Tashkent looks to Moscow to replace lost U.S. aid
The Jamestown Foundation
Eurasia Daily Monitor
Thursday, 22 July 2004 - Volume 1, Issue 57

WASHINGTON PUSHES KARIMOV CLOSER TO MOSCOW

On July 15 Elizabeth Jones, the U.S. Assistant
Secretary of State for European and Eurasian affairs,
officially concluded her two-day visit to Uzbekistan,
where she had met with the country's leadership and
local representatives of several human rights
organizations. On July 13, on the eve of her visit to
Tashkent, the U.S. administration announced its
decision to cut $18 million in financial assistance to
Uzbekistan. According to the official statement issued
by the U.S. Department of State, this measure was
adopted in reaction to "the insufficient progress in
implementing democratic reforms" in Uzbekistan. The
statement specifically mentioned the deaths of
suspects held in prisons and the unwillingness of the
authorities to register opposition parties. There is
increasing speculation that Great Britain and other
European Union members may follow suit (Nezavisimaya
gazeta, July 15, 2004)

Many observers in Uzbekistan and Russia believe that
Assistant Secretary Jones had intended to hold private
discussions about human rights issues with the
Uzbekistani leadership, to whom Washington repeatedly
expressed sincere gratitude for assistance in the
conduct of the anti-terrorist operation in
Afghanistan. Uzbekistan was the first of the
post-Soviet Central Asian states to offer the United
States permission to open an air force base on its
territory, specifically in Khanabad, which is located
close to the border with Afghanistan. This air base
became the largest U.S. military bridgehead in the
region, and it marked the beginning of a serious shift
in the balance of strategic forces between the United
States and Russia. In the course of her visit, Jones
was supposed to convince Tashkent that the
aforementioned decision to cut financial assistance
did not imply a change in the American interests in
the region or the unwillingness to continue
cooperation with Uzbekistan.

According to sources close to government circles in
Uzbekistan, Tashkent did not take the news of the $18
million cut well, as the government had relied on the
funds. The U.S. Department of State's decision is
viewed as a public rebuke of the Karimov regime, and
Uzbekistan's leaders realize that this move signals a
new and very unfavorable turnaround by Washington.
However, President Islam Karimov will not respond by
revoking the agreement on the American air base in
Khanabad, because its operation brings a relatively
small but stable income to the Uzbekistani
authorities. Besides, the continuous operation of the
air base is considered an asset for the stability of
the regime. It must be also noted that Washington
continues to offer substantial military-technical
assistance to Uzbekistan. In May 2004 the United
States gave Tashkent equipment and special hardware
for border defense, which was worth total of $516,600.
Since April 2000 the total of American
military-technical assistance to Uzbekistan amounts to
approximately $7 million.

Some political elites in Tashkent believe that Karimov
had anticipated the shift in U.S. attitudes long
before it occurred. For example, when he visited the
United States in 2002, Karimov was furious that his
arrival at Andrews Air Force Base was greeted only by
Assistant Secretary Jones. For the president of a
country with 25 million people, this was a demeaning
diplomatic gesture. Karimov had flown to Washington
with hopes of securing U.S. political support and to
resolve many internal problems with the American
financial assistance. Nonetheless, by late 2002 U.S.
financial aid to Uzbekistan amounted to only $160
million and another $55 million in loans to purchase
goods in the United States for developing small and
medium business in Uzbekistan. As one well-connected
source commented, "This meant that Tashkent was put in
the common waiting line in front of the main entrance
to the White House."

In September 2003 Karimov told Russian President
Vladimir Putin, who had made a brief stopover in
Samarkand on his way to India, that he had finally
overcome the initial "euphoria" of hopes related to
developing economic relations with the West. This
meeting prompted the later reassessment of relations
between Uzbekistan and Russia, which eventually
culminated in the two presidents signing the
Uzbekistan-Russia Treaty on Strategic Cooperation in
June 2004. Moreover, Uzbekistan and Russia also
reviewed their bilateral military cooperation and
resolved to strengthen this relationship. Tashkent
firmly believes that, unlike Washington, Moscow will
never make its assistance contingent on demands for
democratic changes.

At the same time Uzbekistan does not want to
jeopardize its relations with the United States and
wants to preserve the bilateral partnership. This is
why on the eve of the Jones visit to Tashkent, the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a communique that
stressed that the American-Uzbek relations are
characterized as "strategic partnership" and that they
are "effectively evolving."

The United States continues to be one of Uzbekistan's
ten largest trade partners. In 2003 the trade volume
between the two countries amounted to $335.2 million,
including $106.7 million in weapons. The results of
the first quarter of 2004 show that the trade volume
between the two countries amounted to $153.1 million
(an increase of 124% compared to the same period in
2003), of which exports comprised $28.5 million (up
31%), while imports amounted to $124.6 million (167.3%
higher). The negative balance of bilateral trade
amounted to $96.1 million. There are currently 24
priority investment projects in Uzbekistan involving
American companies and financial institutions. The
total monetary value of these investment projects
amounts to $2.383 billion, including American loans
and credits totaling $1.406 billion. There are 316
enterprises created with U.S. investors, including 227
are joint ventures and 89 wholly established with of
American capital. The enterprises range from mining to
chemicals, consumer goods, foodstuffs, and machine
manufacturing.

--Yuriy Yegorov




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