Fear and Loathing in Central Asia

How Russia plans to use a previously obscure international organization to reassert its control over its "near abroad."

BY LELAND R. MILLER | AUGUST 5, 2010

Twenty years after the demise of the Soviet Union, Moscow is doing its best Humpty Dumpty impression-trying to pick up its pieces and put them back together again.

Fueled by last decade's record-high energy prices and emboldened by the U.S. preoccupation with distant war zones, Russia has stepped up attempts to re-establish hegemony over what it calls its "near abroad." Its chosen vehicle for this mission has been the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), the once nearly defunct regional grouping comprising Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. Once little more than a loose alliance of former Soviet states, Russian moves to deepen the integration of CSTO members have accelerated dramatically over the past year.

When the CSTO was formed in 2002, few foresaw such a prominent role for the organization. After all, a group to coordinate economic and military issues in the region already existed: the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which had a longer pedigree and consisted of many of the same countries. Yet, as Russo-Chinese competition in the region heated up over energy- and trade-related issues, Moscow sought to work through an alternative regional framework that excluded Beijing from a leadership role. As a result, the CSTO quietly emerged as Russia's forum of choice.

Russia's investment in the organization has paid off. The CSTO has held annual joint military exercises since 2005, but in 2009 it went a step further, establishing a "Collective Rapid Reaction Force." The force's ostensible purpose is to coordinate regional responses to natural disasters, drug trafficking, and terrorist threats, but Russian leaders are increasingly envisioning a grander view of its role. In February, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said that the force should be "armed with the most modern weapons and must be on par with NATO forces." The agreement also allows Russia-for the first time since the Soviet Union's collapse in 1991-to legally station its troops within the territory of its neighbors.

Even more significantly, Russia, Belarus, and Kazakhstan announced in January the formation of a tripartite customs union, a trade pact intended to increase economic integration among the three former Soviet countries. For Russia, this is an important first step toward consolidating its leverage over its former vassals -- and laying the groundwork for a more comprehensive "common economic space" that Moscow hopes to establish by 2012.

These steps have led some to ask whether the world is witnessing a rebirth of the Soviet Union. Those fears, however, are premature -- so far. Although Russia has managed to significantly revitalize its influence in Central Asia, it has hit a number of speed bumps in reasserting its old hegemony in the region.

Not every country has proved eager to cede its sovereignty to Russian designs. In fact, the CSTO's ramped-up efforts at integration have caused a significant backlash from several of its member countries.

Until recently, Uzbekistan was Russia's most vociferous critic within the organization. At the June 2009 CSTO summit, which announced the formation of the rapid-reaction force, Uzbekistan (along with Belarus) declined to sign the agreement after it became clear that joint leadership of the force by the member states was not part of Russia's plan. (Russia mandated that it would have more troops in the force, would lead the group, and would base the force where it pleased.) Uzbekistan also vehemently objected to Russian plans to establish a new CSTO military base in Osh, in southern Kyrgyzstan, just miles from the Uzbek border, because it would house Russian troops. Moscow has at least temporarily shelved the plan, but not before inciting Tashkent to boycott several CSTO meetings in protest.

The recent outbreak of violence in Kyrgyzstan and the CSTO's decision not to intervene have also caused considerable tension among Central Asian countries, as well as within Russia itself. Ultimately, the organization determined that intervening in an internal conflict was not permitted under the CSTO charter, a practical decision (announced as a legal one) that pleased Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan. However, it incensed Kyrgyz officials, who had invited CSTO (and Russian) forces to intercede amid fears that the country was teetering on civil war.

The Russian media's reaction to the CSTO's timidity was equally brutal. A Moscow Times article declared that the organization's inaction "demonstrated that Russia is incapable of being even a regional leader," while Yezhednevny Zhurnal, an online opposition newspaper, portrayed the CSTO as a dying organization whose restraint exposed the futility of trying to establish a "zone of privileged interests" in the former Soviet space.

MAXIM MARMUR/AFP/Getty Images

 

Leland R. Miller is managing director of Avascent International, a global advisory firm, and a fellow in international economics with the American Foreign Policy Council.

GEORGEKZ

5:11 AM ET

August 6, 2010

Before producing another pot

Before producing another pot shot at Russian neoimperialist ambitions in Central Asia, an American-minded author should ask himself who will be best placed to fill this vacuum of power if Russia is not the one to do so. For most observers around the world, it becomes clear that realist rhetoric once thrown away to the boneyard of political thought is now taking over an unproductive liberal spiel. For America to solve its problems, muster its courage and vigour and recuperate its one-time strength, it is required to learn to live in a world where power in and influence over some regions of the globe are to be shared. In the context of Central Asia, it is all the more evident, as America is not physically present there, except for its military base in Kyrgyzstan, which is nothing compared to the Russian giant. Russia has been America's archfoe in the recent past and still shows its fangs on some occasions. But the real threat to American geopolitical influence (not survival, just influence! do not overdramatize) comes from China. To conclude with, one should inevitably choose between the two evils in case there is no good on the menu...

 

AHALLY

10:30 AM ET

August 7, 2010

Latest FSB Leak

The FSB documents which were recently published in lubyanskayapravda.com (the web site was blocked later on) were mostly reports from the Operational Information Department (DOI) of FSB-- the espionage section -- about operations conducted in Ukraine, Turkmenistan, and several other former Soviet republics. They dated from the mid-2000s.

Actually, this is not a surprise for me. But what is not mentioned is that there are several multinational corporations behind the curtains of Central Asian states, and they are much more powerful and FSB or other Russian espionage channels.