| America's Growing Stake in Central Asia |
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This year marks the 20th anniversary of independence for the five republics of Central Asia: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. This anniversary is a good opportunity to reflect on America's growing stake in Central Asia. Since 1991, our desire for a stable, independent, and prosperous Central Asia has guided US policy priorities in the region, with each of the five nations working towards building strong, market-oriented democracies. In recent years, the United States has sought to increase engagement with this region on a broad range of issues, particularly as we work to bring stability, security, and prosperity to Afghanistan, which borders three of the Central Asian republics. Located at the critical geostrategic crossroads of Eurasia, the region is rich not only in natural resources, economic opportunity, and human capacity, but also in its diversity of people, culture, and ideas. Just as the region was at the center of the Silk Road of centuries past, Central Asia has the potential once again to serve as a hub of trade, transport, and ideas in Eurasia, linking the people and markets of East and West, and North and South. We look forward to working with the Central Asian republics, their neighbors, and international partners to create a new Silk Road that integrates this strategically vital region and offers new opportunities for its people.
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, the United States embraced an ambitious foreign policy in Central Asia that remains the core of our efforts in the region today. Since 1991, we have sought to preserve the sovereignty of the Central Asian states, to eliminate Soviet-era weapons of mass destruction (WMD), to facilitate the development of the region's energy reserves, and to foster cooperation, not only among the five republics, but also with the region's neighbors and the United States. We also have encouraged political liberalization, the establishment of democratic institutions and practices, transparent governance, and full respect for human rights. In their twenty years of independence, the Central Asian states have made substantial progress in specific areas. They have solidified their sovereignty and renounced WMD. They have established productive relations within the region while preserving their autonomy and developing unique national identities. The Central Asian republics have pursued viable partnerships with the United States on a range of other critical issues affecting the region, most notably on security cooperation and Afghanistan. We hope all the countries of Central Asia will follow the example of Kyrgyzstan in pursuing political liberalization and greater respect for human rights. September 11, 2001The events of September 11, 2001 fundamentally altered the trajectory of US-Central Asian relations. The attacks on 9/11 made abundantly clear our mutual security concerns and led to a considerable broadening of our relations. Central Asia became a key outpost in the US war against terrorism and served as a vital entry point for coalition forces and supplies as we initiated efforts against the Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan. Since then, cooperation on counterterrorism, counternarcotics, and border security have expanded rapidly. SecurityExpanded security cooperation underpins our efforts to bring stability to Afghanistan, most visibly through the Northern Distribution Network (NDN) and the Transit Center at Manas International Airport in Kyrgyzstan. The participation of most Central Asian countries in the NDN has allowed for the transport of supplies into Afghanistan for US and coalition forces. The Manas Transit Center likewise serves as a vital logistical hub for US forces deploying to and from the Afghan theatre. Economic Development and StabilizationCentral Asia's contributions are not limited to security cooperation. Each Central Asian country has contributed in important ways to Afghanistan's economic development and stabilization. Uzbekistan constructed an important rail link between Hairaton and Mazar-e-Sharif in northern Afghanistan. As Turkmenistan supplies electricity to western Afghanistan, Uzbekistan also provides desperately needed electricity at discounted rates to Kabul and surrounding areas. Kazakhstan has invited 1,000 Afghans to train at Kazakhstani universities, while Tajikistan, which shares a 1,400-kilometer border with Afghanistan, coordinates with the Afghan government on border security and trade. Afghanistan's long-term success will depend in part on boosting cooperation with its neighbors, developing a shared vision for the future, and building up trade, energy, economic, and political links that will embed Afghanistan into its neighborhood along a new Silk Road.
Despite success on many policy priorities, Central Asia remains one of the least integrated regions in the world. The United States believes regional cooperation and integration mark opportunities of enormous unfulfilled promise. We are committed to coordinating with our Central Asian partners to achieve an environment in which business and trade can thrive, which is why we support WTO accession for each of the Central Asian republics. We have supported the efforts by the UN Center for Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia (UNRCCA) to facilitate greater consultations and cooperation within the region. We also seek to help Central Asia to develop greater regional linkages by connecting Europe to China, Russia to India, Central Asia to South Asia, and beyond. As Secretary Clinton noted during the US-India Strategic Dialogue in July, this new Silk Road would not be "a single thoroughfare like its namesake, but an international web and network of economic and transit connections." An International Web and Network of Economic and Transit ConnectionsLinking Central Asia to Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India, for instance, will foster stability, economic development, and energy security in these countries and the wider region, and the foundation for a new Silk Road is already being laid. An important step towards this goal will be to connect the road and rail projects in Afghanistan to the Asian Development Bank's extensive road and rail plan in Central Asia to provide the necessary infrastructure for exports from those countries to reach western markets. When realized, these efforts could one day allow for Indian goods to reach markets in Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and beyond; and for Central Asian exports to traverse Afghanistan to the ports and burgeoning markets of Pakistan, India, and beyond. Regional economic cooperation and integration is critical to Afghanistan's future—and to that of Central and South Asia as a whole. |