequently gave the US 180 
days to pull out from the Karshi-Khanabad (K2)air base, used for US operations 
in neighboring Afghanistan. 

Washington has approached Central Asia on bilateral terms, never treating the 
SCO members as a bloc. In terms of leverage in the relations, this shifts the 
fulcrum to Washington's advantage. China and Russia encourage the SCO states to 
act multilaterally in an effort to limit Washington's reach. Rumsfeld's trip 
demonstrated Washington's ability to act bilaterally with Kyrgyzstan, which has 
a newly elected government and has yet to fully congeal its foreign policy, and 
Tajikistan, which has traditionally been the SCO member that follows a balanced 
approach with its foreign suitors. 

Recently, relations between Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan have shown the strengths 
of Washington's bilateral approach. When more than 500 Uzbeks crossed over into 
Kyrgyzstan following the crushing of protesters in Andijan, Kyrgyzstan 
initially reacted in step with the Uzbek government. Eighty-seven Uzbek 
refugees were sent back, prompting outrage from the UN and Washington. This led 
to negotiations between the UN and officials in Kyrgyzstan, which, by 
Washington's design, left out any avenue for input from Uzbekistan. On July 29, 
a plane with 440 Uzbek refugees left Kyrgyzstan for Romania. This demonstrated 
Washington's ability to directly influence the geopolitics of Central Asia only 
a few weeks after the united front presented by the SCO called for a US 
withdrawal. 

However, in dealing with Karimov's government in Uzbekistan, Washington's 
bilateral approach is no longer effective, in part because of its success in 
Kyrgyzstan. The Uzbek suspicion of Washington's involvement in the Kyrgyzstan 
revolution and uprising in Andijan has caused Karimov to throw his government's 
support behind China's and Russia's vision for the region. As such, the same 
day that the plane carried refugees out of Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan asked 
Washington to leave the K2 air base. 

The immediate reaction from Washington was to hold back on sending a high-level 
representative to renegotiate the arrangement while waiting for things to "cool 
down". 

This seems to suggest that the US is leaning toward the future goal of regime 
change in Uzbekistan and is willing to sacrifice the air base if necessary. 
This does not mean that Washington will cut off all relations with Uzbekistan, 
but if it becomes apparent that future negotiations will not lead to an 
extension of the air base use agreement, Washington can be expected to pursue 
further bilateral agreements with the other governments in Central Asia to 
isolate Karimov's government. 

Conclusion 
Beijing, Moscow and Washington are once again using Central Asia, the setting 
for the "Great Game" between Tsarist Russia and Victorian England over 150 
years ago, as their game board in a region rarely neglected by the world's 
great powers. In the contemporary version of the game, Washington approaches 
each state bilaterally, offering incentives to support the operations in 
Afghanistan while undermining the consensus put forth at the recent SCO 
meeting. 

China and Russia are acting in tandem to shore up support for SCO policies by 
offering blanket support for the current regimes and implicitly calling 
attention to US-led efforts to undermine their governments. The states hosting 
the game board will continue to swing their support from China and Russia to 
the US, and back again, so long as they keep their hold on power. The past 
month has seen a flurry of activity in the Great Game, and it can be expected 
that things will not cool down any time soon. 

Published with permission of the Power and Interest News Report, an 
analysis-based publication that seeks to provide insight into various 
conflicts, regions and points of interest around the globe. All comments should 
be directed to [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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