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WSWS : News
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Central Asian military exercises highlight rising great-power
tensions
By John Chan
25 August 2007
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The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), which consists
of Russia, China and four Central Asian republics, held its Peace
Mission 2007 joint war games from August 9 to 17, starting
in the Chinese western province of Xinjiang and continuing in
Russias Ural region of Chelyabinsk. The military exercise,
followed by the SCOs annual summit in Kyrgyzstan on August
16, is one more indication of rising great-power tensions over
the energy-rich Central Asian region.
Russian president Vladimir Putin took the opportunity to formally
announce that Russia was restoring the Cold War practice of long-range
patrolling by nuclear-capable strategic bombers around the world.
We hope our partners will treat this with understanding,
he said. In fact, the announcement, coinciding with the SCO war
games, was calculated to send a message, particularly to Washington,
that Moscow intends to reassert its strategic interests and forcefully
respond to US encroachments on its borders.
Peace Mission 2007 followed a joint military exercise
by Russia and China in 2005, involving large-scale amphibious
operations in the Yellow Sea in eastern China. Its purpose was
to send a warning to Taiwan against any moves toward declaring
independence. The political message from the latest war games,
which involved all SCO members, including Uzbekistan, Tajikistan,
Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, was no less pointed.
More than 6,000 troops, including 2,000 from Russia and 1,600
from China, supported by 100 warplanes and 500 armoured vehicles,
simulated a military exercise to crush an imaginary uprising by
terrorist and religious extremist forces.
The defeat of 1,000 insurgents was planned as part of a series
of diplomatic, political and economic interventions into state
A which was hypothetically endangered by a group of separatists
or other political opposition.
Moscow and Beijing denied the war games were aimed at any third
party. But the real purpose was obvious: to send a warning
that Russia and China would not tolerate the emergence of opposition
movements in Central Asia, nor their exploitation by the US and
other rivals. The scenario made clear that the SCO would not accept
a repetition in Central Asia of the US-backed colour revolutions
in Ukraine and Georgia. Significantly, a request from Washington
to send observers to Peace Missions 2007 was rejected.
Russian chief of general staff, General Yuri Baluyevsky, bluntly
declared before the SCO war games: These [Western] states
continue to make attempts to convince our nations of the necessity
to form so-called true democratic institutions of
state and public management using the Western model, which destabilises
the situation in the states of the region.
Russia reportedly proposed to hold Peace Mission 2007
within the framework of the Collective Security Defence Treaty
Organisation (CSTO)Moscows defence pact signed with
the former Soviet republics of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan in 1992. Beijing, however, rejected
the idea out of concern that CSTOs involvement could create
the impression that China was forming a military bloc with Russia,
thus aggravating its relations with the US.
The Wall Street Journal commented on August 15 that
while the prospect of the SCO becoming a military alliance was
still uncertain, the war games demonstrated worrying
cooperation between Beijing and Moscow. It highlights the
direct military interests Russia and China are taking in Central
Asia, an area of which the US and Europe know very little. Even
more worrying, the Chinese role in the exercise provides yet more
evidence of the dimensions of Chinese military ambitions and capabilities,
the potential targets of which are by no means limited to Central
Asian Muslims, it stated.
What is concerning Washington is that Russian-Chinese cooperation
is cutting across American efforts to exert its own domination
in Central Asia. In the wake of the September 11 attacks in the
US, the Bush administration established a series of military bases
and other concessions in Central Asia republics for the first
time. As Beijing and Moscow recognised, Washingtons war
on terror was a convenient means not only for occupying
Afghanistan, but for bringing the key strategic region within
the US orbit.
The Shanghai Five was initially formed 11 years
ago to resolve the border disputes between Russia and China. But
the growing US threat, especially after Bush came to power, compelled
China and Russia to form a closer strategic partnership.
The SCO was formed in June 2001 with the aim of suppressing terrorism,
separatism and extremism in Central Asia.
Following the US invasion of Iraq and threats against Iran, Moscow
and Beijing increasingly turned to military as well as political
cooperation.
In early 2005, former Kyrgyz president Askar Akayev was toppled
by protests in the so-called Tulip Revolution and
replaced by opposition leader Kurmanbek Bakiyev. Under pressure
from Moscow, however, Bakiyev quickly made clear he intended to
maintain close ties with Russia. Shortly afterward, Uzbek President
Islam Karimov ruthlessly suppressed opposition protests in Andijan.
In defiance of criticism from the US and its allies, the SCO strongly
backed Uzbekistan.
Moreover, the SCO summit in 2005 issued a demand for the US
to set a deadline to remove its military bases in Central Asia.
Uzbekistan shut down the US air base and Kyrgyzstan increased
rent one hundred-fold for the continued US use of its Manas base.
At the same time, Russia continued to use a Kyrgyz air base free
of charge. US assistant secretary of state Richard Boucher complained
during a visit to Kyrgyzstan this June that the fate of the Manas
base should be decided bilaterally and not by discussion between
SCO members.
Russia and China, however, continue to oppose US military presence
in the region. This months SCO summit declared: Stability
and security in Central Asia are best ensured primarily through
efforts taken by the nations of the region on the basis of the
existing regional associations. The SCO has also been the
means for making overtures to other countries in the region. Iran,
India, Pakistan and Mongolia have observer status, while Afghan
president Hamid Karzai has attended SCO summits since 2004 as
an invited guest.
Ivan Safranchuk, the director of the Moscow branch of the World
Security Institute, pointedly told the Christian Science Monitor
on August 17: Thats one reason why the SCO is holding
military exercises, to demonstrate its capability to take responsibility
for stability in Central Asia after the US leaves.
In the face of Washingtons aggressive stance, Russia
and China have increasingly found common ground. Both want the
US out of Central Asia and are threatened by the Bush administrations
policies on a number of fronts. For its part, Beijing is seeking
to counter US efforts to encircle China through a series of strategic
alliances, including with Japan, Australia and India.
At the SCO summit, Putin declared: Year by year, the
SCO is becoming a more substantial factor in ensuring security
in the region. Without naming the US, he nevertheless criticised
its policies. Any attempts to solve global and regional
problems unilaterally are hopeless, he said. Chinese president
Hu Jintao warned against outside interference, saying: Security
for Central Asia was best left to the nations themselves.
At the same time, Russia and China are wary about openly antagonising
the US or establishing a formal military alliance. At the summit,
Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad denounced US plans to establish
a ballistic missile defence in Eastern Europe, saying it was of
concern for much of the continent, Asia and SCO members.
Beijing and Moscow, while no doubt agreeing with the sentiment,
were more measured in their comments. Moreover, at this stage,
they have yet to accept Irans application to join SCO.
At the same time, SCO members share complimentary economic
interests. Chinas huge appetite for oil and gas provides
a new market for Russian energy monopolies, while Moscows
arms industries are vital to Beijings drive to modernise
its military. Commenting on SCOs economic potential, the
Financial Times wrote on August 14: Covering a vast
area from the Russian Arctic to the central Asian deserts bordering
Afghanistan and Iran, SCO countries house more than a quarter
of the worlds population and at least a fifth of global
oil and gas reserves, plus huge uranium resources.
The SCO summit discussed Putins proposal last year to
create an energy club. Kazak president Noursultan
Nazarbaev called for the building of a system of pipelines
connecting all SCO states and for a unified energy regulator.
In a separate visit to Kazakhstan, Hu Jintao secured an agreement
to extend an oil pipeline already linking the two countries on
to the Caspian Sea. The pipeline could deliver up to one million
barrels of oil per day to China. A newly proposed $4 billion gas
pipeline from Turkmenistan to China, due to be completed by 2009,
would also pass through Kazakhstan.
Turkmen president Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov attended the summit
as an invited guest. He stressed that Turkmenistan, which has
huge reserves of natural gas, adopted a neutral position
and favoured multi-optionality of routes to export
its energy resources. Berdimuhamedovs comments were clearly
aimed at maintaining a certain independence, particularly of Russia.
But his very presence at the summit will not have pleased the
Bush administration, which has sought to tie Turkmenistan to a
US pipeline plan to bypass Russian territory.
Far from creating stability and prosperity in Central Asia,
the SCO summit simply underscores the substantial economic and
strategic interests at stake for all the major powers. Having
established its economic and military footholds in the region
over the past decade, the US is not about to give them up without
a struggle.
See Also:
After G8 summit: Conflict
between US and Russia intensifies
[12 June 2007]
Shanghai summit: China
and Russia strengthen bloc to counter the US in Asia
[23 June 2006]
A closer Russia-China
"strategic partnership" cemented with oil and gas
[4 April 2006]
Joint Russian-Chinese
war games: a reaction to aggressive US policies
[24 August 2005]
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