Geopolitical puzzle:
What is behind Pompeo’s visit to Kazakhstan?
4 Jan, 2020 13:50Get short URL
FILE PHOTO: US Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo © Reuters / Erin Scott
Kazakhstan is one of the
stops on US State Secretary Mike Pompeo's whirlwind trip shortly after the New
Year, with hopes that Washington can make inroads with a government in the key
region between Russia, China and Afghanistan.
Washington has chosen to start
2020 by bringing its already strained relations with Iran to a whole new level
of confrontation, as it ordered the killing of one of Tehran’s top generals,
Qassem Soleimani. The high-profile assassination is bound to make things
difficult for the State Department.
And that’s not to mention
that it is far from being the only problem Pompeo and his staff have on their
hands. Yet, instead of seeking to revive stalled denuclearization talks with
North Korea or soothing the ruffled feathers of European NATO allies, the
secretary of state plans to visit several former Soviet republics: Belarus,
Ukraine, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, in the vast Central Asian steppes.
Most Americans may be
forgiven for "knowing" about Kazakhstan via English comedian Sasha
Baron Cohen’s 2006 movie 'Borat,' which actually has nothing to do with the
country and is sort of offensive to bring up there.
The Central Asian nation,
independent since 1991, has signed treaties on cooperation with both the US and
NATO, while maintaining cordial relations with Moscow and Beijing. So what
awaits Pompeo in Nur-Sultan, formerly Astana, Kazakhstan's capital recently
renamed in honor of its first president?
The level of interaction
between Washington and Nur-Sultan was “stable but relatively weak,” Vladimir
Batyuk, a senior fellow at the Russian Institute for the US and Canadian
Studies, told RT. “Their common arrangements have been usually limited
to some low-level meetings.”
Seeking a fallback position
in Central Asia
America’s renewed interest
to Kazakhstan might be a result of the recent developments in nearby
Afghanistan, where the 18-year-long war is showing no sign of ending well for
Washington.
President Donald Trump's
promise to pull out of America's longest war was thwarted at the very beginning
of his administration by hawkish establishment advisers. Later, he abruptly
canceled peace talks with the Taliban militants when a peace deal seemed within
reach.
Recent reports that US generals and officials had known for
years that the war in Afghanistan was unwinnable may help nudge Washington into
actually calling it quits, however.
That is not to say the US
has given up on the dream of having a base in the region, though, and
Kazakhstan may seem like a good prospect to some in Foggy Bottom.
“Now, they would need
Central Asia as its base of operations,” Aleksey Pilko, director of the Eurasian
Communications Center, told RT.
US withdrawal from
Afghanistan is almost guaranteed to result in the resurgence of the Taliban.
The hardline Islamist militants already control much of the country. Washington
may seek to expand its influence in neighboring countries by bringing up
potential security issues and counter-terrorism cooperation.
However, a withdrawal from
Afghanistan is also likely to weaken the US position in the region, and make it
that much more difficult to position itself as a security provider for Central
Asian nations, Pilko believes.
Geopolitical crossroads
Kazakhstan is a major
regional power and the biggest state in Central Asia, at one time contributing
60 percent of the regional GDP. It is also a major uranium exporter, and has
significant oil and gas reserves. These facts alone could be enough for
Washington to turn its eye to Nur-Sultan.
What might be equally
important is that Kazakhstan is conveniently located between Washington's two
major geopolitical adversaries – China and Russia – which makes it a very
valuable piece in the geostrategic puzzle.
In fact, Washington has indeed
become conspicuously interested in “strengthening bilateral relations” with
Nur-Sultan after longstanding Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev – a close
ally and friend of Russia’s Vladimir Putin – stepped down to give way to a
younger national leader.
“Kazakhstan is a key state
in the region, so it is no wonder that the US state secretary pays a visit
there,” Pilko
explained. “The Kazakh leadership has changed… Now, the US sees a need
to sound out the situation and talk to the former and the current presidents to
find out what is happening and what the new leader’s policy will be.”
Pompeo has already given a
warm welcome to the Kazakh Foreign Minister Mukhtar Tleuberdi in Washington in
mid-December, and claimed on Twitter that the “strategic partnership” between
the two nations “has never been stronger.
Good meeting with Kazakhstani Foreign Minister Tileuberdi
yesterday. The U.S. – #Kazakhstan
strategic partnership has never been stronger and the U.S. looks forward to
continuing to strengthen bilateral relations with the government and people of
Kazakhstan.
The State Department then
rushed to laud growing commercial ties between the US and Kazakhstan, as well
as President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev’s “ambitious reform agenda”,
adding that the “human rights crisis” in neighboring Chinese
Xinjiang and “lasting peace” in Afghanistan were also
discussed during the meeting.
Yesterday, @SecPompeo met with Kazakhstani Foreign Minister Tileuberdi. The Secretary commended #Kazakhstan’s global leadership in the repatriation and reintegration of its citizens from Syria and praised steps Kazakhstan has taken to share its experience with other nations.
It is on Tleuberdi’s
invitation that Pompeo is now planning to arrive to Kazakhstan. Little is
officially known about this supposed trip so far, however, with most news
coming from Kazakh officials.
"The program will be eventful,” Kazakh Foreign Ministry spokesman Aybek
Smadiyarov told journalists in early December. Other reports suggested that
Pompeo will unveil nothing less than a new US strategy for Central Asia during
the visit.
Washington might have good
reasons to approach Kazakhstan. However, whether it has the means to achieve
its goals is another matter entirely.
Futile efforts
Even if Pompeo plays the US
security assistance card during his visit, it is unclear whether that will be
enough to sway the local establishment’s opinions in favor of Washington’s
plans for the region.
Kazakhstan is already deeply
integrated with Russia and several other former Soviet Republics, both in
economic and military fields. The nation is a member of the Collective Security
Treaty Organization (CSTO) – an inter-governmental military alliance which also
includes Russia, Armenia, Belarus and two of Kazakhstan’s Central Asian
neighbors, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. The bloc is primarily tasked with fending
off any military aggression against its members, as well as fighting terrorism.
Russian President Vladimir
Putin shakes hands with his Kazakh counterpart Kassym-Jomart Tokayev at the
Russia-Kazakhstan Interregional Cooperation Forum in Omsk, Russia, on November
7, 2019. © Sputnik / Alexey Nikolsky
Kazakhstan is also a member
of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), an economic integration body. The EAEU
is roughly similar to the EU’s Common Market in that it allows free movement of
goods, services and people and sets out common policies in various fields of
economy ranging from transport, industry, energy and agriculture to customs and
investment. In addition to Russia and Kazakhstan, it also includes Belarus,
Armenia and Kyrgyzstan.
It is also worth noting that
China and Russia - not the US - are Kazakhstan’s biggest trading partners. Almost 40 percent of Kazakhstan’s
imports come from Russia, with an additional 16 percent arriving from China. US
goods, by comparison, amount to slightly more than four percent. China is also
the second most important Kazakh export market, while Russia is the fourth one.
However meticulously Pompeo
plans to study all the peculiarities of Kazakh politics during his upcoming
visit, Tokayev has already quite openly said that he would follow the steps of his
predecessor in international relations, which most likely means continued close
cooperation with both Russia and China.
The biggest obstacle to
Pompeo’s potential diplomatic success might, however, lie not in Nur-Sultan but
in Washington itself, Batyuk believes. President Trump largely focuses on
geo-economics in his foreign policy, locking horns with adversaries and allies
alike in his attempts to win extra trade preferences for the US.
“It is economics that is
important for Trump. In this regard, Kazakhstan and Central Asia in general
hardly have any place in his worldview at all. When the national leader does
not exactly know what he wants from the region it is very difficult to develop
any strategy here,” the
analyst said.
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