IMPLICATIONS: The tour was publicized by NATO as a diplomatic success, successfully clarifying certain issues, such as Uzbekistan’s troubled relationship with western democracies, and reaching a landmark agreement with Tajikistan on transit into Afghanistan. It equally served to solidify the growing links the Alliance is fostering with these former Soviet Republics, building on the political rhetoric at its the Istanbul summit. Practical measures have been taken to deepen NATO’s partnership with Central Asia, including appointing a Special Representative on the region and plans to send liaison officers to Central Asia and open NATO training centers. However, familiar with experiencing raised hopes, the Central Asian capitals now look for real practical evidence that this will affect their security environment and promote their own internal defense reform programs. PfP has proven a useful engagement tool, though it has also been limited in its scope to supply the necessary assistance to each country individually, since the programs are generic and therefore not tailored to suit specific needs of any one country. The needs of the Central Asian militaries are diverse and each country has to be treated separately and in sensitive ways that build trust and offer practical improvements to their armed forces and security structures. Unfortunately, in many of the regional defense ministries, this offer of greater Western involvement are often mistaken for a carte blanche supply of weapons and modern equipment. Yet what these post-Soviet structures require most fundamentally is assistance in moving away from their Soviet legacy forces, and enhancing their managerial systems and planning. Only once this has been addressed can other aspects of reform begin in earnest.
CONCLUSIONS: The Central Asian states are cautiously open to NATO’s overtures aimed at helping to reform their armed forces; they understand their need to reform but fail to appreciate how best to implement it and look to the Alliance for technical experience and assistance. For NATO, the real challenge is moving forward in the region alongside Russia, examining areas of potential cooperation. Russia’s opposition toward NATO’s earlier expansion and hostility towards its interests in Central Asia are becoming entrenched. Russian media reported the NATO Secretary-General’s tour of Central Asia in negative language, bordering on scathing denunciation, to skepticism that the Alliance really knows what it is doing within Russia’s southern sphere of influence. What is clear, however, in the aftermath of Beslan, is the emergence of greater impetus towards counter-terrorist cooperation between Russia and NATO, which may facilitate the development of a confluence of security interests in the region. If NATO planners can identify a window of opportunity and capitalize on Russia’s long experience of dealing with the region and move forward in a cooperative framework, based on openness and involving Moscow in the process, then there are grounds for optimism. Such an approach will reassure the Central Asian states, reduce regional tension, eschew great power competition and rivalry and bring opportunities for joint confidence building measures: Scheffer’s next stop ought to be Moscow. However, the appointment of the Special Representative for Central Asia and the Caucasus may also point to future trouble for NATO in its dealings with these regions: mistakenly lumping them together in the same generic process and placing them under the scrutiny of one political advisor to the Secretary-General, rather than fostering a more individually constructed approach to each of these countries. It is a potential error of judgment, and one that Moscow will watch carefully in the coming years. Meanwhile, the bilateral agreement between Russia and Tajikistan on amongst other security matters agreeing basing rights to Russia’s 201st Motor Rifle Division in Dushanbe, will remind the Alliance that Russia will not leave the region in any hurry.
AUTHOR’S BIO: Roger N. McDermott is an honorary senior research associate, department of politics and international relations, University of Kent at Canterbury (UK). He is also the editor (together with Anne C. Aldis) of Russian Military Reform 1992-2002, London/Portland: Frank Cass, 2003.