IMPLICATIONS: These moves represent an effort to strengthen what has hitherto been a singularly ineffective talking shop. Russian media reports confirm that America’s victory in Iraq, Washington’s refusal to consider Russian interests as seen by Moscow, and Russia’s growing fear of being ousted from the CIS triggered them. Various CIS members’ efforts to draw nearer to NATO and Washington or to secure economic independence from Russian oil and gas pressures also clearly play a major role here. It is hardly surprising that moves to pressure Georgia due to its signature of a new treaty with Washington, and calls for Azerbaijan to forsake ties to Washington and move closer to Moscow, coincided with the Central Asian initiatives. Similarly, Russian diplomats have publicly opposed Kazakstan’s efforts to build its own Navy to defend its Caspian shore. Likewise, Putin’s continuing efforts to enclose CIS economies in a closed bloc called the Eurasian Economic Association (EurAzEC) indicate enduring aspirations for a monopolistic hold on local energy economies. These moves do not aim to recreate the Soviet Union. But they do represent an increasingly coordinated attempt to realize the diminution of these states’ effective sovereignty by creating a Russian-dominated sphere of influence that entails their military-economic-political subordination to Russia and allows Russia opportunities to monopolize access to and influence over their energy holdings and defense policies. It also entails the support for dictatorship abroad and for anti-democratic rule at home. Third, it means dividing Central Asia into blocs as Moscow clearly seeks to undermine Islam Karimov’s pro-American policies and rule in Uzbekistan, even to the extent of spreading rumors of his imminent demise. One way to do so is to surround Uzbekistan with satellites to curtail its ability to develop freely and enhance its regional influence. Fourth, these policies also strike at American policies in Central Asia by increasing pressure upon local states to limit America’s freedom of action, undermine their support for Washington’s war on terrorism, and eventually create conditions to induce Washington to leave the area. Ultimately, Moscow would like to curtail American and other foreign opportunities for investment here, because an independent and competitive energy sector in Central Asia undermines the oil and gas sector in Russia upon which the Russian economy depends.
CONCLUSIONS: All things considered, Russia’s strivings for exclusive hegemony in Central Asia and the CIS will probably fail. Moscow lacks the economic and military resources to dominate these areas single-handedly. Moreover, America is unlikely to let it do so and plunge these states into perpetual stagnation. Unfortunately, Russia has now thrown down a gauntlet to America and stimulated the rivalry in Central Asia that it feared. Russia’s new bases and efforts to coerce local governments into a military alliance ensures that America will neither soon leave its bases nor do so unilaterally. The consequences of that departure would be disastrous for those local states and for Russia as well. Continuing calls for a “redivision of spheres of influence” and other such atavistic policies suggests how little Moscow appreciates its own limited capacities for sustaining and projecting power abroad and how little it has learned from Yeltsin’s quixotic efforts to establish hegemony by force. In doing so, they may bring the whole edifice of regional security as well as hopes for regional progress crashing down upon both Central Asia and themselves.
AUTHOR BIO: Professor Stephen Blank, Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College. The views expressed here do not represent those of the U.S. Army, Department of Defense, or the U.S. Government.