<DIV>I think a lot of this talk about Russia and the US "vying for influence" in Central Asia and the Caucasus is overblown. As far as I know, Moscow and Washington have been cooperating pretty closely in the area. If you can believe Foreign Secretary Ivanov, Putin himself had to persuade the 'stans to let US troops on their soil, and Saakashvili in Georgia has been much more cooperative with Russia than Shevardnadze was. I think the Kremlin views the US as a stabilizing force in Central Asia. Anyway, the only way the US could push Russia out of the region would be if it figured out a way to run a power cable from Washington.</DIV>
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<DIV><TT>The Hindu<BR><BR>Sunday, Jun 06, 2004<BR><BR>Tajikistan: Russia scores over U.S.<BR><BR>By Vladimir Radyuhin<BR><BR>MOSCOW, JUNE 5. Moscow scored a major win over Washington in their <BR>battle<BR>for domination of ex-Soviet Central Asia by persuading Tajikistan to <BR>drop<BR>its demand for an early pullout of Russian border guards and to grant<BR>permanent status to a Russian military base in the ex-Soviet Central <BR>Asian<BR>republic.<BR></TT><BR><BR><B><I>uvj@vsnl.com</I></B> wrote:
<BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px">The Hindu<BR><BR>Sunday, Jun 06, 2004<BR><BR>Tajikistan: Russia scores over U.S.<BR><BR>By Vladimir Radyuhin<BR><BR>MOSCOW, JUNE 5. Moscow scored a major win over Washington in their battle<BR>for domination of ex-Soviet Central Asia by persuading Tajikistan to drop<BR>its demand for an early pullout of Russian border guards and to grant<BR>permanent status to a Russian military base in the ex-Soviet Central Asian<BR>republic.<BR><BR>Meeting the Russian President, Vladimir Putin, at the Russian Black Sea<BR>resort of Sochi on Friday the Tajik President, Imomali Rakhmonov, asked him<BR>to extend the Russian border guards' stay until the end of 2006, a Kremlin<BR>spokesman said. Earlier Tajikistan insisted the guards should leave by<BR>mid-2005. Russia's 9,000 border guards patrol 90 per cent of Tajikistan's<BR>border with opium-producing Afghanistan.<BR><BR>Tajikistan also agreed to
hand over to Russia "for free and permanent use"<BR>the land for the establishment of a Russian military base in Tajikistan, Mr.<BR>Putin's foreign policy advisor, Sergei Prikhodko, told reporters after the<BR>meeting. Dushanbe has been dragging its feet over granting a permanent legal<BR>status to the 11,000-strong Russian army division deployed in Tajikistan in<BR>the hope of winning economic and defence aid from the United States and<BR>other NATO countries. The U.S. has deployed about 3,000 troops at Tajik air<BR>bases in addition to bigger military presence in Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan<BR>and has poured millions of dollars in Tajik infrastructure and military<BR>projects.<BR><BR>The U.S. think-tank, Strategic Forecasting Inc., last month hailed the<BR>coming withdrawal of the Russian military from Tajikistan as a "strategic<BR>victory" for Washington.<BR><BR>However, Moscow has expressed fears that the pullout of its troops and<BR>border guards would open the Tajik border to
drug trafficking from<BR>Afghanistan. Washington's European allies appear to share Russian concerns,<BR>since 70 per cent of opium and 100 per cent of heroin reaching Europe come<BR>from Afghanistan via Tajikistan and Russia. In the past few weeks the chiefs<BR>of staff of the British and French armies descended on Tajikistan. The head<BR>of the United Nations drug-control agency, Mario Costa, who also visited<BR>Dushanbe recently, said he was "worried by the news (of Russian<BR>withdrawal)."<BR><BR>Copyright © 2004, The Hindu.<BR><BR><BR><BR>___________________________________<BR>http://mailman.lbo-talk.org/mailman/listinfo/lbo-talk</BLOCKQUOTE></DIV><p>
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