Central Asia: Regional Developments and
Implications for U.S. Interests

Jim Nichol
Specialist in Russian and Eurasian Affairs
January 3, 2012
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RL33458
CRS Report for Congress
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epared for Members and Committees of Congress

Central Asia: Regional Developments and Implications for U.S. Interests

Summary
U.S. policy toward the Central Asian states has aimed at facilitating their cooperation with U.S.
and NATO stabilization efforts in Afghanistan and their efforts to combat terrorism, proliferation,
and trafficking in arms, drugs, and persons. Other U.S. objectives have included promoting free
markets, democratization, human rights, energy development, and the forging of East-West and
Central Asia-South Asia trade links. Such policies aim to help the states become what various
U.S. administrations have considered to be responsible members of the international community
rather than to degenerate into xenophobic, extremist, and anti-Western regimes that contribute to
wider regional conflict and instability.
Soon after the terrorist attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001, all the Central Asian
“front-line” states offered over-flight and other support for coalition anti-terrorism operations in
Afghanistan. Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan hosted coalition troops and provided access
to airbases. In 2003, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan also endorsed coalition military action in Iraq.
About two dozen Kazakhstani troops served in Iraq until late 2008. Uzbekistan rescinded U.S.
basing rights in 2005 after the United States criticized the reported killing of civilians in the town
of Andijon. In early 2009, Kyrgyzstan ordered a U.S. base in that country to close, allegedly
because of Russian inducements and U.S. reluctance to meet Kyrgyz requests for greatly
increased lease payments. An agreement on continued U.S. use of the Manas Transit Center was
reached in June 2009. In 2009, most of the regional states also agreed to become part of a
Northern Distribution Network for the transport of U.S. and NATO supplies to Afghanistan. The
status of the Manas Transit Center was in doubt after an April 2010 coup in Kyrgyzstan, but the
new leadership soon stated that the Manas Transit Center arrangement would remain in place.
Policymakers have tailored U.S. policy in Central Asia to the varying characteristics of these
states. U.S. interests in Kazakhstan have included securing and eliminating Soviet-era nuclear and
biological weapons materials and facilities. U.S. energy firms have invested in oil and natural gas
development in Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, and successive administrations have backed
diverse export routes to the West for these resources. U.S. policy toward Kyrgyzstan has long
included support for its civil society. In Tajikistan, the United States pledged to assist in its
economic reconstruction following that country’s 1992-1997 civil war. U.S. relations with
Uzbekistan—the most populous state in the heart of the region—were cool after 2005, but
recently have improved. Since the 2008 global economic downturn, more U.S. humanitarian,
health, and education assistance has been provided to hard-struck Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.
Congress has been at the forefront in advocating increased U.S. ties with Central Asia, and in
providing backing for the region for the transit of equipment and supplies for U.S.-led
stabilization efforts in Afghanistan. Congress has pursued these goals through hearings and
legislation on humanitarian, economic, and democratization assistance, security issues, and
human rights. During the 112th Congress, the Members may review assistance for bolstering
regional border and customs controls and other safeguards to prevent the proliferation of weapons
of mass destruction (WMD), combating trafficking in persons and drugs, encouraging regional
integration with South Asia and Europe, advancing energy security, and countering terrorism.
Support for these goals also has been viewed as contributing to stabilization and reconstruction
operations by the United States and NATO in Afghanistan. For several years, Congress has placed
conditions on assistance to Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan—because of concerns about human rights
abuses and lagging democratization—which have affected some U.S. diplomatic and security ties.
Congress will continue to consider how to balance these varied U.S. interests in the region.
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Central Asia: Regional Developments and Implications for U.S. Interests

Contents
Most Recent Developments ............................................................................................................. 1
Historical Background ..................................................................................................................... 2
Overview of U.S. Policy Concerns.................................................................................................. 2
Post-September 11 and Afghanistan.......................................................................................... 6
Support for Operation Iraqi Freedom ........................................................................................ 7
Fostering Pro-Western Orientations................................................................................................. 7
Russia’s Role ............................................................................................................................. 9
Obstacles to Peace and Independence: Regional Tensions and Conflicts...................................... 12
The 1992-1997 Civil War in Tajikistan ................................................................................... 13
The 1999, 2000, and 2006 Incursions into Kyrgyzstan ........................................................... 14
Attacks in Uzbekistan.............................................................................................................. 14
The 2005 Violence in Andijon, Uzbekistan....................................................................... 15
The Summer 2009 Suicide Bombings and Attacks in Uzbekistan .................................... 16
The 2010 Ethnic Clashes in Kyrgyzstan.................................................................................. 16
Attacks by Jama’at Kyrgyzstan Jaish al-Mahdi in 2010-2011 ................................................ 19
The 2010 Attacks in Tajikistan ................................................................................................ 19
The 2011 Attacks in Kazakhstan ............................................................................................. 20
U.S. Designation of the IMU and IJU as Terrorist Organizations ........................................... 20
Democratization and Human Rights.............................................................................................. 21
Recent Developments in Kazakshtan ...................................................................................... 23
Recent Developments in Kyrgyzstan....................................................................................... 24
Recent Developments in Uzbekistan....................................................................................... 26
Human Rights.......................................................................................................................... 27
Kazakhstan and the Presidency of the OSCE.......................................................................... 30
Security and Arms Control ............................................................................................................ 32
Programs and Assistance ......................................................................................................... 33
Closure of the Karshi-Khanabad Airbase ................................................................................ 36
Efforts to Improve Security Relations............................................................................... 36
The Manas Airbase/Transit Center .......................................................................................... 37
The Manas Transit Center Agreement............................................................................... 38
The Status of the Manas Transit Center After the April 2010 Coup.................................. 39
The December 2010 Congressional Report on Fuel Contracts ......................................... 40
The Northern Distribution Network (NDN) to Afghanistan.................................................... 42
Weapons of Mass Destruction ................................................................................................. 43
Trade and Investment..................................................................................................................... 44
Energy Resources .................................................................................................................... 47
Kazakhstan’s Oil and Gas ................................................................................................. 49
Turkmenistan’s Gas........................................................................................................... 51
Uzbekistan ............................................................................................................................... 53
U.S. Aid Overview......................................................................................................................... 53
Congressional Conditions on Kazakh and Uzbek Aid............................................................. 54
Legislation ..................................................................................................................................... 56

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Figures
Figure 1. Central Asia: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan........ 59

Tables
Table 1. U.S. Foreign Assistance to Central Asia, FY1992 to FY2011, and the FY2012
Request ....................................................................................................................................... 56
Table 2. U.S. Assistance to Central Asia, FY1992-FY2001 .......................................................... 58
Table 3. U.S. Assistance to Central Asia, FY2002-FY2010 (and Totals, FY1992-FY2010)......... 58

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 60

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Most Recent Developments
On December 29, 2011, President Almazbek Atambayev of Kyrgyzstan responded to Iran’s
threats to close the Straits of Hormuz by claiming that the U.S. Manas Transit Center—a major
U.S. military facility supporting operations in Afghanistan—might be a target of Iranian missiles.
Such an attack, he warned, could endanger the city of Bishkek adjacent to the Manas Transit
Center, and stated that “Why do I need this kind of a base here? Does anyone need it?”1
On December 16, 2011, energy sector workers on strike since May 2011 and others reportedly
extensively damaged and burned government and other buildings and clashed with police in the
town of Zhanaozen, in the Mangistau Region of Kazakhstan, resulting in 16 deaths and dozens of
injuries, the government reported. Some observers alleged that there were more casualties and
that the riots were triggered or exacerbated by police firing on the demonstrators. Protests and
violence also spread to other areas of the region. President Nursultan Nazarbayev declared a state
of emergency and curfew in the town on December 17 and sent military and security forces to the
region. He claimed that the violence was pre-planned and financed, perhaps from abroad, that the
rioters had been given alcohol and money, and that police had shot into the crowds only in self-
defense. At the same time, he charged that local officials had not heeded the grievances of the
striking oil workers and had given him misinformation. In response, he fired the head of
Kazmunaigaz, the state-owned energy firm, ousted his son-in-law as head of the national fund
that owned Kazmunaigaz, replaced the governor of the region, and pledged new employment and
retraining for oil workers who had been fired during their long strike. Critics charged that he took
these moves to protect his popularity and that of the ruling political party during an electoral
campaign (see below). The government reported that dozens of individuals have been detained so
far in connection with the protests. The non-governmental organization Human Rights Watch has
raised concerns about alleged torture and other abuses against detainees.
For the third time during his period of rule, Kazakhstan’s President Nazarbayev issued a decree
on November 16, 2011, dismissing the legislature and setting early elections for January 15,
2012. He invoked his constitutional power to dissolve the legislature in case of a “political crisis”
between the legislature and the executive branch of government. He argued that the crisis was
linked to the possibility of another global economic downturn. His presidential advisor has added
that other reasons include rising terrorism and increasing popular discontent that would make it
more difficult for the ruling party to win if the election were held at the normal time in late 2012.2
The party list election involves 98 members of the 107-seat lower legislative chamber, with the
remaining 9 members selected by a presidential advisory body. Critics have complained that the
holding of an early election appears aimed —as in the case of the recent early presidential
election—at hindering the political opposition from preparing for the election. Critics also alleged
that the government had prepared for an early election, including by suspending the activities of
the opposition Communist Party in October 2011, on the grounds that the party was trying to
form an illegal alliance with an unregistered party to participate in a future legislative election.
Another possible preparatory move included the “constructive opposition” Ak Zhal Party’s
selection of Azat Peruashev as its head, who allegedly is a supporter of Nazarbayev. Under a law
passed in 2009, more than one party must be represented in the legislature, so that even if only the

1 Open Source Center, Central Eurasia: Daily Report (hereafter CEDR), December 29, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950083.
2 CEDR, December 19, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950019.
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ruling party gains enough votes to win seats under normal rules, a runner-up party will be granted
at least 2 seats.
In October 2011, the Turkmen Central Electoral Commission announced that a regularly
scheduled presidential election would be held on February 12, 2012. During the last two weeks of
December 2011, initiative groups nominated candidates for president and gathered 10,000
signatures in a majority of the country’s districts in order to gain registration of their candidates.
The National Revival Movement, a civic association headed by the president, nominated
President Berdimuhamedow as its candidate. Several initiative groups have nominated other
government officials as possible candidates. The Central Electoral Commission will examine the
signatures and decide on registering candidates by January 18, 2012. President Berdimuhamedow
has stated that the election will have several contenders and will uphold “principles of honest
competition, democracy and openness.”3
On November 18, 2011, the Peace Corps announced that it was quickly pulling its 117 volunteers
out of Kazakhstan after 18 years of work in the country.
Historical Background
Central Asia consists of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan; it
borders Russia, China, the Middle East, and South Asia. The major peoples of all but Tajikistan
speak Turkic languages (the Tajiks speak an Iranian language), and most are Sunni Muslims
(some Tajiks are Shiia Muslims). Most are closely related historically and culturally. By the late
19th century, Russian tsars had conquered the last independent khanates and nomadic lands of
Central Asia. By the early 1920s, Soviet power had been imposed; by 1936, five “Soviet Socialist
Republics” had been created. Upon the collapse of the Soviet Union in December 1991, they
gained independence.4
Overview of U.S. Policy Concerns
After the collapse of the Soviet Union at the end of 1991, then-President George H.W. Bush sent
the “FREEDOM Support Act” (FSA) aid authorization to Congress, which was amended and
signed into law in October 1992 (P.L. 102-511). In 1999, congressional concerns led to passage of
the “Silk Road Strategy Act” (P.L. 106-113), which authorized enhanced policy and aid to support
conflict amelioration, humanitarian needs, economic development, transport and
communications, border controls, democracy, and the creation of civil societies in the South
Caucasus and Central Asia.
U.S. policymakers and others hold various views on the appropriate types and levels of U.S.
involvement in the region. Some have argued that ties with “energy behemoth” Kazakhstan are

3 CEDR, December 3, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950046.
4 See CRS Report 97-1058, Kazakhstan: Recent Developments and U.S. Interests, by Jim Nichol; CRS Report 97-690,
Kyrgyzstan: Recent Developments and U.S. Interests, by Jim Nichol; CRS Report 98-594, Tajikistan: Recent
Developments and U.S. Interests
, by Jim Nichol, CRS Report 97-1055, Turkmenistan: Recent Developments and U.S.
Interests
, by Jim Nichol, and CRS Report RS21238, Uzbekistan: Recent Developments and U.S. Interests, by Jim
Nichol.
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crucial to U.S. interests.5 Others have argued that Uzbekistan is the “linchpin” of the region (it is
the most populous regional state and is centrally located, shaping the range and scope of regional
cooperation) and should receive the most U.S. attention.
In general, U.S. aid and investment have been viewed as strengthening the independence of the
Central Asian states and forestalling Russian, Chinese, Iranian, or other efforts to subvert them.
Advocates of such ties have argued that
Central Asia: Basic Facts
political turmoil and the growth of terrorist
Total area: 1.6 million sq. mi., larger than India;
enclaves in Central Asia could produce
Kazakhstan: 1.1 m. sq. mi.; Kyrgyzstan: 77,000 sq. mi.;
spillover effects both in nearby states,
Tajikistan: 55,800 sq. mi.; Turkmenistan: 190,000 sq. mi.;
including U.S. allies and friends such as
Uzbekistan: 174,500 sq. mi.
Turkey, and worldwide. They also have argued
Total population: approximately 62 million, slightly less
that the United States has a major interest in
than France; Kazakhstan: 15.5 m.; Kyrgyzstan: 5.6 m.;
preventing terrorist regimes or groups from
Tajikistan: 7.6 m.; Turkmenistan: 5.0 m.; Uzbekistan: 28.1
m. (July 2011 est., The World Factbook.)
illicitly acquiring Soviet-era technology for
making weapons of mass destruction (WMD).
Total gross domestic product: approximately $346
They have maintained that U.S. interests do
billion in 2010; per capita GDP is about $5,600, but there
are large income disparities and relatively large
not perfectly coincide with those of its allies
percentages of people in each country are in poverty.
and friends, that Turkey and other actors
Kazakhstan: $196.4 b.; Kyrgyzstan: $12.0 b.; Tajikistan:
possess limited aid resources, and that the
$14.7 b.; Turkmenistan: $36.9 b.; Uzbekistan: $85.9 b.
United States is in the strongest position as the
(The World Factbook, purchasing power parity.)
sole superpower to influence democratization
and respect for human rights. They have stressed that such U.S. influence will help alleviate
social tensions exploited by Islamic extremist groups to gain adherents. They also have argued
that for all these reasons, the United States should maintain military access to the region even
when Afghanistan becomes more stable.6
Some views of policymakers and academics who previously objected to a more forward U.S.
policy toward Central Asia appeared less salient after September 11, 2001—when the United
States came to stress counter-terrorism operations in Afghanistan—but aspects of these views
could again come to the fore in debates over U.S. security policy in Afghanistan and Central Asia.
These observers argued that the United States historically had few interests in Central Asia and
that developments there remained largely marginal to U.S. interests. They discounted fears that
anti-Western Islamic extremism would make enough headway to threaten secular regimes or
otherwise harm U.S. interests in Central Asia. They also argued that the United States should not
try to foster democratization among cultures they claimed are historically attuned to

5 U.S. Department of State, Office of the Spokesman, Remarks: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice At Eurasian
National University
, October 13, 2005. Perhaps indicative of the boosted emphasis on U.S. interests in Kazakhstan,
former Secretary Rice argued that the country had the potential to be the “engine for growth” in Central Asia. More
recently, Assistant Secretary of State Robert Blake stated in November 2010 that “our relations with Kazakhstan are
perhaps our deepest and broadest in Central Asia.” U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Foreign Relations,
Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific, and the Global Environment, Hearing on the Emerging Importance of the U.S.-
Central Asia Partnership, Testimony of Robert O. Blake, Jr., Assistant Secretary, Bureau of South and Central Asian
Affairs,
November 17 2010.
6 At least some of these views seemed to be reflected in the former Bush Administration’s 2006 National Security
Strategy of the United States, which proclaimed that “Central Asia is an enduring priority for our foreign policy.” The
Obama Administration’s May 2010 National Security Strategy does not specifically mention Central Asia or the
Caspian region. The White House, National Security Strategy of the United States, March 16, 2006, p. 40; National
Security Strategy
, May 2010.
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authoritarianism. Some observers rejected arguments that U.S. interests in anti-terrorism, non-
proliferation, regional cooperation, and trade outweighed concerns over democratization and
human rights, and urged reducing or cutting off most aid to repressive Central Asian states. A few
observers pointed to instability in the region as a reason to eschew deeper U.S. involvement such
as military access that could needlessly place more U.S. personnel and citizens in danger.
The Obama Administration has listed five objectives of what it terms an enhanced U.S.
engagement policy in Central Asia:
1. to maximize the cooperation of the states of the region with coalition counter-
terrorism efforts in Afghanistan (particularly cooperation on hosting U.S. and
NATO airbases and on the transit of troops and supplies to Afghanistan along the
“Northern Distribution Network”; see below);
2. to increase the development and diversification of the region’s energy resources
and supply routes;
3. to promote the eventual emergence of good governance and respect for human
rights;
4. to foster competitive market economies; and
5. to increase the capacity of the states to govern themselves, and in particular to
prevent state failure in Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan, including by enhancing food
security assistance.
Signs of this enhanced engagement include the establishment of high-level Annual Bilateral
Consultations (ABCs) with each of the regional states on counter-narcotics, counter- terrorism,
democratic reform, rule of law, human rights, trade, investment, health, and education. The first
round of ABCs took place in late 2009-2010 in all the regional states except Kyrgyzstan (because
of instability there) and the second round in 2011.7
In March 2011, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper testified that “as the US increases
reliance on Central Asia to support operations in Afghanistan, the region's political and social
stability is becoming more important.” He warned that instability is possible in much of the
region, as evidenced by the coup and subsequent violence in Kyrgyzstan. He also warned that
“Kyrgyzstan's and Tajikistan's abilities to cope with the challenge of Islamic extremism—should
it spread from Pakistan and Afghanistan—represent an additional cause for concern.” As an
example of the latter threat, he stated that in 2010, Tajik President Emomaliy Rahmon “was
forced to negotiate with regional warlords after failing to defeat them militarily, an indicator that
Dushanbe is potentially more vulnerable to an Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan with renewed
interests in Central Asia” (see below, “The 2010 Attacks in Tajikistan”).8

7 U.S. Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, Subcommittee on Near Eastern and South and Central Asian Affairs,
Hearing on Reevaluating U.S. Policy in Central Asia, Testimony of George Krol, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State,
Bureau of South And Central Asian Affairs
, December 15, 2009; U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Foreign
Relations, Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific, and the Global Environment, Hearing on the Emerging Importance of the
U.S.-Central Asia Partnership, Testimony of Robert O. Blake, Jr., Assistant Secretary, Bureau of South and Central
Asian Affairs,
November 17 2010.
8 U.S. Senate, Committee on Armed Services, Hearing on Worldwide Security Threats, Statement of James R. Clapper
Director, National Intelligence Office of the Director of National Intelligence
, March 10, 2011.
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In July 2010, Assistant Secretary of State Robert Blake refuted the arguments of critics “that this
Administration is too focused on the security relationship with [Central Asian] countries and
forgets about human rights,” He stated that human rights and civil society issues “will remain an
essential part of our dialogue equal in importance to our discussion on security issues,” He also
rejected criticism that the Administration “was too interested in maintaining the Transit Center at
Manas International Airport in Kyrgyzstan and refused to criticize the Bakiyev regime on its
human rights performance,” asserting that “we … never spurned meeting with the then opposition
in Bishkek or in Washington.”9
In September 2010, Assistant Secretary Blake stressed that closer U.S.-Russia ties were
facilitating U.S. engagement in Central Asia, and stated that “we want to not only build on that
progress with respect to our relations in Kyrgyzstan, but also to look at other ways that the United
States and Russia can cooperate in the region.”10 Other observers have disputed this
characterization in regard to Kyrgyzstan, arguing that Russia and the United States disagreed
about the significance of democratic elections there.11
In testimony in November 2010, Assistant Secretary Blake appeared to emphasize U.S. security
interests when he stated that “Central Asia plays a vital role in our Afghanistan strategy…. A
stable future for Afghanistan depends on the continued assistance of its Central Asian neighbors,
just as a stable, prosperous future for the Central Asian states depends on bringing peace, stability
and prosperity to Afghanistan.” He also discussed the other four U.S. goals of “increased U.S.
engagement” in the region. Appearing at the same hearing as Blake, Deputy Assistant Secretary
of Defense Robert Sedney stated that “from the Department of Defense perspective … our focus
is on the support for the effort in Afghanistan, but that is accompanied by the longer-term security
assistance projects, including a variety of training efforts in areas from counterterrorism to
counternarcotics that are building capabilities in those countries that are important for reasons
well beyond Afghanistan.”12
Among recent contacts between President Obama and Central Asian leaders, the President met on
April 11, 2010, with Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev on the sidelines of the Nuclear
Security Summit in Washington, DC. A joint statement reported that they “pledged to intensify
bilateral cooperation to promote nuclear safety and non-proliferation, regional stability in Central
Asia, economic prosperity, and universal values.” President Obama encouraged Kazakhstan to
fully implement its 2009-2012 National Human Rights Action Plan. President Nazarbayev agreed
to facilitate U.S. military air flights along a new trans-polar route that transits Kazakhstan to
Afghanistan, and President Obama praised Kazakh assistance to Afghanistan.13

9 U.S. Department of State, Robert O. Blake, Jr., Assistant Secretary, Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs, U.S.
Policy Towards Central Asia
, Carnegie Endowment for Peace, July 30, 2010. For criticism of warming U.S.-Uzbek
ties, see Joshua Kucera, “The US and its ‘Friendly’ Dictator,” Eurasianet, November 14, 2010.
10 U.S. Department of State, Office of the Spokesman, On-the-Record Briefing: Assistant Secretary for South and
Central Asian Affairs Robert Blake on Developments in Central Asia
, September 22, 2010.
11 Joshua Kucera, “State Department Touts Russia Reset’s Positive Role in Central Asia,” Eurasianet, September 23,
2010.
12 U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Foreign Relations, Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific, and the Global
Environment, Hearing on the Emerging Importance of the U.S.-Central Asia Partnership, Testimony of Robert O.
Blake, Jr., Assistant Secretary, Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs
, and Testimony of Robert Sedney, Deputy
Assistant Secretary of Defense,
November 17 2010.
13 The White House, Office of the Press Secretary, Joint Statement on the meeting between President Obama and
Kazakhstan President Nazarbayev
April 11, 2010.
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On September 28, 2010, President Obama met with then-Kyrgyz President Roza Otunbayeva on
the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly’s opening autumn session. He praised her
“courageous efforts to rebuild democratic institutions in Kyrgyzstan,” and thanked her for
Kyrgyzstan’s support for Afghan stabilization.14 Then-President Otunbayeva also met with
President Obama during her March 2011 U.S. visit. Reportedly, President Obama informed her
that the United States was improving the transparency of its financial arrangements regarding the
Transit Center, and pledged that the Transit Center would work to maximize its benefits to the
Kyrgyz people. He also praised Kyrgyzstan’s democratization efforts and reaffirmed U.S. support
for those efforts.
Secretary Clinton visited Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan in early December 2010. In
Kazakhstan, she participated in the OSCE Summit (see below, “Kazakhstan and the Presidency of
the OSCE”). She also met briefly with Tajik President Rahmon and Turkmen President
Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov on the sidelines of the Astana Summit. In Uzbekistan, she signed
an accord on scientific cooperation as one means, she explained, to further U.S. engagement with
the country. According to some reports, on January 11, 2011, Vice President Joe Biden briefly
visited Uzbekistan while in transit to Afghanistan and Pakistan. President Obama telephoned
President Karimov on September 28, 2011, to thank him for Uzbekistan’s cooperation in
stabilization efforts in Afghanistan, and reportedly to urge him to facilitate the transit of U.S. and
NATO cargoes into and out of Afghanistan. During her October 22-23, 2011, visit to Tajikistan
and Uzbekistan, Secretary Clinton discussed the U.S. “New Silk Road Vision” (see below, “Trade
and Investment”) to turn Afghanistan into a regional transportation, trade, and energy hub linked
to Central Asia. She also warned the presidents of both countries that restrictions on religious
freedom could contribute to rising religious discontent.
Post-September 11 and Afghanistan
After the terrorist attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001, then-Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State B. Lynn Pascoe testified that the former Bush Administration realized that “it
was critical to the national interests of the United States that we greatly enhance our relations
with the five Central Asian countries” to prevent them from becoming harbors for terrorism.15 All
the Central Asian states soon offered overflight and other assistance to U.S.-led anti-terrorism
coalition operations in Afghanistan. The states were predisposed to welcome such operations.
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan had long supported the Afghan Northern Alliance’s combat against the
Taliban, and all the Central Asian states feared Afghanistan as a base for terrorism, crime, and
drug trafficking (even Turkmenistan, which tried to reach some accommodation with the Taliban).
In 2005, however, Uzbekistan rescinded its basing agreement with the United States. Tajikistan
and Uzbekistan have maintained their basing support for NATO peacekeeping operations, and
Kyrgyzstan for U.S. and NATO operations, in Afghanistan. In 2009, most Central Asian states
agreed to facilitate the air and land transport of U.S. and NATO non-lethal (and later of lethal)
supplies to Afghanistan as an alternative to land transport via increasingly volatile Pakistan (see
“Security and Arms Control” below). They also have provided aid and increased trade and
transport links with Afghanistan.

14 U.S. Embassy, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, Read-out of President Obama's Meeting with Kyrgyzstani President Roza
Otunbayeva
, September 28, 2010.
15 U.S. Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, Subcommittee on Central Asia and the South Caucasus, The U.S. Role
in Central Asia. Testimony of B. Lynn Pascoe, Deputy Assistant Secretary for European and Eurasian Affairs, June 27,
2002.
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In October 2010, Kazakh President Nazarbayev announced that the country would send some
officers to ISAF headquarters in Afghanistan. After the Kazakh Majlis (lower legislative
chamber) approved sending military personnel to support ISAF on May 18, 2011, the Taliban
reportedly issued a threat two days later to retaliate against Kazakhstan for supporting ISAF. After
bombings occurred at security offices on May 17 and 24, 2011 (see below, “The 2011 Attacks in
Kazakhstan”), the Kazakh Senate (upper legislative chamber) rejected the bill approved by the
lower chamber. The Senate explained its action as a response to widespread public opposition to
sending military personnel to Afghanistan.
Support for Operation Iraqi Freedom
Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan were the only Central Asian state that joined the “coalition of the
willing” in 2003 that endorsed U.S.-led coalition military operations in Iraq. Uzbekistan
subsequently decided not to send troops to Iraq. In August 2003, Kazakhstan deployed some two
dozen troops to Iraq who served under Polish command and carried out water-purification,
demining, and medical activities. They pulled out in late 2008.
Fostering Pro-Western Orientations
The United States has encouraged the Central Asian states to become responsible members of the
international community, supporting integrative goals through bilateral aid and through
coordination with other aid donors. The stated policy goal is to discourage radical anti-democratic
regimes and terrorist groups from gaining influence. All the Central Asian leaders publicly
embrace Islam but display hostility toward Islamic fundamentalism. At the same time, they have
established some trade and aid ties with Iran. Some observers argue that, in the longer run, their
foreign policies may not be anti-Western but may more closely reflect some concerns of other
Islamic states. Some Western organizational ties with the region have suffered in recent years, in
particular those of the OSCE, which has been criticized by some Central Asian governments for
advocating democratization and respect for human rights.16 Despite this criticism, President
Nazarbayev successfully pushed for Kazakhstan to hold the presidency of the OSCE in 2010 (see
below).
The State Department in 2006 included Central Asia in a revamped Bureau of South and Central
Asian Affairs. According to former Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Steven Mann,
“institutions such as NATO and the OSCE will continue to draw the nations of Central Asia closer
to Europe and the United States,” but the United States also will encourage the states to develop
“new ties and synergies with nations to the south,” such as Afghanistan, India, and Pakistan.17
Other observers, however, criticized the move, arguing that it threatened to deemphasize efforts to
integrate the region into European institutions and that ties with Central Asia would become an
afterthought to ties with South Asia.18 In May 2007, then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates urged

16 See also CRS Report RL30294, Central Asia’s Security: Issues and Implications for U.S. Interests, by Jim Nichol.
17 U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on International Relations, Subcommittee on the Middle East and Central
Asia, Assessing Energy and Security Issues in Central Asia, Testimony of Steven Mann, Principal Deputy Assistant
Secretary for South and Central Asian Affairs
, July 25, 2006. The State Department appointed a Senior Advisor on
Regional Integration in the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs, Robert Deutsch, who focused on bolstering
trade and transport ties between South and Central Asia.
18 Zeyno Baran, “Energy Supplies in Eurasia and Implications for U.S. Energy Security,” Nixon Center, September 27,
(continued...)
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Asian countries to provide Central Asia with road and rail, telecommunications, and electricity
generation and distribution aid to link the region with Asia; to help it combat terrorism and
narcotics trafficking; to send technical advisors to ministries to promote political and economic
reforms; to offer more military trainers, peacekeepers, and advisors for defense reforms; and to
more actively integrate the regional states into “the Asian security structure.”19 (See “Trade and
Investment,” below.)
The European Union (EU) has become more interested in Central Asia in recent years as the
region has become more of a security threat as an originator and transit zone for drugs, weapons
of mass destruction, refugees, and persons smuggled for prostitution or labor. Russia’s cutoff of
gas supplies in early 2006 and 2009 to Ukraine—which hindered gas supplies transiting Ukraine
to European customers—also bolstered EU interest in Central Asia as an alternative supplier of
oil and gas. Such interests contributed to the launch of a Strategy Paper for assistance for 2002-
2006 and a follow-on for 2007-2013 (see below), and the EU’s appointment of a Special
Representative to the region. The EU has implemented Partnership and Cooperation Agreements
(PCAs, which set forth political, economic, and trade relations) with Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
and Uzbekistan. An existing Interstate Oil and Gas Transport to Europe (INOGATE) program was
supplemented in 2004 and 2006 by a Baku Energy Initiative and Astana Energy Ministerial
Declaration to diversify energy supplies. One project involves the proposed Nabucco pipeline,
which could transport Caspian region gas to Austria (see “Energy Resources,” below).20
In June 2007, the EU approved a new “Central Asian strategy” for enhanced aid and relations for
2007-2013. It calls for establishing offices in each regional state and assistance of $1 billion. The
strategy argues that the EU ties with the region need to be enhanced because EU enlargement and
EU relations with the South Caucasus and Black Sea states bring it to Central Asia’s borders. The
strategy also stresses that “the dependency of the EU on external energy sources and the need for
a diversified energy supply policy in order to increase energy security open further perspectives
for cooperation between the EU and Central Asia,” and that the “EU will conduct an enhanced
regular energy dialogue” with the states.21 Under the strategy, the EU holds dozens of meetings
and seminars each year with the Central Asian states on such issues as human rights, civil society
development, foreign policy and assistance, trade and investment, environmental and energy
cooperation, and other issues.
In May 2007, the United Nations Secretary General agreed to a request by the Central Asian
states to establish a U.N. Regional Center for Preventive Diplomacy, with headquarters in
Ashkhabad, Turkmenistan. The Center, opened in December 2007, was intended to take on some

(...continued)
2005.
19 U.S. Department of Defense, Department of Defense Documents, International Institute for Strategic Studies -
Remarks as Delivered by Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates, Singapore
, June 1, 2007.
20 For details, see CRS Report RL33636, The European Union’s Energy Security Challenges, by Paul Belkin. See also
European Union, “The EU and the Countries of the Black Sea and Caspian Sea Regions Agree on a Common Energy
Strategy,” Press Release, November 30, 2006, at http://www.inogate.org.
21 European Commission, Regional Strategy Paper for Assistance to Central Asia for the Period 2007-2013, June 2007;
Council of the European Union, Presidency Conclusions, 11177/07, June 23, 2007, p. 12; European Commission,
External Relations, Joint Progress Report by the Council and the European Commission to the European Council on
the implementation of the EU Central Asia Strategy
, June 24, 2008; European Commission, External Relations
Directorate, Central Asia DCI Indicative Program 2011 – 2013, September 2010; Into Eurasia: Monitoring The EU’s
Central Asia Strategy
, Center For European Policy Studies, February, 2010.
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of the duties of the U.N. Tajikistan Office of Peace-Building, which established after the Tajik
Civil War and was being closed. The Center’s mandate includes monitoring regional threats and
working together and with other regional organizations to facilitate peacemaking and conflict
prevention. Priority concerns include cross-border terrorism, organized crime and drug
trafficking; regional water and energy management; environmental degradation; and stabilization
in Afghanistan.
Russia’s Role
During most of the 1990s, successive U.S. administrations generally viewed a democratizing
Russia as serving as a role model in Central Asia. Despite growing authoritarian tendencies in
Russia during the presidencies of Vladimir Putin (2000-2008) and Dmitriy Medvedev (2008-
2012), successive U.S. administrations have emphasized that Russia’s counter-terrorism efforts in
the region broadly support U.S. interests. At the same time, successive administrations have
stressed to Russia that it should not seek to dominate the region or exclude Western and other
involvement. Virtually all U.S. analysts agree that Russia’s actions should be monitored to ensure
that the independence of the Central Asian states is not vitiated.
Soon after the terrorist attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001, Russia acquiesced to
increased U.S. and coalition presence in the region for operations against Al Qaeda and its
supporters in Afghanistan. Besides Russia’s own concerns about Islamic extremism in
Afghanistan and Central Asia, it was interested in boosting its economic and other ties to the West
and regaining some influence in Afghanistan. In the later part of the 2000s, however, Russia
appeared to step up efforts to counter U.S. influence in Central Asia by advocating that the states
increase economic and strategic ties with Russia and limit such ties with the United States. This
stance included efforts to persuade Kyrgyzstan to close its U.S. airbase. Such a stance appeared
paradoxical to U.S. officials, since Russia (and China) benefitted from anti-terrorism operations
carried out by U.S. (and NATO) forces in Afghanistan. Closer U.S.-Russia relations that
developed since 2009 appear to have included some Russian cooperation with U.S. and NATO
stabilization efforts in Afghanistan.
During the 1990s, Russia’s economic decline and demands by Central Asia caused it to reduce its
security presence, a trend that Vladimir Putin appeared determined to reverse during his
presidency (2000-2008). In 1999, Russian border guards were largely phased out in Kyrgyzstan,
the last Russian military advisors left Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan withdrew from the
Collective Security Treaty (CST; see below) of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS),
in part because the treaty members failed to help Uzbekistan meet the growing Taliban threat in
Afghanistan, according to Uzbek President Islam Karimov.
Despite these moves, Russia appeared determined to maintain a military presence in Tajikistan. It
has retained from the Soviet period the 201st motorized infantry division of about 5,500 troops
subordinate to Russia’s Volga-Ural Military District. Some Russian officers reportedly help
oversee these troops, many or most of whom are ethnic Tajik noncommissioned officers and
soldiers. Thousands of Tajik Frontier Force border guards receive support as necessary from the
201st division.22 Russia’s efforts to formalize a basing agreement with Tajikistan dragged on for

22 The Military Balance 2010, London: International Institute of Strategic Studies, February 3, 2010. Besides this
border security assistance, the OSCE established a Border Management Staff College in Dushanbe in May 2009 to train
officers from OSCE member and partner countries, including Afghanistan.
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years, as Tajikistan endeavored to charge rent and assert its sovereignty. In October 2004, a ten-
year basing agreement was signed, formalizing Russia’s largest military presence abroad, besides
its Black Sea Fleet. At the same time, Tajikistan demanded full control over border policing.
Russia announced in June 2005 that it had handed over the last guard-house along the Afghan-
Tajik border to Tajik troops (some Russian border advisors remained). In October 2009, visiting
President Rahmon reportedly urged President Medvedev to pay rent on Russia’s base facilities in
Tajikistan, but Moscow only agreed to consider the issue when the basing agreement came up for
renewal. At a meeting in Dushanbe in early September 2011, President Medvedev announced that
he and Rahmon had made progress in reaching agreement on extending the basing agreement for
another 49 years, and that an accord would be signed in early 2012. One source in the Tajik
Foreign Ministry has indicated that Tajikistan is calling for rent payments, which Russia long has
opposed. Also at the meeting, the two presidents agreed that the number of Russian border
advisors reportedly would be reduced from 350 to 200, and would more closely cooperate with
the Tajik border force. In early November 2011, tensions rose between Russia and Tajikistan
following the conviction in Tajikistan of a Russian and an Estonian pilot on smuggling charges.
Russia retaliated by expelling several hundred allegedly illegal Tajik migrant workers. Although
Tajikistan amnestied the pilots later in the month, some Russian media alleged that bilateral
relations were at a nadir.
In a seeming shift toward a more activist role in Central Asia, in April 2000, Russia called for the
signatories of the CST to approve the creation of rapid reaction forces to combat terrorism and
hinted that such forces might launch preemptive strikes on Afghan terrorist bases. These hints
elicited U.S. calls for Russia to exercise restraint. Presidents Clinton and Putin agreed in 2000 to
set up a working group to examine Afghan-related terrorism (this working group later broadened
its discussions to other counter-terrorism cooperation; it has continued to meet under the Obama
Administration). CST members agreed in 2001 to set up the Central Asian rapid reaction force
headquartered in Kyrgyzstan, with Russia’s troops in Tajikistan comprising most of the force (this
small force of 3,000 to 5,000 troops has held exercises and supposedly is dedicated to border
protection; in 2009 it was supplemented by a larger 20,000-troop rapid reaction force with a
supposedly wider mission).23 CIS members in 2001 also approved setting up an Anti-Terrorism
Center (ATC) in Moscow, with a branch in Kyrgyzstan, giving Russia influence over regional
intelligence gathering.
Perhaps as a result of the establishment of a U.S. airbase in Kyrgyzstan after the September 11,
2001, attacks (see “The Manas Airbase” below), Russia in September 2003 signed a 15-year
military basing accord with Kyrgyzstan providing access to the Kant airfield, near Kyrgyzstan’s
capital of Bishkek. The base is a few miles from the U.S.-led coalition’s airbase. Russia attempted
to entice Kyrgyzstan in early 2009 to close the Manas airbase by offering the country hundreds of
millions of dollars in grants and loans. However, after Kyrgyzstan agreed to continued U.S. use of
the airbase in mid-2009 as a transit center, Russia reneged on some of this funding and requested
that Kyrgyzstan grant Moscow rights to another airbase near Uzbekistan’s border. Uzbekistan
denounced this plan, and it appeared to be put on hold. With the U.S.-Russia “reset” of relations,
Russia’s opposition to the continued operation of the Manas Transit Center seemingly has
changed.
Besides Russia’s military presence in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, Russia’s 2009 National Security
Strategy called for the country to play a dominant role in Caspian basin security. Russia’s Caspian

23 CEDR, February 25, 2010, Doc. No. CEP-950282.
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Sea Flotilla has been bolstered by troops and equipment in recent years. A security cooperation
agreement signed at a Caspian littoral state summit on November 18, 2010, states that Caspian
basin security is the exclusive preserve of the littoral states. Some observers have viewed this
agreement as reflecting Russia’s objections to the U.S. Caspian Guard program and other
maritime security initiatives (see below, “Security and Arms Control”).24
Taking advantage of Uzbekistan’s souring relations with many Western countries in 2005 (see
below, “The 2005 Violence in Andijon, Uzbekistan”), Russia signed a Treaty on Allied Relations
with Uzbekistan in November 2005 that calls for mutual defense consultations in the event of a
threat to either party (similar to language in the CST). Uzbekistan rejoined the CST Organization
(CSTO; see below) in June 2006 at a meeting where the member-states also agreed that basing
agreements by any member with a third party had to be approved by all members, in effect
providing supreme veto power to Russia over future basing arrangements. Despite rejoining the
CSTO, Uzbekistan has appeared wary of Russian intentions in the organization, including by
insisting that Tashkent will not participate in the CSTO rapid reaction force established in June
2009. In October 2011, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, acting as the head of the
CSTO, reportedly called for a CSTO summit meeting scheduled in December in Moscow to
consider whether Uzbekistan should remain a member. President Karimov attended this summit,
as well as a CIS summit held the same day, and stressed that Uzbekistan’s continued participation
in these bodies depended on whether their actions accord with Uzbkeistan’s national interests.25
Many observers suggest that the appreciative attitude of Central Asian states toward the United
States in the early 2000s—for their added security accomplished through U.S.-led actions in
Afghanistan—has declined over time. Reasons may include perceptions that the United States has
not provided adequate security or economic assistance. Also, Russia and China are pledging
security support to the states to get them to forget their pre-September 11, 2001, dissatisfaction
with Russian and Chinese efforts. Russia also encourages the leaders to believe that the United
States backs democratic “revolutions” to replace them. Lastly, Russia has claimed that it can
ensure regional security in the face of the continuing fragile security situation in Afghanistan.
As Russia’s economy improved in the 2000s—as a result of increases in oil and gas prices—
Russia reasserted its economic interests in Central Asia. Russia endeavored to counter Western
business and gain substantial influence over energy resources through participation in joint
ventures and by insisting that pipelines cross Russian territory. Although Russia experienced a
decline in gross domestic product (GDP) in 2009 and only modest growth in GDP in 2010-2011
as a result of shocks associated with the global economic downturn, it has appeared that Russia
has tried to maintain economic leverage in the region, including by giving stabilization grants and
loans to Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. In other areas, such as commodity trade, Russian economic
influence has been reduced, although it is still significant. In 2009, the number of Central Asian
migrant workers in Russia decreased, and the country imposed quotas on the number of migrant
laborers. The numbers of migrant workers from Central Asia have increased since then????, and
worker remittances from Russia remain significant to the GDPs of Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and
Uzbekistan.

24 CEDR, November 19, 2010, Doc. No. CEP-4002.
25 Interfax, October 26, 2011; CEDR, November 25, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950093; December 9, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-
964011; December 21, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950141.
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Russia’s efforts to maintain substantial economic interests in Central Asia face increasing
challenges from China, which has substantially increased its aid and trade activities in the region.
Perhaps to use institutional means to constrict growing Chinese economic influence, a Russia-
Belarus-Kazakhstan customs union began operating in mid-2011. Russian officials and state-
owned media have called for the customs union to expand to include Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.
In an article in early October 2011, Prime Minister Putin called for boosting Russian influence
over Soviet successor states through the creation of an economic, political, and military “Eurasian
Union.”
Obstacles to Peace and Independence:
Regional Tensions and Conflicts

The legacies of co-mingled ethnic groups, convoluted borders, and emerging national identities
pose challenges to stability in all the Central Asian states. Emerging national identities accentuate
clan, family, regional, and Islamic self-identifications. Central Asia’s convoluted borders fail to
accurately reflect ethnic distributions and are hard to police, hence contributing to regional
tensions. Ethnic Uzbeks make up sizeable minorities in the other Central Asian countries and
Afghanistan. In Tajikistan, they make up almost one-quarter of the population and in Kyrgyzstan
they make up over one-seventh. More ethnic Turkmen reside in Iran and Afghanistan—over 3
million—than in Turkmenistan. Sizeable numbers of ethnic Tajiks reside in Uzbekistan, and 7
million in Afghanistan. Many Kyrgyz and Tajiks live in China’s Xinjiang province. The fertile
Ferghana Valley is shared by Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan. The central governments
have struggled to gain control over administrative subunits. Most observers agree that the term
“Central Asia” currently denotes a geographic area more than a region of shared identities and
aspirations, although it is clear that the land-locked, poverty-stricken, and sparsely populated
region will need more integration in order to develop.
Regional cooperation remains stymied by tensions among the states. Such tensions continue to
exist despite the membership of the states in various cooperation groups such as the CST
Organization (CSTO), the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), and NATO’s Partnership
for Peace (PFP). The CST was signed by Russia, Belarus, the South Caucasus countries, and the
Central Asian states (except Turkmenistan) in May 1992 and called for military cooperation and
joint consultations in the event of security threats to any member. At the time to renew the treaty
in 1999, Uzbekistan, Georgia, and Azerbaijan formally withdrew. The remaining members
formed the CSTO in late 2002, and a secretariat opened in Moscow at the beginning of 2004.
Through the CSTO, Russia has attempted to involve the members in joint efforts to combat
international terrorism and drug trafficking. Although the charter of the CSTO does not mention
internal or external peacekeeping functions, other agreements have provided for such activities.
Neither former Kyrgyz President Akayev nor former President Bakiyev apparently requested the
aid of the CSTO during the coups that overthrew them (on the latter coup, see below, “Recent
Developments in Kyrgyzstan”), and the CSTO has appeared inactive during other crises in the
region. In September 2008, its members agreed to condemn Georgia’s “aggression” against its
breakaway South Ossetia region but refused a request by Russia to extend diplomatic recognition
to South Ossetia and Georgia’s breakaway region of Abkhazia. At a CSTO meeting in June 2010
to consider an urgent request by interim Kyrgyz President Roza Otunbayeva for troops to assist in
quelling ethnic violence, a consensus could not be reached and the members only agreed to
provide equipment. At a CSTO summit in December 2011, all the members signed a pledge that
no non-member military bases could be established on their territories unless all members agreed.
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They also reportedly agreed on detailed procedures for intervening in domestic “emergency”
situations within a member state at the behest of the member.26
In 1996, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan signed the “Shanghai treaty” with China
pledging the sanctity and substantial demilitarization of mutual borders, and in 1997 they signed a
follow-on treaty demilitarizing the 4,300-mile former Soviet-Chinese border. China has used the
treaty to pressure the Central Asian states to deter their ethnic Uighur minorities from supporting
separatism in China’s Xinjiang province, and to get them to extradite Uighurs fleeing China. In
2001, Uzbekistan joined the group, renamed the SCO, and in 2003 the SCO Regional Anti-
Terrorism Structure (RATS) was set up there. Several military and security exercises have been
held, the most recent of which was a one-day exercise called “Tianshan-2” in May 2011 in
China’s Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, which involved police and intelligence forces from
China, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan. The scenario involved the infiltration of a Central Asian-based
“East Turkestan” terrorist group into Xinjiang to join with other terrorists. The exercise was led
by the chairman of RATS, and this organization just days before had participated with the CIS
anti-terrorism center in an apparently related exercise in Kyrgyzstan. According to some reports,
Russia recently has discouraged the holding of major SCO military exercises as well as the
strengthening of economic ties within the SCO, although Moscow has been amenable to
cooperation within the SCO on regional oil and gas issues.27
In late 2007, the Central Asian states prevailed on the U.N. to set up a Regional Center for
Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia (UNRCCA) to facilitate diplomatic and other cooperation
to prevent internal and external threats to regional security. UNRCCA is based in Tashkent and is
headed by a special representative of the U.N. secretary-general. UNRCCA’s plan for action for
2009-2011 calls for diplomacy to combat “trans-border illegal networks of weapons, drugs and
crime and terrorism; environmental degradation, conflicting water and border management; and
ongoing instability in Afghanistan.” The plan calls for facilitating common efforts by regional
governments to combat these threats, encouraging the peacemaking efforts of the OSCE, CIS,
SCO, EU and other regional organizations, and monitoring and analyzing the situation in Central
Asia in order to give early warning and make recommendations to the U.N. Secretary General
and regional leaders. The UNRCCA has held several regional conferences on such issues as Aral
Sea desiccation, water-sharing, and Afghanistan. The UNRCCA special representative visited
Kyrgyzstan several times in the wake of the April 2010 coup to discuss U.N. aid to the interim
government to ensure peace and stability.
The 1992-1997 Civil War in Tajikistan
Tajikistan was among the Central Asian republics least prepared and inclined toward
independence when the Soviet Union broke up. In September 1992, a loose coalition of
nationalist, Islamic, and democratic parties and groups tried to take power. Kulyabi and Khojenti
regional elites, assisted by Uzbekistan and Russia, launched a successful counteroffensive that by
the end of 1992 had resulted in 20,000-40,000 casualties and up to 800,000 refugees or displaced
persons, about 80,000 of whom fled to Afghanistan. After the two sides agreed to a cease-fire, the
U.N. Security Council established a small U.N. Mission of Observers in Tajikistan (UNMOT) in
December 1994. In June 1997, Tajik President Rahmon and the late rebel leader Seyed Abdullo

26 Interfax, December 21, 2011.
27 CEDR, November 8, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-6008.
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Nuri signed a comprehensive peace agreement. Benchmarks of the peace process were largely
met, and UNMOT pulled out in May 2000. To encourage the peace process, the United States
initially pledged to help Tajikistan rebuild. Some observers point to events in the city of Andijon
in Uzbekistan (see “The 2005 Violence in Andijon, Uzbekistan” below) as indicating that
conflicts similar to the Tajik Civil War could engulf other regional states where large numbers of
people are disenfranchised and poverty-stricken.
The 1999, 2000, and 2006 Incursions into Kyrgyzstan
Several hundred Islamic extremists and others harboring in Tajikistan and Afghanistan first
invaded Kyrgyzstan in July-August 1999. Jama Namanganiy, the co-leader of the Islamic
Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU; see below), headed the largest guerrilla group. They seized
hostages and several villages, allegedly seeking to create an Islamic state in south Kyrgyzstan as a
springboard for a jihad in Uzbekistan.28 With Uzbek and Kazakh air and other support, Kyrgyz
forces forced the guerrillas out in October 1999. Dozens of IMU and other insurgents again
invaded Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan in August 2000. Uzbekistan provided air and other support,
but Kyrgyz forces were largely responsible for defeating the insurgents by late October 2000. The
IMU did not invade the region in the summer before September 11, 2001, in part because Osama
bin Laden had secured its aid for a Taliban offensive against the Afghan Northern Alliance.
About a dozen alleged IMU members invaded from Tajikistan in May 2006 but soon were
defeated (some escaped). After this, the Kyrgyz defense minister claimed that the IMU, HT, and
other such groups increasingly menaced national security.
Attacks in Uzbekistan
A series of explosions in Tashkent in February 1999 were among early signs that the Uzbek
government was vulnerable to terrorism. By various reports, the explosions killed 16 to 28 and
wounded 100 to 351 people. The aftermath involved wide-scale arrests of political dissidents and
others deemed by some observers as unlikely conspirators. Karimov in April 1999 accused
Mohammad Solikh (former Uzbek presidential candidate and head of the banned Erk Party) of
masterminding what he termed an assassination plot, along with Tohir Yuldashev (co-leader of the
IMU) and the Taliban. The first trial of 22 suspects in June resulted in six receiving death
sentences. The suspects said in court that they received terrorist training in Afghanistan,
Tajikistan, Pakistan, and Russia and were led by Solikh, Yuldashev and Namanganiy. In 2000,
Yuldashev and Namanganiy received death sentences in absentia, and Solikh received a 15.5 year
prison sentence. Solikh denied membership in IMU, and he and Yuldashev denied involvement in
the bombings.
On March 28 through April 1, 2004, a series of suicide bombings and other attacks were launched
in Uzbekistan, reportedly killing 47. An obscure Islamic Jihad Group of Uzbekistan (IJG; Jama’at
al-Jihad al-Islami, a breakaway part of the IMU) claimed responsibility.29 In subsequent trials, the
alleged attackers were accused of being members of IJG or of Hizb ut-Tahrir (HT; an Islamic

28 According to Zeyno Baran, S. Frederick Starr, and Svante Cornell, the incursions of the IMU into Uzbekistan and
Kyrgyzstan in 1999 and 2000 were largely driven by efforts to secure drug trafficking routes. Islamic Radicalism in
Central Asia and the Caucasus: Implications for the EU
, Silk Road Paper, July 2006.
29 The IJG changed its name to the Islamic Jihad Union (IJU) in 2005.
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fundamentalist movement ostensibly pledged to peace but banned in Uzbekistan) and of
attempting to overthrow the government. Some defendants testified that they were trained by
Arabs and others at camps in Kazakhstan and Pakistan. They testified that Najmiddin
Kamolitdinovich Jalolov (convicted in absentia in 2000) was the leader of IJG, and linked him to
Taliban head Mohammad Omar, Uighur extremist Abu Mohammad, and Osama bin Laden. On
July 30, 2004, explosions occurred at the U.S. and Israeli embassies and the Uzbek Prosecutor-
General’s Office in Tashkent. The IMU and IJG claimed responsibility and stated that the suicide
bombings were aimed against Uzbek and other “apostate” governments.30
The 2005 Violence in Andijon, Uzbekistan
Dozens or perhaps hundreds of civilians were killed or wounded on May 13, 2005, after Uzbek
troops fired on demonstrators in the eastern town of Andijon. The protestors had gathered to
demand the end of a trial of local businessmen charged with belonging to an Islamic terrorist
group. The night before, a group stormed a prison where those on trial were held and released
hundreds of inmates. Many freed inmates then joined others in storming government buildings.31
President Karimov flew to the city to direct operations, and reportedly had restored order by late
on May 13.32 On July 29, 439 people who had fled from Uzbekistan to Kyrgyzstan were airlifted
to Romania for resettlement processing, after the United States and others raised concerns that
they might be tortured if returned to Uzbekistan.33
The United States and others in the international community repeatedly called for an international
inquiry into events in Andijon, which the Uzbek government rejected as violating its sovereignty.
In November 2005, the EU Council approved a visa ban on 12 Uzbek officials it stated were
“directly responsible for the indiscriminate and disproportionate use of force in Andijon and for
the obstruction of an independent inquiry.” The Council also embargoed exports of “arms,
military equipment, and other equipment that might be used for internal repression.”34 In October
2007 and April 2008, the EU Council suspended the visa ban for six months but left the arms

30 See also CRS Report RS21818, The 2004 Attacks in Uzbekistan: Context and Implications for U.S. Interests, by Jim
Nichol.
31 There is a great deal of controversy about whether this group contained foreign-trained terrorists or was composed
mainly of the friends and families of the accused and other disgruntled citizenry. See U.S. Congress. Commission on
Security and Cooperation In Europe. Briefing: The Uzbekistan Crisis. Testimony of Galima Bukharbayeva,
Correspondent. Institute for War and Peace Reporting,
June 29, 2005. A declassified Defense Intelligence Agency
memorandum prepared soon after the events stated that “no credible information indicates extremist groups participated
in the attacks,” but stressed that evidence was not definitive on this point. See Uzbekistan: Review of Information on
Unrest in Andijon, 12-13 May 2005
, Info Memo, 5-0549/DR, July 30, 2005 (the memo is part of the Rumsfeld Archive,
see below). For alternative views on terrorist involvement and casualties, see Shirin Akiner, Violence in Andijon, 13
May 2005: An Independent Assessment
, Central Asia-Caucasus Institute, July 2005; AbduMannob Polat, Reassessing
Andijan: The Road to Restoring U.S.-Uzbek Relations
, Jamestown Foundation, June 2007; and Donald Rumsfeld,
Known and Unknown (New York: Penguin Group Publishers, 2011). See also James Kirchick, “Did Donald Rumsfeld
Whitewash Massacre In Uzbekistan?” RFE/RL, May 13, 2011
32 Analyst Adeeb Khalid draws a parallel between the Uzbek government’s actions at Andijon and at a large student
demonstration in Tashkent in January 1992. In the latter case, Karimov allegedly ordered troops to fire on the marchers,
resulting in up to six deaths and two dozen or more injuries. Islam After Communism (Berkeley, CA: University of
California Press, 2007), p. 155. See also Reuters, January 17, 1992.
33 See also CRS Report RS22161, Unrest in Andijon, Uzbekistan: Context and Implications, by Jim Nichol.
34 Council of the European Union, Uzbekistan: Council Adopts Restrictive Measures, Press Release 14392/05,
November 14, 2005. U.S. officials argued that the United States already had been limiting military assistance—at
congressional request—because of human rights abuses.
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embargo in place. In October 2008, the EU Council praised what it viewed as some positive
trends in human rights in Uzbekistan and lifted the visa ban, although it left the arms embargo in
place.35 In October 2009, it lifted the arms embargo.
At the first major trial of 15 alleged perpetrators of the Andijon unrest in late 2005, the accused
all confessed and asked for death penalties. They testified that they were members of Akramiya, a
branch of HT launched in 1994 by Akram Yuldashev that allegedly aimed to use force to create a
caliphate in the area of the Fergana Valley located in Uzbekistan. Besides receiving assistance
from HT, Akramiya was alleged to receive financial aid and arms training from the IMU. The
defendants also claimed that the U.S. and Kyrgyz governments helped finance and support their
effort to overthrow the government, and that international media colluded with local human rights
groups and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in this effort. The U.S. and Kyrgyz
governments denied involvement, and many observers criticized the trial as appearing stage-
managed. Reportedly, 100 or more individuals were arrested and sentenced, including some
Uzbek opposition party members and media and NGO representatives.36 Partly in response, the
U.S. Congress tightened conditions on aid to Uzbekistan.
The Summer 2009 Suicide Bombings and Attacks in Uzbekistan
On May 25-26, 2009, a police checkpoint was attacked on the Kyrgyz-Uzbek border, attacks took
place in the border town of Khanabad, and four bombings occurred in Andijon in the commercial
district, including at least one by suicide bombers. Several deaths and injuries were alleged,
although reporting was suppressed. Uzbek officials blamed the IMU, although the IJU allegedly
claimed responsibility. President Karimov flew to Andijon on May 31. In late August 2009,
shooting took place in Tashkent that resulted in the deaths of three alleged IMU members and the
apprehension of other group members. The Uzbek government alleged that the group had been
involved in the 1999 explosions and in recent assassinations in Tashkent. In early December
2009, the Andijon regional court reportedly convicted 22 individuals on charges of involvement
in the May 2009 events, and sentenced them to prison terms ranging from five to 18 years.
The 2010 Ethnic Clashes in Kyrgyzstan
Deep-seated tensions between ethnic Kyrgyz and ethnic Uzbeks in southern Kyrgyzstan erupted
on June 10-11, 2010. Grievances included perceptions among some ethnic Kyrgyz in the south
that ethnic Uzbeks controlled commerce, discontent among some ethnic Uzbeks that they were
excluded from the political process, and views among many Bakiyev supporters in the south that
ethnic Uzbeks were supporting their opponents. Allegedly, fighting began between rival ethnic-
based gangs at a casino in the city of Osh and quickly escalated, fuelled by rumors of rapes and
other atrocities committed by each side. The fighting over the next few days resulted in an official

35 Council of the European Union, 2824th General Affairs Council Meeting, Press Release, October 15-16, 2007; 2864th
and 2865th General Affairs and External Relations Council Meetings, Press Release, April 29, 2008; 2897th General
Affairs and External Relations Council Meeting, Press Release, October 13, 2008. Some international human rights
groups protested against a visit by the head of the Uzbek state security service—who had been subject to the visa ban
lifted by the COE—to Germany in late October 2008. He reportedly advised German officials on IJU activities in
Central Asia.
36 OSCE, Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), Report from the OSCE/ODIHR Trial
Monitoring in Uzbekistan
, April 21, 2006; Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of Uzbekistan, Comments on the
Report Prepared by the OSCE ODIHR
, April 19, 2006.
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death toll of 426 (of which 276 were ethnic Uzbeks and 105 were ethnic Kyrgyz) and over 2,000
injuries. The violence also resulted in an initial wave of 400,000 refugees and IDPs and the
destruction of thousands of homes and businesses in Osh and Jalal-abad. Otunbayeva appealed to
Russia for troops to help end the fighting, but the CSTO, meeting in emergency session on June
14, 2010, agreed to only provide humanitarian assistance. The Kyrgyz interim government
variously blamed Bakiyev’s supporters, Uzbek secessionists, Islamic extremists, and drug
traffickers for fuelling the violence.37 There are some reports that elements of the police and
armed forces in the south defied central authority and were involved in the violence and
subsequent attacks on ethnic Uzbeks.
The Kyrgyz government has formed a commission to analyze the conflict and also requested that
the U.N. and OSCE support forming an international commission. The OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly’s Special Representative for Central Asia, Kimmo Kiljunen, has set up such a
commission.38 After delays, a team of OSCE investigators held its first meeting in mid-October
2010 and began to interview Kyrgyz citizens. The report of the commission, with
recommendations, is planned to be released in early 2011.
Although critical of the Kyrgyz government, Uzbekistan did not intervene militarily or permit its
citizens to enter Kyrgyzstan to join in the June fighting. After some hesitation, the Uzbek
government permitted 90,000 ethnic Uzbeks to settle in temporary camps in Uzbekistan. Virtually
all had returned to Kyrgyzstan by the end of June.39 According to Assistant Secretary of State Eric
Schwartz, “the Government of Uzbekistan acted quickly and constructively in response to the
humanitarian crisis, [and] cooperated closely with U.N. agencies, the International Committee of
the Red Cross and non-governmental organizations. These efforts helped many people in a time
of dire need.”40 While also stating that “Uzbekistan … behaved admirably” by hosting the
refugees, Assistant Secretary Blake has testified that “although there were no reports of force to
promote returns, reports of psychological pressure, monetary incentives, threats of loss of
citizenship, coercion and/or encouragement to participate in the June 27 referendum and concerns
about family members who remained in Kyrgyzstan all may have factored into the rapid
repatriation of those who were displaced.” Presumably, Kyrgyz officials were involved in these
actions.41
An OSCE informal foreign ministers’ meeting in July 2010 endorsed sending a 52-member police
advisory group for an initial period of four months to help facilitate peace in southern
Kyrgyzstan. It was proposed that the mission could later be extended and another 50 advisors
deployed.42 Concerns about the presence of the OSCE police advisory group from the Osh mayor
and other Kyrgyz ultranationalists delayed its deployment. On November 18, 2010, the OSCE

37 Bruce Pannier, “Kyrgyzstan: Anatomy of a Conflict,” RFE/RL, July 02, 2010.
38 “Kyrgyz Commission Begins Investigating Ethnic Clashes,” RFE/RL, August 2, 2010; “OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly Supports Kyrgyz Inquiry; UN Response Awaited,” Eurasianet, July 28, 2010.
39 UNHCR, Final Report on UNHCR Emergency Operations in the Republic of Uzbekistan, July 23, 2010.
40 U.S. Department of State, Opening Statement of Assistant Secretary Schwartz, June 29, 2010.
41 Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, Hearing on Instability in Krygyzstan: The International
Response, Testimony by Robert O. Blake, Assistant Secretary Of State For South And Central Asia, July 27, 2010.
42 OSCE, Press Release, OSCE and Kyrgyzstan Agree on Principles for OSCE Police Advisory Group, July 16, 2010;
OSCE Chairperson Says Presence of Police Advisory Group in Kyrgyzstan will Facilitate Strengthening Trust,
Stability and Order in Country
, July 22, 2010.
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Permanent Council reached agreement with Kyrgyzstan on an alternative one-year police training
program.
International donors meeting in Bishkek on July 27, 2010 pledged $1.1 billion in grants and loans
to help Kyrgyzstan recover from the June violence. The United States pledged $48.6 million in
addition to FY2010 and FY2011 planned aid. In addition, the United States provided $4.1 million
in humanitarian assistance to Kyrgyzstan immediately after the April and June events.43 Analyst
Martha Olcott has warned that the discrimination by ethnic Kyrgyz against ethnic Uzbeks has
contributed in some cases to young ethnic Uzbeks being attracted to Islamic extremism.44
On January 10, 2011, a Kyrgyz commission issued its findings on the causes of the June 2010
violence in southern Kyrgyzstan between ethnic Kyrgyz and ethnic Uzbeks. The report largely
blamed ethnic Uzbek “extremists” and some supporters of former Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek
Bakiyev for fomenting the violence. The report also blamed interim government officials of
ineptness in dealing with the escalating ethnic tensions. The commission also called for the
government to give an award to Uzbek President Islam Karimov for his country’s efforts to
temporarily shelter ethnic Uzbeks fleeing the fighting.
On May 2, 2011, an international commission formed under the leadership of Kimmo Kiljunen,
the Special Representative for Central Asia of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, released its
report of findings regarding the June 2010 violence. The commission concluded that the Kyrgyz
provisional government failed to adequately provide security and leadership to stifle rising
tensions and incidents in May or to minimize the effects of the June ethnic violence. The
commission criticized Gen. Ismail Isakov, who assumed command over security in Osh region,
for not using the 2,000-man military force under his command to prevent or stop the bulk of the
violence in Osh city, and raised concerns that security forces were directly or indirectly complicit
in the violence (according to the commission, most police, military, and other security personnel
are ethnic Kyrgyz). The commission also criticized the Commandant of Jalal-Abad, Kubatbek
Baybolov (who is currently Kyrgyzstan’s prosecutor general), of laxity in quelling violence and
failing to ensure that crimes associated with the violence are properly investigated and
prosecuted. The commission called for the Kyrgyz government to condemn ultra-nationalism and
proclaim that the state is multi-national, promote gender equality, provide special rights for
Uzbek language use in the south, train security forces to uphold human rights and not subvert
state interests through parochial loyalties, impartially investigate and prosecute those responsible
for the violence, establish a truth and reconciliation commission, and provide reparations.45 The
Kyrgyz government has rejected the finding that security forces were complicit in the violence,
continued to blame the former Bakiyev regime and Islamic extremists for fomenting the clashes,
and stated that ethnic Uzbeks share substantial blame for committing human rights abuses.

43 U.S. Department of State, Office of the Spokesman, United States Announces Additional Support for Kyrgyz
Republic
, July 27, 2010; U.S. Embassy, Bishkek, Opening Statement by Daniel Rosenblum, Coordinator of U.S.
Assistance to Europe and Eurasia and Tatiana Gfoeller, U.S. Ambassador to the Kyrgyz Republic: High-Level Donors
Meeting, “Emergency Response to the Kyrgyz Republic, Reconciliation and Recovery,”
July 27, 2010; Commission on
Security and Cooperation in Europe, Hearing on Instability in Kyrgyzstan: The International Response, Testimony of
Robert O. Blake,
July 27, 2010.
44 Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, Hearing on Instability in Krygyzstan: The International
Response, Testimony of Martha Brill Olcott, July 27, 2010.
45 OSCE, Report of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry into the Events in Southern Kyrgyzstan in
June 2010
, May 2, 2011.
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Some observers have raised concerns that what they view as inadequate efforts by the Kyrgyz
government to foster ethnic reconciliation could result in new ethnic unrest. Among such
concerns, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), a terrorist group currently based in
Afghanistan and Pakistan, reportedly has vowed actions against the Kyrgyz government for its
alleged abuses against ethnic Uzbeks in southern Kyrgyzstan. Former President Otunbayeva and
other observers have warned that some ethnic Uzbek youth in the south are being recruited by the
IMU.46
Attacks by Jama’at Kyrgyzstan Jaish al-Mahdi in 2010-2011
According to Kyrgyz security authorities, Jama’at Kyrgyzstan Jaish al-Mahdi (Kyrgyz Army of
the Righteous Ruler), an ethnic Kyrgyz terrorist group, bombed a synagogue and sports facility
and attempted to bomb a police station in late 2010, and killed three policemen in early 2011. The
group also allegedly planned to attack the U.S. embassy and U.S. military Manas “transit center.”
Kyrgyz security forces reportedly killed or apprehended a dozen or more members of the group,
including its leader, in January 2011. Ten alleged members of the group were put on trial in May
2011. At least some group members allegedly had received training by the Caucasus Emirate
terrorist group in Russia, but also in late 2010 the group reportedly pledged solidarity with the
Taliban.
The 2010 Attacks in Tajikistan
In late August 2010, over two dozen individuals sentenced as terrorists escaped from prison in
Dushanbe and launched attacks as they travelled to various regions of the country. Many of these
individuals had been opposition fighters during the Tajik Civil War and had been arrested in
eastern Tajikistan during government sweeps in 2009. In early September 2010, a suicide car
bombing resulted in over two dozen deaths or injuries among police in the northern city of
Khujand. An obscure terrorist group, Jamaat Ansarullah, supposedly related to the IMU, claimed
responsibility. Some escapees and their allies, allegedly including IMU terrorists, attacked a
military convoy in the Rasht Valley (formerly known as Karategin) east of Dushanbe on
September 19, 2010, reportedly resulting in dozens of deaths and injuries to government forces.
Heavy fighting in the Rasht Valley over the next month reportedly led to dozens of additional
casualties among government forces. The Tajik government claimed in early 2011 that it had
stabilized the situation in eastern Tajikistan. In early January 2011, the Tajik Interior (police)
Ministry reported that its forces had killed former Tajik opposition fighter Alovuddin Davlatov,
alias Ali Bedaki, the alleged leader of one major insurgent group involved in the ambush in the
Rasht Valley. Another leader of the ambush, Abdullo Rakhimov, aka Mullo Abdullo—a former
Tajik opposition paramilitary leader who spurned the peace settlement and travelled to
Afghanistan and Pakistan, where he maintained links with al Qaeda and the Taliban, and who
reentered Tajikistan in 2009—was reportedly killed by Tajik security forces on April 15, 2011.47

46 Neil Melvin, Promoting a Stable and Multiethnic Kyrgyzstan: Overcoming the Causes and Legacies of Violence,
Open Society Foundations, March 7, 2011; .Bruce Pannier, “The Growing Threat of Militants in a Corner of Central
Asia,” RFE/RL, April 23, 2011; “Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan Says It Has New Leader and Can Attack Targets in
Central Asia,” Report News: Central Asia, Issue 631, Institute of War and Peace Reporting, October 13, 2010.
47 Lola Olimova and Nargis Hamrabaeva, “Tajik Authorities Struggle to Quell Militants,” Report News: Central Asia,
Institute for War and Peace Reporting, October 4, 2010; Tilav Rasulzoda and Parvina Khamidova, “New Militant Force
in Tajikistan?” Report News: Central Asia, Institute for War and Peace Reporting, October 21, 2010; CEDR, January
12, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950136; Dilafruz Nabiyeva, “Mullo Abdullo Killed,” Central Asia Online, April 15, 2011.
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In September 2011, Jamaat Ansarullah reportedly issued a directive to its followers in Tajikistan
to kill pro-democracy advocates, who by its definition were “unbelievers” even if they were
practicing Muslims. In December 2011, several of the alleged participants in the September 2010
attack in Khujand received life sentences.
The 2011 Attacks in Kazakhstan
Several suicide bombings and other alleged terrorist attacks occurred in Kazakhstan in 2011,
although the government appeared reluctant to release many details and trials of alleged terrorists
were usually closed to outside observers. A suicide bombing took place in a security office on
May 17, 2011, in the city of Aktoke and a car bombing took place at another security office on
May 24 in Astana. On the night of June 30, alleged terrorists killed three police officers in the
village of Shubarshi in Aktobe Region. Apparently shaken by these and other bombings and
terrorist attacks, Nazarbayev directed changes to the law on religion that were duly approved in
late September. On October 31, two explosions occurred in the city of Atyrau, one at the regional
administration building and the other a suicide bombing in a residential area. A week after these
bombings, two police officers were killed in Almaty by alleged terrorists who had filmed their
actions. On November 12, in the town of Taraz, one person killed several police and attacked a
security office. The same day, an attempted explosion reportedly was foiled and an attack on a
roadblock was carried out in Taraz, resulting in additional police deaths. The Jund al-Khilafah
(Soldiers of the Caliphate) claimed responsibility for the bombings in Atyrau and may have been
involved in other incidents. Kazakhstan’s Office of the Prosecutor-General claimed that the
Soldiers of the Caliphate was formed in mid-2011 by Kazakh citizens Renat Khabibuly,
Orynbasarov Unasov, and Damir Nabiyev, was allied with the Taliban, was headquartered in
Pakistan’s tribal area, and was dedicated to “waging a jihad on the territory of Kazakhstan.” At
the end of November 2011, Kazakhstan banned the Soldiers of the Caliphate as a terrorist
organization.48
U.S. Designation of the IMU and IJU as Terrorist Organizations
In September 2000, the State Department designated the IMU as a Foreign Terrorist Organization,
stating that the IMU, aided by Afghanistan’s Taliban and by Osama bin Laden, resorts to
terrorism, actively threatens U.S. interests, and attacks American citizens. The “main goal of the
IMU is to topple the current government in Uzbekistan,” the State Department warned, and it
linked the IMU to bombings and attacks on Uzbekistan in 1999-2000. IMU forces assisting the
Taliban and Al Qaeda suffered major losses during coalition actions in Afghanistan, and IMU co-
head Namanganiy was probably killed.49
Former CIA Director Porter Goss testified in March 2005 that the IJG/IJU “has become a more
virulent threat to U.S. interests and local governments.”50 In May 2005, the State Department
designated the IJG/IJU as a Foreign Terrorist Organization and Specially Designated Global
Terrorist, and in June, the U.N. Security Council added the IJG/IJU to its terrorism list.51 In June

48 CEDR, November 9, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950038; Interfax, November 30, 2011.
49 U.S. Department of State, Patterns of Global Terrorism 2003, April 2004.
50 U.S. Senate, Committee on Armed Services, Testimony of the Director of Central Intelligence, The Honorable Porter
J. Goss, March 17, 2005.
51 U.S. Department of State, Press Statement: U.S. Department of State Designates the Islamic Jihad Group Under
(continued...)
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2008, IJG head Jalolov and his associate Suhayl Fatilloevich Buranov were added to the U.N.
1267 Sanctions Committee’s Consolidated List of individuals and entities associated with bin
Laden, al Qaeda, and the Taliban. Also, the U.S. Treasury Department ordered that any of their
assets under U.S. jurisdiction be frozen and prohibited U.S. citizens from financial dealings with
the terrorists.52 IMU head Yuldashev reportedly was killed in late August 2009 in Pakistan by a
U.S. predator drone missile, and Jalalov allegedly similarly was killed in late September 2009.
Democratization and Human Rights
A major goal of U.S. policy in Central Asia has been to foster the long-term development of
democratic institutions and respect for human rights. Particularly since September 11, 2001, the
United States has attempted to harmonize its concerns about democratization and human rights in
the region with its interests in regional support for counter-terrorism. According to some
allegations, the former Bush Administration may have sent suspected terrorists in its custody to
Uzbekistan for questioning, a process termed “extraordinary rendition.”53 Although not verifying
such transfers specifically to Uzbekistan, the former Bush Administration stated that it received
diplomatic assurances that transferees would not be tortured. Several citizens of Central Asian
states who were held in U.S. custody at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base have been returned to
their home countries.54
All of the Central Asian leaders have declared that they are committed to democratization. During
Nazarbayev’s 1994 U.S. visit, he and then-President Clinton signed a Charter on Democratic
Partnership that recognized Kazakhstan’s commitments to the rule of law, respect for human
rights, and economic reform. During his December 2001 and September 2006 visits, Nazarbayev
repeated these pledges in joint statements with then-President Bush. In March 2002, a U.S.-
Uzbek Strategic Partnership Declaration was signed pledging Uzbekistan to “intensify the
democratic transformation” and improve freedom of the press. During his December 2002 U.S.
visit, Tajikistan’s President Rahmon pledged to “expand fundamental freedoms and human
rights.”
Despite such democratization pledges, the states have made little progress, according to the State
Department. In testimony in May 2011, Assistant Secretary Blake stated that leaders in Central
Asia “are suspicious of democratic reforms, and with some exceptions have maintained tight

(...continued)
Executive Order 13224, May 26, 2005; U.N. Security Council, The Al-Qaida and Taliban Sanctions Committee, Press
Release: Security Council Committee Adds One Entity to Al-Qaida Section of Consolidated List, SC/8405, June 3,
2005.
52 U.S. Department of the Treasury, Press Release: Treasury Designates Leadership of the IJU Terrorist Group, June
18, 2008.
53 The New Yorker, February 14, 2005; New York Times, May 1, 2005; New York Times, December 31, 2005;
Representative Edward Markey, Congressional Record, December 13, 2005, p. H11337; European Parliament.
Temporary Committee on the Alleged Use of European Countries by the CIA for the Transport And Illegal Detention
of Prisoners, Draft Interim Report, 2006/2027(INI), April 24, 2006; and On the Testimony by Craig Murray, Former
British Ambassador
, Working Document No. 5, June 1, 2006.
54 House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on International Organizations, Human Rights, and Oversight,
Hearing: City on the Hill or Prison on the Bay? The Mistakes of Guantanamo and the Decline of America’s Image,
May 6, 2008; Hearing: Rendition and the Department of State, June 10, 2008. At least three Tajiks returned to
Tajikistan from Guantanamo were then tried and imprisoned on charges of belonging to al Qaeda or the IMU.
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restrictions on political, social, religious, and economic life in their countries…. [They] have
frequently and publicly called for building democratic institutions in their countries ... but they
have done little to put them into practice…. Kyrgyzstan has been the primary exception in Central
Asia. The democratic gains recently made in Kyrgyzstan … are cause for optimism.”55 The non-
governmental organization Freedom House has rated all of Central Asia’s governments (except
Kyrgyzstan’s) as among the most repressive in the world in terms of political rights and civil
liberties, with Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan being rated as similar to Burma and North Korea.56
During the 1990s and early 2000s, almost all the leaders in Central Asia held onto power by
orchestrating extensions of their terms, holding suspect elections, eliminating possible
contenders, and providing emoluments to supporters and relatives (the exception was the leader
of Tajikistan, who had been ousted in the early 1990s during a civil war). After this long period of
leadership stability, President Askar Akayev of Kyrgyzstan was toppled in a coup in 2005, and
President Niyazov of Turkmenistan died in late 2006, marking the passing of three out of five
Soviet-era regional leaders from the scene. Soviet-era leaders Nazarbayev and Karimov remain in
power, and Tajikistan has been headed since the civil war by Rahmon, the Soviet-era head of a
state farm.
Possible scenarios of political futures in Central Asia have ranged from continued rule in most of
the states by elite groups that became ensconced during the Soviet era to violent transitions to
Islamic fundamentalist rule. Peaceful transitions to more or less democratic political systems have
not occurred and appear unlikely for some time to come (although the peaceful October 2011
Kyrgyz presidential election may offer some hope; see below). While some observers warn that
Islamic extremism could increase dramatically in the region, others discount the risk that the
existing secular governments soon will be overthrown by Islamic extremists.57
In the case of the three succession transitions so far, Tajikistan’s resulted in a shift in the Soviet-
era regional/clan elite configuration and some limited inclusion of the Islamic Renaissance Party.
Perhaps worrisome, Tajik President Rahmon has written a “spiritual guide” reminiscent of the one
penned by Turkmenistan’s late authoritarian president Niyazov, and has given orders on how
citizens should live and dress. In Turkmenistan, it appears that Soviet-era elites have retained
power following Niyazov’s death and have eschewed meaningful democratization. Kyrgyzstan’s
transition appeared to involve the gradual consolidation of influence of southern regional/clan
ethnic Kyrgyz elites linked to Bakiyev until April 2010, when northern regional/clan ethnic
Kyrgyz elites reasserted influence by ousting then-President Bakiyev. An interim president held
office until an election was held on October 30, 2011, the first contested electoral transfer of
power in Central Asia (see below).

55 Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, Hearing on Central Asia and the Arab Spring: Growing
Pressure For Human Rights? Testimony of Robert Blake, Jr., Assistant Secretary, Bureau of South and Central Asian
Affairs
, May 11, 2011.
56 “Combined Average Ratings: Independent Countries,” Freedom in the World 2011, Freedom House, at
http://www.freedomhouse.org/uploads/fiw11/CombinedAverageRatings(IndependentCountries)FIW2011.pdf.
57 Analyst Adeeb Khalid argues that the elites and populations of the regional states still hold many attitudes and follow
many practices imposed during the Soviet period of rule. This “Sovietism” makes it difficult for either Islamic
extremism or democratization to make headway, he suggests. Khalid, p. 193. For a perhaps more troubling view of the
threat of Islamic extremism, see above, “Overview of U.S. Policy Concerns.
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Recent Developments in Kazakshtan
A bill approved by the legislature in May 2010 proclaimed Nazarbayev the “Leader of the
Nation” (“Yelbashy”), providing him with a political role if he retired from the presidency. The
bill also provided the President and his family with lifetime immunity from prosecution.
Nazarbayev refused to sign the bill into law, but did not veto it or return it to the legislature, so it
went into effect without his signature. He claimed that he did not veto the bill because he was
sure the legislature would over-ride his veto.
In late 2010, supporters of President Nazarbayev launched a petition drive to hold a referendum
to approve extending his term in office until December 2020 (a similar referendum had been held
in 1995 to extend his term to 1999). The United States and other countries and international
organizations were critical of the proposed referendum. The Kazakh legislature quickly approved
a bill to hold a referendum even before the petition drive was complete, but President Nazarbayev
vetoed the legislation. The legislature overrode his veto (by this time, reportedly two-thirds of the
electorate had signed the petition), but the Constitutional Council ruled at the end of January 2011
against the legitimacy of proposed constitutional changes necessary to hold the referendum.
President Nazarbayev claimed that to gratify the petition-signers who had endorsed his
presidency and to uphold democracy, he would move up the date of the next scheduled
presidential election from 2012 to April 3, 2011.
Many opposition politicians decried the holding of a sudden presidential election. They claimed
that they would not be able to mount adequate campaigns in only a few weeks, while
Nazarbayev’s supporters had already mobilized to carry out the petition drive. During a three-
week registration period, three candidates besides the president were able to satisfy the many
requirements necessary to run (two of these also had run in the 2005 presidential election), while
other more well-known opposition politicians refused to run, were unable to satisfy the various
requirements, or were denied registration. All of the presidential candidates proclaimed that they
wanted Nazarbayev to win, and one candidate announced on voting day that he had cast his ballot
for the incumbent. The Kazakh Central Electoral Commission (CEC) reported that 89.99% of 9.3
million voters turned out and that Nazarbayev was reelected with 95.55% of the vote. According
to OSCE monitors, “needed reforms for holding genuine democratic elections still have to
materialize as this election revealed shortcomings similar to those” in previously monitored
elections. The OSCE reported “serious irregularities” during voting, “including numerous
instances of seemingly identical signatures on voter lists and cases of ballot box stuffing,” and
judged vote counting as even more problematic.58 The U.S. Embassy in Astana, Kazakhstan,
congratulated Nazarbayev on his reelection and “welcome[d] Kazakhstan’s commitments to
further liberalize the political environment and believe[d] that continued improvements in the
electoral process are critical components.”59

58 OSCE, Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, International Election Observation, Republic Of
Kazakhstan, Early Presidential Election, 3 April 2011: Statement of Preliminary Findings and Conclusions
, April 4,
2011.
59 U.S. Embassy, Astana, Kazakhstan, Press Release: U.S. Embassy Statement, April 4, 2011.
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Recent Developments in Kyrgyzstan
After two days of popular unrest in the capital of Bishkek and other cities that appeared to be
linked to rising utility prices and government repression, opposition politicians ousted the
Bakiyev administration on April 8, 2010, and declared an interim government. Roza Otunbayeva,
a former foreign minister and ambassador to the United States, was declared the acting prime
minister. Bakiyev initially fled to his native region in southern Kyrgyzstan but was given refuge
in Belarus on April 19. The interim leadership formed a commission on May 4 to draft a new
constitution to establish a system of governance with greater balance between the legislative and
executive branches. Pro-Bakiyev demonstrators occupied government offices in Batken, Jalal-
abad, and Osh on May 13-14, but after clashes that resulted in at least one death and dozens of
injuries, the interim leadership reestablished control. Renewed clashes took place in Jalal-abad on
May 19 that reportedly resulted in two deaths and dozens of injuries.60 Deep-seated tensions
between ethnic Kyrgyz and ethnic Uzbeks in southern Kyrgyzstan erupted on June 10-11, 2010
(see above, “The 2010 Ethnic Clashes in Kyrgyzstan”).
Despite the violence, the interim government felt strongly that the country’s stability would be
enhanced by going ahead with a June 27, 2010, referendum on the draft constitution. According
to the government, the turnout was 72% and over 90% approved the draft constitution. A limited
OSCE observer mission reported that vote-counting procedures seemed problematic in the polling
stations visited.61 Although at least some ethnic Uzbeks felt that the draft constitution failed to
protect or enhance their interests, voting was reported to be largely supportive of the draft
constitution, although turnout was lower. Under the law implementing the new constitution,
Otunbayeva was designated the president, although it also was stipulated that she cannot run
when presidential elections are held at the end of 2011. She was sworn in as president on July 3,
2010.
A legislative election was held on October 10, 2010. Twenty-nine political parties participated for
the 120 legislative seats. OSCE monitors reported that the election “constituted a further
consolidation of the democratic process and brought the country closer to meeting its
international commitments on democratic elections.” Morten Høglund, the head of the short-term
OSCE observer mission, stated that ‘this election reflected the will of the people of the Kyrgyz
Republic.” The mission’s preliminary report stated, however, that vote-counting was poorly
organized and that tabulation procedures were not followed properly in half of the polling stations
visited and in one-third of territorial electoral commissions.62 Five parties were determined to
have overcome a 5% vote hurdle to gain seats. The Ata Jurt Party, linked to former Bakiyev
officials and to ultra-nationalists, received the largest percentage of 1.7 million votes, 8.7%, and
28 seats; the Social-Democratic Party (SDP; Otunbayeva’s party) won 7.8% of the vote and 26
seats; the opposition Ar Namys won 7.57% of the vote and 25 seats; the centrist opposition
Respublika won 6.93% of the vote and 23 seats; and the pro-government Ata Mekan won 5.49%
of the vote and 18 seats. About 35% of 1.7 million votes went to parties that did not pass the vote

60 CRS Report R41178, The April 2010 Coup in Kyrgyzstan and its Aftermath: Context and Implications for U.S.
Interests
, by Jim Nichol.
61 OSCE, Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, The Kyrgyz Republic Constitutional Referendum, 27
June 2010: OSCE/ODIHR Limited Referendum Observation Mission Report
, June 27, 2010.
62 OSCE, Kyrgyz Republic: Parliamentary Elections, 10 October 2010, Statement of Preliminary Findings and
Conclusions
, October 11, 2010.
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hurdle to gain seats. Since no one party obtained over one-half of the legislative seats, they
negotiated on forming a ruling coalition.
President Obama hailed the election as demonstrating “important and positive attributes of a
genuine democracy.” Secretary Clinton saluted “the resolve that the President and the people
showed in holding these elections, which were widely applauded as being free, fair, and
legitimate. Countries with a much longer history of elections have not achieved the high quality
of election that was held here in Kyrgyzstan.” Assistant Secretary Blake argued that the “United
States played an active role in facilitating this democratic [election in Kyrgyzstan] through our
assistance programs and grants to the Kyrgyz government and civil society, and our participation
in the election monitoring mission.”63
Initially, President Otunbayeva asked the SDP to take the lead in forming a coalition, but this
effort failed when the coalition’s candidate for speaker was not approved by the legislature and
the coalition broke up. She then asked Respublika to form a coalition, and on December 17, 2010,
it announced a coalition with the SDP and the Ata Jurt Party, controlling 77 seats out of 120. The
coalition nominated SDP official Almazbek Atambayev as prime minister and he was approved
by 92 votes by the legislature. Ata Jurt official Akhmatbek Keldibekov was approved as speaker,
In a speech to the legislators and other public comments, Atambayev pledged to solidify a
“strategic partnership” with Russia, since the two countries have a “common history,” and to seek
to join the Russia-Kazakh-Belarus customs union. He also called for close relations with the
United States, and pledged not to challenge the U.S.-Kyrgyz accord on the airbase.
Kyrgyzstan’s presidential election was held on October 30, 2011, the first involving the peaceful
contested transfer of presidential power in Central Asia. The Central Electoral Commission
(CEC) approved 23 candidates (four after they won court cases), out of nearly 90 who had
initially indicated that they would run. Some prospective candidates did not gather enough
signatures to register, some did not post a election bond, and a few failed a requisite Kyrgyz
language test. After being registered, however, several candidates withdrew from the race, leaving
16 on the ballot. Over one-half of these candidates ran as independents without a specific party
endorsement. Prime Minister Almazbek Atambayev temporarily stepped down so that he could
run. President Roza Otunbayeva was constitutionally banned from running. Although a member
of the coalition government, Ata Jurt fielded Kamchybek Tashiyev as its candidate. Atambayev
was nominated by the party he heads, the Social Democratic Party, a member of the coalition. The
third member of the coalition, the Republic Party, also backed Atambayev.
The day after the election, monitors from the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and
Human Rights (OSCE/ODIHR), the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly (OSCE PA), the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), and the European Parliament (EP)
judged that the election had “shortcomings” that needed to be addressed “to consolidate
democratic practice in line with international commitments.” They stated that although there was
a wide choice of candidates and the electoral campaign “was open and respected fundamental
freedoms,” there were “significant irregularities ... during the counting and [the] tabulation of

63 The White House, Office of the Press Secretary, Statement by President Obama on the Parliamentary Elections in
Kyrgyzstan
, October 11, 2010; U.S. Department of State, Remarks With President Otunbayeva After Their Meeting,
Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State
, December 2, 2010; U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Foreign
Relations, Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific, and the Global Environment, Hearing on the Emerging Importance of the
U.S.-Central Asia Partnership, Testimony of Robert O. Blake, Jr., Assistant Secretary, Bureau of South and Central
Asian Affairs,
November 17 2010.
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votes.” Among problems highlighted by the monitors, broadcast media provided scant evaluation
of the candidates out of concern over possible legal consequences due to ambiguous electoral
laws, a “considerable” number of prospective voters were not on the voter lists and were turned
away, and the involvement of national minorities in election campaign activities was rather
limited. Voting was positively assessed by observers in 94% of polling stations visited. A number
of cases of ballot box stuffing, multiple and family voting, vote buying, and bussing of voters
were reported. The process worsened during the counting and tabulation, which was
negatively assessed in nearly one-third of the polling stations and territorial electoral
commissions observed, and included interference by outsiders in the vote count, pre-signed
voting tallies, failure to post voting tallies, and alteration of completed tallies.
On November 12, the CEC announced final election results. It stated that Atambayev had won
with 62.52% of 1.86 million votes cast, followed by the nationalist leader of the opposition party
Butun Kyrgyzstan (One Kyrgyzstan), Adahan Madumarov, with 14.78% of the vote, and
Tashiyev, with 14.32%.64 Atambayev was sworn in at president on December 1, 2011. The next
day, the Social Democratic Party acted to form a new coalition, and on December 15, a coalition
was formed comprising the Social Democratic Party, Respublika, Ata-Meken, and Ar-Namys. The
coalition holds 92 seats, leaving the Ata-Jurt Party, with 28 seats, as the opposition in the
legislature. On December 21, the legislature elected Social Democratic Party member Asilbek
Jeenbekov as its speaker and two days later approved Respublika Party member Omurbek
Babanov as the prime minister along with a slate of ministers. The distribution of power in the
new government appears to revivify northern dominance over southern interests, intensifying
regional tensions.
Recent Developments in Uzbekistan
In a speech in November 2010, President Karimov called for various constitutional changes
which were approved by the legislature in March 2001 and signed into law by the president in
April 2011. One of the changes provides for the political party that controls a majority of seats in
the lower legislative chamber to have the right to nominate a candidate for prime minister (all
existing political parties are pro-Karimov). Procedures also are outlined for the legislature to hold
a vote of no confidence in the prime minister. The prime minister is given responsibility for
appointing regional administrators, a power formerly lodged with the president. Another
amendment specifies that in the event the president is incapacitated, the chairman of the Senate
will serve as the interim head of state pending the holding of a presidential election within three
months. Some skeptics have linked the constitutional changes to government concerns that civil
discontent could become manifest as it did in several Middle Eastern countries in early 2011.
Others suggest that since some of the ostensible reform efforts predate the “Arab Spring,” they
are linked to infighting within the elite. Perhaps supporting the latter view, in mid-July 2011 the
legislature passed a joint resolution criticizing an economic report delivered by the prime
minister.65

64 Central Commission for Elections and Referenda of the Kyrgyz Republic, Resolution of the CEC, November 12,
2011, at http://www.shailoo.gov.kg.
65 CEDR, July 22, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950121.
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Human Rights
According to the NGO Human Rights Watch, Central Asian governments in 2010 fell short in
respect for human rights in many areas:
• In Kazakhstan, the human rights record “was marred by ... disappointments.
Restrictive amendments to media and Internet laws remained, and a number of
websites and weblogs were blocked on a regular basis. The government punished
activists for breaking restrictive rules on freedom of assembly. Several activists
were put on trial in 2010 and Kazakhstan's leading human rights defender,
Evgeniy Zhovtis, remains in prison.”
• In Kyrgyzstan, the April 2010 coup and the June 2010 ethnic violence were
problematic for respect of human rights.
• In Tajikistan, “despite a few small positive steps, Tajik authorities continue to
violate rights affecting areas ranging from elections and media freedoms to
religious liberty and women's rights.... The authorities continued suppression of
the press [and] began enforcing a repressive law that tightens state control over
religious activity.”
• In Turkmenistan, “the government increasingly repressed NGOs and Turkmen
activists, and prevented citizens from leaving the country.... The government
introduced burdensome requirements for students seeking to travel abroad for
university [and] blocked websites and banned the import of some printed
materials. Prisons remained closed to the outside for observation.”
• In Uzbekistan, the “human rights record remains abysmal, with no substantive
improvement in 2010. Authorities continue to crack down on civil society
activists, opposition members, and independent journalists, and to persecute
religious believers who worship outside strict state controls. Freedom of
expression remains severely limited. Government-initiated forced child labor
during the cotton harvest continues.”66
Visiting Uzbekistan in June 2010, Assistant Secretary of State Michael Posner stated that “there
are a number of [human rights] fields that the government here has made progress in, such as last
autumn’s decision to allow the Red Cross to visit prisons, its submission to the UN of a human
rights report under Universal Periodic Review, and President Karimov’s encouragement of
strengthening the parliament here and parliamentary exchanges with the U.S. Congress. We also
discussed a wide range of issues and specific cases where we continue to have differences. Those
discussions were respectful, frank and detailed, and I think it’s an indication of the growing
confidence of the relationship that we were able to have these discussions.”67
Attending a meeting of NGO representatives in Astana, Kazakhstan, on November 30, 2010 (on
the eve of the Astana OSCE Summit, see below), Secretary Clinton hailed recent progress by the
Kazakh government in respecting human rights, stating that “this government has made more
progress than any other in the region and has committed itself to continuing that progress.”

66 World Report 2011, Human Rights Watch, January 24, 2011.
67 U.S. Embassy in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, Press Conference with Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human
Rights, and Labor Michael Posner
, June 18, 2010.
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However, she also qualified this praise by stating that “I know that there is still much more work
to be done. I know that there are many issues that are not yet satisfying the people about what
should be done in the human rights regime, in the democracy development.” She urged a
“balanced view of Kazakhstan’s human rights status, stating “let us be proud of the positive
success, let us be fair about the criticisms, and let us encourage the changes that will benefit the
people of Kazakhstan in terms of democracy and human rights.”68
Some observers alleged that Kazakhstan continued to commit human rights abuses during its
chairmanship of the OSCE. In September 2010, the Committee to Protect Journalists, a non-
governmental organization, alleged that the Kazakh government had “intensified its repressive
practices…. Attacks on the press have continued unabated in this, the year of Kazakhstan’s
chairmanship.”69
In November 2006, the State Department designated Uzbekistan a “country of particular concern”
(CPC) for severe religious and other human rights violations that could lead to U.S. sanctions. In
its most recent report in May 2011, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom
(USCIRF) reported that Uzbekistan had made scant efforts to address religious freedom abuses
and should retain its CPC designation. In the case of religious freedom in Turkmenistan, the
USCIRF recommended in its 2011 annual report—as it had since 2000—that Turkmenistan be
designated a CPC.70
On human trafficking, the State Department did not include Turkmenistan because of inadequate
information until 2009, when it listed Turkmenistan on the “Tier 2 Watch List,” because it “does
not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking [but] is making
significant efforts to do so. Despite these efforts, the government did not publicly acknowledge
trafficking as a problem, undertake significant efforts to raise awareness, or assist victims.” In
2011, Turkmenistan was downgraded to “Tier 3” (designating a source country for human
trafficking that did not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of
trafficking and was not making significant efforts to do so). The State Department downgraded
Uzbekistan in mid-2006 to “Tier 3.” No U.S. aid sanctions were reported as a direct result of the
Tier 3 designation. In June 2008, Uzbekistan was found to have made some modest progress in
addressing human trafficking problems, and was upgraded to the “Tier 2 Watch List.” According
to the State Department, Uzbekistan in 2008 adopted an anti-trafficking law and demonstrated
modest improvement in its victim assistance and protection efforts. In June 2011, the State
Department reported that “the Uzbek government demonstrated negligible progress in ceasing
forced labor, including forced child labor, in the annual cotton harvest and did not make efforts to
investigate or prosecute government officials suspected to be complicit in forced labor,” so would
remain on the “Tier 2 Watch List.”
In regard to other Central Asian countries, Tajikistan was downgraded from “Tier 2” to the “Tier
2 Watch List” in 2008 through 2010. In 2011, it was upgraded slightly to “Tier 2” because it is

68 U.S. Department of State, Office of the Spokesman, Town Hall on Empowering Civil Society for Central Asia’s
Future
, Eurasian University, Astana, Kazakhstan, November 30, 2010.
69 “CPJ Special Report: Disdaining Press Freedom, Kazakhstan Undermines OSCE,” Committee to Protect Journalists,
September 16, 2010.
70 U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, Annual Report, May 1, 2009; Annual Report, May 1, 2010;
Annual Report, May 1, 2011. USCIRF first urged that Uzbekistan be designated a CPC in its 2005 Annual Report. For
the most recent State Department CPC designations, see Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, July-
December, 2010 International Religious Freedom Report
, September 13, 2011.
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making significant efforts … [to] comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of
trafficking…. The government made important progress over the past year in addressing the use
of forced labor in the annual cotton harvest.” Kazakhstan was downgraded to the “Tier 2 Watch
List” in 2010, even though it was making significant efforts to eliminate trafficking, because the
government did not assist victims of forced labor and was complicit in the use of forced labor,
including to pick cotton.71 In 2011, it was upgraded to “Tier 2,” because it “significantly
decreased the use of forced child labor in the cotton harvest, increased law enforcement efforts
against human trafficking, passed a law strengthening penalties for convicted child sex trafficking
offenders, and increased victim identification.”
In 2009, the U.S. Department of Labor listed all the Central Asian states as countries that use
child labor to pick cotton. This list was meant to inform the choices made by the buying public. In
addition, on July 20, 2010, cotton from Tajikistan and Uzbekistan was added to a list that requires
U.S. government contractors purchasing products to certify that they have made a good faith
effort to determine whether forced or indentured child labor was used to produce the cotton.72 The
U.N. Children’s Fund (UNICEF) was permitted to monitor the Autumn 2011 cotton harvest, but
Uzbekistan continues to bar monitors from the U.N.’s International Labor Organization.
Among U.N. actions, the General Assembly in 2003 and 2004 approved resolutions expressing
“grave concern” about human rights abuses in Turkmenistan and urging reforms. The U.N.
Rapporteur on Torture in early 2003 completed a report that concluded that police and prison
officials in Uzbekistan “systematically” employed torture.73 In late 2005, the U.N. General
Assembly’s Third Committee approved resolutions critical of human rights violations in
Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. The resolution on Turkmenistan expressed “grave concern” about
political repression, media censorship, religious minority group harassment, and detainee torture.
The resolution on Uzbekistan expressed “grave concern” about violence against civilians in
Andijon and called on the government to permit an international investigation. The Uzbek
representative asserted that the resolution contained no credible facts and ignored Uzbekistan’s
right to defend its constitutional order against terrorists.74 In late 2007, the U.N. Committee
Against Torture stated that it “remained concerned that [in Uzbekistan] there were numerous

71 U.S. Department of State, Trafficking in Persons Report, June 2006, June 2007, June 2008, June 2009, and June
2010. On Uzbekistan, see also Invisible To The World? The Dynamics of Forced Child Labor in the Cotton Sector of
Uzbekistan
, The School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, 2009.
72 U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of International Labor Affairs, Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor, and Human
Trafficking, The Department of Labor’s List of Goods Produced by Child Labor or Forced Labor, September 3, 2009;
Executive Order 13126, Prohibition of Acquisition of Products Produced by Forced or Indentured Child Labor, at
http://www.dol.gov/ILAB/regs/eo13126/main.htm.
73 U.N. General Assembly, Resolution: Situation of Human Rights in Turkmenistan, 58/194, December 22, 2003;
Resolution: Situation of Human Rights in Turkmenistan, 59/206, December 20, 2004. U.N. Economic and Social
Council, Commission on Human Rights, Special Rapporteur on the Question of Torture, Theo van Boven, Report of the
Special Rapporteur Submitted in Accordance with Commission Resolution 2002/38. Addendum: Mission to Uzbekistan
,
E/CN.4/2003/68/Add.2, annex, February 3, 2003. U.N. Special Rapporteur on the Question of Torture, Manfred
Nowak, Report by the Special Rapporteur. Addendum: Follow-up to the Recommendations Made by the Special
Rapporteur,
E/CN.4/2006/6/Add.2, March 21, 2006.
74 U.N. General Assembly, Third Committee, Draft Resolution: Situation of Human Rights in Turkmenistan,
A/C.3/60/L.46, November 2, 2005; Draft Resolution: Situation of Human Rights in Uzbekistan, A/C.3/60/L.51,
November 2, 2005; Press Release: Third Committee ... Approves Text Expressing Deep Concern over Human Rights
Situation in Uzbekistan
, GA/SHC/3843, November 22, 2005.
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reports of abuses in custody, and many deaths, some of which were alleged to have followed
torture or ill-treatment.”75
Amnesty International was among NGOs that submitted petitions to the December 2008 session
of the revamped U.N. Human Rights Council (UNHRC) alleging ongoing Uzbek human rights
abuses.76 UNHRC also examined human rights in Turkmenistan at this session. On Uzbekistan,
the UNHRC agreed to a report by its working group that called for the government to give
accreditation to major international human rights organizations, adopt legislation to promote
gender equality, modify the criminal code to establish a definition of torture, take measures to
prevent torture, and eliminate forced child labor, among other recommendations. On
Turkmenistan, the UNHRC agreed to a report by its working group that called for the government
to eliminate the use of torture, protect the human rights of journalists and human rights defenders,
ensure greater independence of the judiciary, and ensure that opposition parties are permitted to
participate freely, among other recommendations.77
Kazakhstan and the Presidency of the OSCE
The 15th Ministerial Meeting of the OSCE in Madrid in late November 2007 decided that
Kazakhstan would hold the OSCE chairmanship in 2010, the first post-Soviet, Eurasian, Muslim-
majority country to host an OSCE summit. Kazakhstan’s then-Foreign Minister Marat Tazhin
pledged at the Ministerial Meeting that amendments to Kazakhstan’s media law would include
reducing criminal penalties for libel by the media, setting up “media self-regulation mechanisms”
to address libel issues, and easing the registration process for media. He also promised that the
Kazakh government would soon move to increase local self-government. He assured the OSCE
that Kazakhstan “consider[s] the human dimension to be one of the most important directions of
the OSCE activity,” and that in chairing the OSCE, Kazakhstan would ensure that NGOs are able
to participate in OSCE events and that ODIHR’s mandate is preserved. He argued that
Kazakhstan’s chairmanship would be “a powerful catalyst of the reform process [in Kazakhstan]
and an additional confirmation of the rightly chosen path of further liberalization and
openness.”78 Addressing the Parliamentary Assembly of the OSCE in Astana in June 2008,
President Nazarbayev stated that his country’s preparations for holding the chairmanship included
the elaboration of a blueprint he termed “the path to Europe,” which envisaged Kazakhstan’s
integration into Europe in the areas of energy, transport, technology transfers, education, culture,
and democratization.
Kazakhstan’s progress in meeting these pledges has been mixed, according to most observers. In
early February 2009, President Nazarbayev approved changes to laws on the media, elections,
and political parties. Political parties that did not gain at least 7% of votes cast in an Majlis

75 U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Committee Against Torture, Press Release: Committee
Against Torture Concludes Thirty-ninth Session
, November 23, 2007.
76 Uzbekistan: Submission to the U.N. Universal Periodic Review Working Group, Amnesty International, July 21,
2008.
77 U.N. General Assembly, UNHRC, Report of the Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review: Uzbekistan,
A/HRC/10/83, March 11, 2009; Report of the Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review: Turkmenistan,
A/HRC/10/79, January 6, 2009; Draft Report of the Human Rights Council on its Tenth Session, A/HRC/10/L.11,
March 31, 2009.
78 OSCE, 15th Ministerial Council Meeting, Address of Marat Tazhin, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of
Kazakhstan
, November 29, 2007.
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election were accorded the right to participate in some legislative affairs; the number of
signatures necessary for registering a party for a Majlis election was reduced from 50,000 to
40,000; and requirements for registering media were eased. Critics termed the changes minor.79
One positive sign was an action by the constitutional court in February 2009 to strike down a
proposed law that would have tightened restrictions on religious freedom (however, the law later
was tightened in 2011). In July 2009, changes to the media law were signed into law that
restricted access to the Internet, barred foreign broadcasts from “complicat[ing] or support[ing]
the nomination or election” of candidates or parties, and broadly banned media reporting that
“interfere[s] with election campaigns,” takes place during times when campaign news is not
allowed, tries to influence election results, or influences participation in strikes. ODIHR had
urged the legislature not to enact the changes.80
Kazakhstan assumed the chairmanship of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE) on January 1, 2010. It followed a varied agenda with emphasis on each of the
military/security, democratic/human rights, and economic/environmental “dimensions” or
“baskets” of activity of the OSCE. Kazakhstan stressed that it would emphasize several issues of
concern to Kazakhstan, Central Asia, and Russia, among them: bolstering nuclear disarmament;
continuing the “Corfu Process” dialogue on the future of European security (including discussion
of Russia’s draft European Security Treaty); appointing a Special Representative of the OSCE
Chairman to promote dialogue on protracted conflicts in the former Soviet Union; and supporting
several initiatives regarding Afghanistan.
At an informal OSCE foreign ministerial meeting in Almaty (Kazakhstan’s largest city) in July
2010, an agreement was reached to hold an OSCE heads of state and government summit on
December 1-2, 2010, in Astana (Kazakhstan’s capital), the first since the Istanbul summit in 1999.
Kazakhstan had strongly urged holding this summit to “modernize” the activities of the OSCE.
The United States earlier had raised concerns about the necessity of holding such a summit, but
received assurances from Kazakhstan and others that a summit would address substantive issues
of U.S. interest.81 At a meeting of the OSCE Permanent Council (the main decision-making body;
it convenes weekly in Vienna) on November 15, 2010, Kazakh Foreign Minister and OSCE
Chairman-in-Office Kanat Saudabayev asserted that Kazakhstan was successfully carrying out
the goals it outlined at the beginning of its chairmanship and that the upcoming summit would
further these goals. Among the summit deliverables, he called for enhancing the OSCE’s efforts
in Afghanistan; bolstering early warning and conflict prevention mechanisms; reaffirming the rule
of law and the role of civil society; promoting cooperation among international security
organizations; and formulating an action plan to update the 1999 Vienna Document (provisions
for confidence and security-building, including the exchange and verification of information on
armed forces, defense policies, and military activities).82
In response to Foreign Minister Saudabayev’s November 15, 2010, speech, Ian Kelly, the U.S.
Ambassador to the OSCE Permanent Council, stated that the United States viewed the upcoming

79 An Atmosphere of Quiet Repression: Freedom of Religion, Assembly and Expression in Kazakhstan, Human Rights
Watch, December 2008.
80 Human Rights in Kazakhstan: Seven Months before the OSCE Chairmanship, Human Rights Watch Memorandum,
Human Rights Watch, May 20, 2009.
81 Commission for Security and Cooperation in Europe, Articles, OSCE 2010 Informal Ministerial: Kazakhstan
Persistence Earns A Summit In Astana
, by Winsome Packer, November 1, 2010.
82 OSCE Permanent Council, Countdown to the OSCE Summit: Statement by Mr. Kanat Saudabayev, Chairperson-in-
Office of the OSCE and Secretary of State and Minister for Foreign Affairs
, November 15, 2010.
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summit “as an opportunity to revitalize the OSCE in [the military/security, democratic/human
rights, and economic/environmental] dimensions and reinforce the development of the OSCE as a
democratic and cooperative security community.”83 Although Saudabayev had argued that
Kazakhstan had “exceeded” its commitments to the OSCE to uphold democratization and human
rights, the U.S. Mission to the OSCE criticized Kazakhstan’s efforts to exclude some civil society
representatives from a Review Conference held in Warsaw, Poland, on September 30-October 8,
2010, to prepare the agenda for the summit.84 During three Review Conference meetings, the
United States had stressed, in addition to the measures mentioned by Saudabayev, reestablishing
an OSCE Mission in Georgia; empowering ODIHR to better monitor elections; and strengthening
the powers of the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, among other measures. At the
same time, the United States reiterated that it did not see the need for new treaties or institutions
to safeguard European Security as urged by Russia.85
According to many observers, the December 1-2, 2010, OSCE Summit accomplished a few of the
goals set by Kazakhstan but fell short on most. Summit participants could not agree on an action
plan, but issued the Astana Commemorative Declaration toward a Security Community. There
appeared to be some progress in bolstering Afghanistan’s security and development and in
reaffirming the centrality of democracy and human rights as core principles. The United States
and Russia clashed over the issue of Georgia’s territorial integrity, including whether Russia had
complied with ceasefire accords, and over Russia’s failure to carry out its pledge to withdraw
troops from Moldova. Lack of progress in resolving the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over the
breakaway Nagorno Karabakh also was mentioned by the United States as a reason the summit
could not agree on an action plan (however, a statement was issued calling for a settlement of the
conflict). Although the summit declaration called for building on the so-called Corfu process to
further European security cooperation, the United States and some other members of the OSCE
had objected to Russia’s call (supported by Kazakhstan) for a new European Security Treaty.
Security and Arms Control
The U.S.-led coalition’s overthrow of the Taliban and routing of Al Qaeda and IMU terrorists in
Afghanistan (termed Operation Enduring Freedom or OEF) increased the security of Central
Asia. According to then-Assistant Secretary of Defense J. D. Crouch in testimony in June 2002,
“our military relationships with each [Central Asian] nation have matured on a scale not
imaginable prior to September 11th.” Crouch averred that “for the foreseeable future, U.S. defense
and security cooperation in Central Asia must continue to support actions to deter or defeat
terrorist threats” and to build effective armed forces under civilian control.
According to Crouch

83 United States Mission to the OSCE, Response to Kazakhstani Foreign Minister Kanat Saudabayev as delivered by
Ambassador Ian Kelly to the Permanent Council
, November 15, 2010.
84 United States Mission to the OSCE, OSCE Review Conference, Vienna, Austria, As delivered by Julie Raschka,
October 25, 2010; Catherine Fitzpatrick, “Turkmen Activists Denied Entry to OSCE Review Conference in Warsaw,”
Eurasianet, October 4, 2010.
85 United States Mission to the OSCE, Opening Plenary Session at the OSCE Review Conference, Vienna, Austria, As
delivered by Dr. Michael Haltzel, U.S. Head of Delegation, OSCE Review Conference
, October 18, 2010; Closing
Plenary Session of OSCE Review Conference in Vienna, Austria, As delivered by Dr. Michael Haltzel
, October 26,
2010.
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• Kyrgyzstan became a “critical regional partner” in OEF, providing basing for
U.S. and coalition forces at Manas (in 2011, the U.S. Air Force reported that
there were 850 U.S. troops and 750 U.S. and host nation civilian employees and
contractors at Manas).
• Uzbekistan provided a base for U.S. operations at Karshi-Khanabad (K2; just
before the 2005 pullout, U.S. troops reportedly numbered less than 900), a base
for German units at Termez (in 2011, The Military Balance reported that there
were 163 German troops at Termez), and a land corridor to Afghanistan for
humanitarian aid via the Friendship Bridge at Termez.
• Tajikistan permitted use of its international airport in Dushanbe for refueling
(“gas-and-go”) and hosted a French force (in 2011, media have reported that
there are up to 300 French troops based in Tajikistan).
• Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan provided overflight and other support.86
To obtain Uzbekistan’s approval for basing, the 2002 U.S.-Uzbek Strategic Partnership
Declaration included a nonspecific security guarantee. The United States affirmed that “it would
regard with grave concern any external threat” to Uzbekistan’s security and would consult with
Uzbekistan “on an urgent basis” regarding a response. The two states pledged to intensify military
cooperation, including “reequipping the Armed Forces” of Uzbekistan, a pledge that appeared to
be repudiated by Uzbekistan following events in Andijon.
Programs and Assistance
In November 2010, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense David Sedney testified that “the focus
of the Department of Defense’s efforts in Central Asia today in the short term are the transport of
goods and equipment and personnel through the ground and air lines of communication through
Central Asia…. But beyond our focus on the immediate goals in Afghanistan, we also have long-
term security assistance goals in Central Asia. Our security assistance focuses on the
professionalization of the military, the border guards, counternarcotics forces and
counterterrorism forces.”87 Indicative of these goals, he mentioned that over 1,000 Central Asian
security personnel had been trained at the U.S.-German Marshall Center and that the U.S.
National Guard had provided training in civil-military relations (but not combat training) in
support of U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM; see below) throughout Central Asia as part of
the National Guard State Partnership Program, funded by Partnership for Peace and
USCENTCOM appropriations. In regard to the latter program, the Arizona National Guard has
provided training for Kazakh active and reserve forces, interagency partners, and international
non-governmental organizations, the Louisiana National Guard for Uzbek participants, the
Montana National Guard for Kyrgyz participants, the Virginia National Guard for Tajik
participants, and the Nevada National Guard for Turkmen participants.88

86 Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Subcommittee on Central Asia and the South Caucasus, Statement of J.D.
Crouch II, Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Policy
, June 27, 2002.
87 .S. House of Representatives, Committee on Foreign Relations, Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific, and the Global
Environment, Hearing on the Emerging Importance of the U.S.-Central Asia Partnership, Testimony of Robert Sedney,
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, November 17 2010.
88 Lt. Col. Gail A. Ross, The National Guard State Partnership Program, USAWC Strategy Research Project, U.S.
Army War College, May 3, 2004; Maj. Colleen M. Kelly, National Guard Bureau – State Partnership Program, Air
(continued...)
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Although U.S. security assistance to the region was boosted in the aftermath of 9/11, such aid has
lessened since then as a percentage of all such aid to Eurasia, particularly after aid to Uzbekistan
was cut in FY2004 and subsequent years (see below). Security and law enforcement aid to
Central Asia was 31% ($188 million) of all such aid to Eurasia in FY2002, but had declined to
14% ($203 million) in FY2007. Of all budgeted assistance to Central Asia over the period from
FY1992-FY2008, security and law enforcement aid accounted for a little over one-fifth. Security
and law enforcement programs include Foreign Military Financing (FMF), International Military
Education and Training (IMET), Excess Defense Articles (EDA), and border security aid to
combat trafficking in drugs, humans, and WMD.
A Defense Department counter-terrorism train and equip program (created under Section 1206 of
the National Defense Authorization Act for FY2006; P.L. 109-163) provided $20 million to
Kazakhstan in FY2006, $19.2 million in FY2007, and $12.5 million in FY2008 (the latter to
respond to threats in the North Caspian Sea). It also provided $12 million to Kyrgyzstan in
FY2008 and $9.6 million in FY2009. Another Defense Department program for defense articles,
services, training or other support for reconstruction, stabilization, and security activities (created
under Section 1207 of P.L. 109-163; Sec. 1207 has expired and been replaced by a USAID
Complex Crises Fund) provided $9.9 million to Tajikistan in FY2008.89 In FY2010, the Defense
Department transferred $15.8 million in Sec. 1207 funds to the State Department’s Civilian
Response Corps to assist in reconstruction in Kyrgyzstan following the April 2010 coup and the
June 2010 ethnic violence.90
In 2010, the Defense Department announced assistance to set up training facilities in Kyrgyzstan
and Tajikistan. The training center in southern Kyrgyzstan, planned to be built in the Batken
region, was planned to cost $5.5 million. The facility in Tajikistan, to be built near Dushanbe in
2011, was planned to cost $10 million. It was stated that no U.S. troops would be stationed at the
facilities, which were envisaged to bolster regional security by training military personnel to
combat drug-trafficking and terrorism.91 Construction of the Batken facility was reportedly
postponed because of instability in Kyrgyzstan in 2010.
During his visits to Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, and Tajikistan in late June 2011, U.S. Assistant
Secretary of State for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL) William
Brownfield announced the launch of a new $4.2 million Central Asia Counternarcotics Initiative
(CACI) to provide training and equipment to set up counternarcotics task forces in each of the
Central Asian states. The initiative also aims to encourage regional cooperation by the task forces,
including through the U.S. supported Central Asia Regional Information Coordination Center
(CARICC), as well as broader cooperation with existing task forces in Afghanistan and Russia.
Besides INL, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) will be involved in the initiative.

(...continued)
Command And Staff College, Air University, Maxwell Air Force Base, April 2006.
89 For background, see CRS Report RS22855, Security Assistance Reform: “Section 1206” Background and Issues for
Congress
, by Nina M. Serafino, and CRS Report RS22871, Department of Defense “Section 1207” Security and
Stabilization Assistance: Background and Congressional Concerns, FY2006-FY2010
, by Nina M. Serafino.
90 U.S. Department of State, U.S. Stabilization Capabilities: Lessons Learned From Kyrgyzstan, Dipnote, October 04,
2010.
91 Deirdre Tynan, “Kyrgyzstan: U.S. Intends to Construct Military Training Center in Batken,” Eurasianet, March 3,
2010; Stratfor, June 25, 2010. The EU also has built or refurbished military training and border facilities in Central
Asia, including in Kyrgyzstan. See The EU’s Border Management Program in Central Asia (BOMCA), at
http://bomca.eu-bomca.kg/en/about.
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In addition to the aid reported by the Coordinator’s Office, the Defense Department provides
coalition support payments to Kyrgyzstan, including base lease payments and landing and
overflight fees (see below).
U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM) in 1999 became responsible for U.S. military
engagement in Central Asia. It cooperates with the European Command (USEUCOM), on the
Caspian Maritime Security Cooperation program (similar to the former Caspian [Sea] Guard
program). Gen. Bantz Craddock, Commander of USEUCOM, testified in 2008 that the Caspian
Maritime Security Cooperation program coordinates security assistance provided by U.S.
agencies to Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan. He stated that U.S. Naval Forces Europe cooperates with
U.S. Naval Forces Central Command “to promote maritime safety and security and maritime
domain awareness in the Caspian Sea.”92 Russia objects to the involvement of non-littoral
countries in Caspian maritime security and has appeared to counter U.S. maritime security aid by
boosting the capabilities of its Caspian Sea Flotilla and by urging the littoral states to coordinate
their naval activities exclusively with Russia.
All the Central Asian states except Tajikistan joined NATO’s PFP by mid-1994 (Tajikistan joined
in 2002). Central Asian troops have participated in periodic PFP (or “PFP-style”) exercises in the
United States since 1995, and U.S. troops have participated in exercises in Central Asia since
1997. A June 2004 NATO summit communique pledged enhanced Alliance attention to the
countries of the South Caucasus and Central Asia, and the NATO Secretary General appointed a
Special Representative for the Caucasus and Central Asia. Uzbekistan sharply reduced its
participation in PFP after NATO raised concerns that Uzbek security forces had used excessive
and disproportionate force in Andijon (however, it continued to permit Germany to use a base at
Termez). Relations with NATO appeared to improve in 2008-2009 (see below).
Kazakhstan’s progress in military reform enabled NATO in January 2006 to elevate it to
participation in an Individual Partnership Action Plan (IPAP). Kazakhstan has stated that it does
not plan to join NATO but wants to modernize its armed forces. According to analyst Roger
McDermott, despite Kazakhstan’s cooperation with NATO, “the defense relationship between
Kazakhstan and Russia has, in fact, substantially deepened.”93 The Kazakh defense ministry has
reported, for instance, that “1,259 Kazakh servicemen are now studying at Russian military
educational establishments,” constituting a substantial boost over previous years.94
According to some reports, during the former Bush Administration the Defense Department was
considering possibly setting up long-term military facilities in Central Asia termed Cooperative
Security Locations (CSLs; they contain pre-positioned equipment and are managed by private
contractors, and few if any U.S. military personnel are present). The Overseas Basing
Commission in 2005 acknowledged that U.S. national security might be enhanced by future CSLs
in Central Asia but urged Congress to seek inter-agency answers to “what constitutes vital U.S.

92 House of Representatives, Armed Services Committee, Statement of General Bantz J. Craddock, Commander,
United States European Command
, March 13, 2008. Caspian Sea Maritime Proliferation Prevention aid to Kazakhstan
was $4 million in FY2005, $5 million in FY2006, and $7 million in FY2007, and $8 million was requested for each of
FY2008 and FY2009. U.S. Department of Defense, Defense Threat Reduction Agency, FY2008-FY2009 Budget
Estimates: Former Soviet Union Threat Reduction
, February 2007.
93 Roger McDermott, Kazakhstan’s Defense Policy: An Assessment Of The Trends, Strategic Studies Institute, U.S.
Army War College, February 2009.
94 CEDR, April 14, 2009, Doc. No. CEP-950316.
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interests in the area that would require long-term U.S. presence.”95 According to former
USCENTCOM Commander Admiral William Fallon, the Bagram airbase in Afghanistan is the
Forward Operating Site (basing intended for rotational use by operating forces with limited U.S.
military support presence and possibly pre-positioned equipment) for access to and operations in
Central Asia.96
Closure of the Karshi-Khanabad Airbase
On July 5, 2005, the presidents of Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan signed a declaration
issued during a meeting of the SCO (see above, “Obstacles to Peace and Independence:
Regional Tensions and Conflicts”) that stated that “as large-scale military operations against
terrorism have come to an end in Afghanistan, the SCO member states maintain that the relevant
parties to the anti-terrorist coalition should set a deadline for the temporary use of ...
infrastructure facilities of the SCO member states and for their military presence in these
countries.”97 Despite this declaration, none of the Central Asian leaders immediately called for
closing the coalition bases. However, after the United States and others interceded so that
refugees who fled from Andijon to Kyrgyzstan could fly to Romania, Uzbekistan on July 29
demanded that the United States vacate K2 within six months. On November 21, 2005, the United
States officially ceased operations to support Afghanistan at K2. Perhaps indicative of the reversal
of U.S. military-to-military and other ties, former pro-U.S. defense minister Qodir Gulomov was
convicted of treason and received seven years in prison, later suspended. Many K2 activities
shifted to the Manas airbase in Kyrgyzstan. Some observers viewed the closure of K2 and souring
U.S.-Uzbek relations as setbacks to U.S. influence in the region and as gains for Russian and
Chinese influence. Others suggested that U.S. ties with other regional states provided continuing
influence and that U.S. criticism of human rights abuses might pay future dividends among
regional populations.98
Efforts to Improve Security Relations
Appearing to signal improving U.S.-Uzbek relations, in early 2008 Uzbekistan permitted U.S.
military personnel under NATO command, on a case-by-case basis, to transit through an airbase
near the town of Termez that it has permitted Germany to operate.99 President Karimov attended
the NATO Summit in Bucharest, Romania, in early April 2008 and stated that Uzbekistan was
ready to discuss the transit of non-lethal goods and equipment by NATO through Uzbekistan to
Afghanistan. He announced in May 2009 that the United States and NATO had been permitted to
use the Navoi airport (located between Samarkand and Bukhara in east-central Uzbekistan) for
transporting non-lethal supplies to Afghanistan.

95 Commission on Review of the Overseas Military Facility Structure of the United States, Interim Report, May 9,
2005.
96 House of Representatives. Appropriations Committee. Subcommittee on Military Construction. Statement of Admiral
William J. Fallon, Commander, U.S. Central Command, on Military Construction in U.S. Central Command
, April 17,
2007.
97 CEDR, July 5, 2005, Doc. No. CPP-249.
98 On growing Chinese regional influence, see Michael Mihalka, “Counter-insurgency, Counter-terrorism, State-
Building and Security Cooperation in Central Asia,” The China and Eurasia Forum Quarterly, May 2006.
99 “U.S. Military Returns to Ex-Soviet Uzbekistan,” Agence France Presse, March 6, 2008; “Only Germany Can Use
Uzbek Bases Now,” United Press International, December 13, 2005.
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Representing the Obama Administration, Under Secretary of State William Burns visited
Uzbekistan in early July 2009, and President Karimov assessed his talks with Burns as “positive.”
In August 2009, Gen. Petraus traveled to Uzbekistan and signed an accord on boosting military
educational exchanges and training. Reportedly, these visits also resulted in permission by
Uzbekistan for military air overflights of weapons to Afghanistan. Assistant Secretary Blake
visited Uzbekistan in November 2009 and stated that his meetings there were “a reflection of the
determination of President Obama and Secretary Clinton to strengthen ties between the United
States and Uzbekistan.” He proposed that the two countries set up high-level annual consultations
to “build our partnership across a wide range of areas. These include trade and development,
border security, cooperation on narcotics, the development of civil society, and individual
rights.”100
The first Bilateral Consultation meeting took place in late December 2009 with a U.S. visit by an
Uzbek delegation led by Foreign Minister Vladimir Norov. The two sides drew up a plan for
cooperation for 2010. According to the published Uzbek text, the plan called for a visit by
Secretary Clinton; a visit by the Congressional Central Asia Caucus; Uzbekistan’s support for the
United States to participate as an observer at the SCO Summit in Ashkhabad; a visit by State and
Defense Department officials to evaluate Uzbekistan’s military equipment and supply needs
under the FMF and Excess Defense Articles programs; an expanded IMET program for
Uzbekistan (see “Legislation,” below); the seconding of an Uzbek military emissary to
CENTCOM in Tampa, FL, and the convocation of an investment conference in Washington,
among other measures.101 These cooperative efforts were carried out. For 2011, the Commander
of U.S. Central Command, Gen. James Mattis visited Tashkent in November 2010 and signed a
2011 Program of Security Cooperation during a meeting with Uzbekistan’s Minister of Defense.
The Manas Airbase/Transit Center
The Manas airbase (since 2009 called the Manas Transit Center; see below) became operational
in December 2001 and uses some facilities of the international airport near Bishkek, the capital of
Kyrgyzstan. According to a fact sheet prepared in early 2009 by the 376th Air Expeditionary Wing
of the U.S. Air Force, the Manas airbase serves as the “premier air mobility hub” for operations in
Afghanistan. Missions include support for personnel and cargo transiting in and out of the theater,
aerial refueling, airlift and airdrop, and medical evacuation. Secretary Clinton was told during her
December 2010 visit to the Manas Transit Center that up to 3,500 troops every day, over 13
million pounds of cargo each month, and 117 million gallons of fuel each year are handled by the
airbase.
In early 2006, Kyrgyz President Bakiyev reportedly requested that lease payments for use of the
Manas airbase be increased to more than $200 million per year but at the same time reaffirmed

100 U.S. Embassy in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, Press Conference of Assistant Secretary for South and Central Asian Affairs
Robert Blake
, October 14, 2009.
101 CEDR, January 29, 2010, Doc. No. CEP-4019. The Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA) defines
Expanded IMET as a group of courses aimed at “educating U.S. friends and allies in the proper management of their
defense resources, improving their systems of military justice ... and fostering a greater respect for, and understanding
of, the principle of civilian control of the military. The program is based upon the premise that active promotion of
democratic values is one of the most effective means available for achieving U.S. national security and foreign policy
objectives.... For a country whose international military training program is very politically sensitive, the entire IMET
program may consist of Expanded IMET training only.” See DSCA. What is Expanded IMET? At
http://www.dsca.osd.mil/programs/eimet/eimet_default.htm.
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Russia’s free use of its nearby base.102 By mid-July 2006, however, the United States and
Kyrgyzstan announced that they had reached a settlement for the continued U.S. use of the
airbase. Although not specifically mentioning U.S. basing payments, it was announced that the
United States would provide $150 million in “total assistance and compensation over the next
year,” subject to congressional approval.
In September 2007, a U.S. military officer stated that the Manas airbase was moving toward “a
sustainment posture,” with the replacement of most tents and the building of aircraft maintenance,
medical, and other facilities.103
On February 3, 2009, then-President Bakiyev announced during a visit to Moscow that he
intended to close the Manas airbase. Many observers speculated that the decision was spurred by
Russia, which offered Bakiyev a $300 million loan for economic development and a $150 million
grant for budget stabilization in the wake of the world economic downturn. Russia also stated that
it would write off most of a $180 million debt. The United States was notified on February 19,
2009, that under the terms of the status of forces agreement it had 180 days to vacate the airbase.
The Manas Transit Center Agreement
The Defense Department announced on June 24, 2009, that an agreement of “mutual benefit” had
been concluded with the Kyrgyz government “to continu[e] to work, with them, to supply our
troops in Afghanistan, so that we can help with the overall security situation in the region.”104 The
agreement was approved by the Kyrgyz legislature and signed into law by then-President
Bakiyev, to take effect on July 14, 2009. According to the then-Kyrgyz Foreign Minister, the
government decided to conclude the annually renewable “intergovernmental agreement with the
United States on cooperation and the formation of a transit center at Manas airport,” because of
growing alarm about “the worrying situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan.” The agreement is for
five years and is renewed yearly, unless both parties agree to end it. A yearly rent payment for use
of land and facilities at the Manas airport would be increased from $17.4 million to $60 million
per year and the United States had pledged more than $36 million for infrastructure
improvements and $30 million for air traffic control system upgrades for the airport. Sarbayev
also stated that the United States had pledged $20 million dollars for a U.S.-Kyrgyz Joint
Development Fund for economic projects, $21 million for counter-narcotics efforts, and $10
million for counter-terrorism efforts.105 All except the increased rent had already been
appropriated or requested. The agreement also reportedly includes stricter host-country conditions
on U.S. military personnel. One Kyrgyz legislator claimed that the agreement was not a volte-face
for Kyrgyzstan because Russia and other Central Asian states had signed agreements with NATO
to permit the transit of supplies to Afghanistan (see below).106

102 For background, see CRS Report RS22295, Uzbekistan’s Closure of the Airbase at Karshi-Khanabad: Context and
Implications
, by Jim Nichol. Perhaps indicating Kyrgyz pressure on Russia to compensate for use of the base, Russia in
October 2006 pledged grant military assistance to Kyrgyzstan.
103 Lt. Col. Michael Borgert, “Liberandos: Thank You for a Job Well Done,” 376th Expeditionary Services Squadron
Public Affairs, September 9, 2007.
104 U.S. Department of Defense, DoD News Briefing, June 24, 2009. See also U.S. Department of State, Daily Press
Briefing
, June 25, 2009.
105 Tolkun Namatbayeva, “Kyrgyzstan Allows U.S. to Keep Using Base,” Agence France Presse, June 23, 2009.
106 See also CRS Report R40564, Kyrgyzstan and the Status of the U.S. Manas Airbase: Context and Implications, by
Jim Nichol.
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Kyrgyzstan had also requested that French and Spanish troops who were deployed at Manas had
to leave, and they had pulled out by October 2009. The French detachment (reportedly 35 troops
and a tanker aircraft) moved temporarily to Dushanbe. The Spanish unit (reportedly 60 troops and
two transport aircraft) moved temporarily to Herat, west Afghanistan, and Dushanbe was used
temporarily as a stopover for troop relief flights. France and Spain have since reached accords
with Kyrgyzstan and have returned to Manas.
The Status of the Manas Transit Center After the April 2010 Coup
Initially after the April 2010 ouster of then-President Bakiyev, some officials in the interim
government stated or implied that the conditions of the lease would be examined. Then-acting
Prime Minister Roza Otunbayeva warned on April 8 that questions of corruption involving
commercial supplies for the Manas Transit Center would be one matter of investigation. On April
12, she stated that she realized that 2010 was a seminal year for U.S. operations in Afghanistan
and that President Obama planned on drawing down troops thereafter, and implied that ultimately
she hoped there were no bases in the country.107 On April 13, Otunbayeva announced that the
lease on the Manas Transit Center would be “automatically” renewed for one year. Meeting with
Secretary Clinton on December 2, 2010, Otunbayeva stressed that the Manas Transit Center was a
significant contributor to regional security and that Kyrgyzstan would support its operation at
least through 2014 in line with U.S. Administration objectives for drawing down U.S. forces.108
President Atambayev has called for the closure of the Manas Transit Center when the basing
agreement comes up for renewal in 2014, to coincide with the drawdown of U.S. forces in
Afghanistan.
The U.S. Embassy in Bishkek has reported that in FY2009, the United States provided $108
million in direct, indirect, and charitable expenses in connection with the Manas Transit Center,
$131.5 million in FY2010, and $150.6 million in FY2011.
Of this FY2011 amount:
• $60 million was a lease payment
• $27.4 million was landing and other fees and leases
• $30 million was a contribution to Kyrgyz Aeronavigation
• $30.9 million was for construction of buildings and road repairs, for furniture and
other equipment, and for services
• $824,000 was for “programmatic humanitarian assistance”
• $1.4 million was for other local spending

107 CEDR, April 12, 2010, Doc. No. CEP-600.
108 U.S. Department of State, Remarks With President Otunbayeva After Their Meeting, Hillary Rodham Clinton,
Secretary of State
, December 2, 2010.
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The December 2010 Congressional Report on Fuel Contracts
In December 2010, the majority staff of the Subcommittee for National Security and Foreign
Affairs of the House Oversight Committee released a report on contracts awarded by the Defense
Department’s Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) to the privately owned Red Star and its sister
Mina firms for the supply of jet fuel for the Manas Transit Center.109 The report stressed that
many citizens of Kyrgyzstan, and even current Kyrgyz President Roza Otunbayeva, supposed that
former Kyrgyz Presidents Askar Akayev and Bakiyev and their families had benefitted from the
contracts in a corrupt fashion. Perceptions of corruption regarding the fuel contracts, according to
the report, were significant factors in the overthrow of the presidents and in growing tensions
between the United States and Kyrgyzstan. The Subcommittee reported evidence from the FBI
that the Akayev family was corruptly involved in fuel supplies to the Manas Transit Center, but
the subcommittee found no direct evidence of illicit involvement by the Bakiyev family. President
Otunbayeva had called for transparency in the fuel contracts in a speech at the U.N. General
Assembly in September 2010 and during an associated meeting with President Barack Obama.
According to the report’s findings, DLA did not know who owned Red Star or Mina until late
2010, did not claim to care whether contract funds were being misappropriated by Akayev’s
family, did not know that Russia’s state-owned Gazprom gas firm had an ownership interest in a
subsidiary of the firms, and did not claim to know that the firms were using false certifications to
obtain fuel from Russia. On the latter issue, Red Star and Mina had repeatedly informed DLA of
the false certifications scheme, according to emails and other documents. In a 2006 Red Star
proposal for a fuel contract, for instance, the firm spelled out that it was participating in a scheme
to circumvent supposed Russian restrictions on fuel exports for military uses, and warned DLA
that opening up the contracting process to other bidders might expose this scheme and lead to a
fuel cut-off by Russia. The 2006 contract was subsequently awarded to Red Star without
competition. A 2009 contract to Mina also was awarded without competition on “national
security” grounds. The Subcommittee argued that the use of such a scheme to obtain fuel and
DLA’s apparent lack of reaction to the scheme opened the United States to excessive strategic
vulnerability, since a sudden fuel cutoff by Russia could jeopardize U.S. military operations in
Afghanistan.
Red Star and Mina reported that the Russian government knew that Gazprom was the source of
jet fuel for the Manas Transit Center. The firms claimed, however, that they still had to falsely
certify that the aviation fuel was being used for civilian purposes so that Russian authorities could
claim that their ban on aviation fuel exports for military uses was not being circumvented. After
then-President Putin apparently decided in early 2009 that the U.S. airbase at Manas should be
closed and offered assistance to Kyrgyzstan as a seeming quid pro quo, Gazprom initiated a
slowdown in fuel shipments, according to the report. Although Kyrgyzstan’s then-President
Bakiyev had pledged to Putin that he would close the airbase, in mid-2009 Bakiyev instead
redesignated it as the “Manas Transit Center” and permitted it to continue operations. Russia then
“discovered” that Gazprom’s fuel shipments were being used by the airbase, imposed a high
export tariff on all fuel exports to Kyrgyzstan on April 1, 2010, and later cut off all fuel shipments
to Kyrgyzstan through Mina and Red Star.

109 U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Subcommittee on National
Security and Foreign Affairs, Mystery at Manas: Strategic Blind Spots in the Department of Defense’s Fuel Contracts
in Kyrgyzstan
, Report of the Majority Staff, December 2010.
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The report also criticized the State Department and the U.S. Embassy in Bishkek for ignoring the
ramifications of the fuel contracts on U.S.-Kyrgyz relations. Even after Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton became engaged with the issue during her December 2010 visit to Kyrgyzstan (see
below), the embassy reportedly asserted that issues involving the fuel contract were beyond its
concern, according to the report.
Among the recommendations on improving the transparency and due diligence of fuel contracts
for the Manas Transit Center, the Subcommittee called for an interagency analysis of the U.S.
military’s “extraordinary reliance on Mina and Red Star for jet fuel” and on the risks associated
with increased Russian influence over the fuel supply chain supporting U.S. operations in
Afghanistan. The Subcommittee also stated that “ability to perform and financial viability are
necessary but not sufficient objects of due diligence. Business history, litigation exposure,
insurance posture, affiliated companies, and ownership are also important for U.S. contacting
authorities to understand in order to make competent judgments about contractors.” Knowledge
of ownership, for instance, is needed to satisfy a Federal Acquisition Regulations requirement that
principals be checked against sanctions lists, it stated.
In November 2010, DLA awarded Mina a $315 million contract to continue supplying up to 120
million gallons of fuel to the Manas Transit Center for at least one more year. An amendment to
the contract later highlighted by Secretary Clinton during her December 2010 visit to Kyrgyzstan
provided for the possible addition of a second supplier for between 20 and 50% of the fuel.110 The
Kyrgyz government called for the Manas Refueling Complex—established in mid-2010 as a joint
venture between the Kyrgyz government and Gazprom—to be named as the sole supplier and for
Mina to be suspended from the contract. The report by the House Subcommittee raised concerns
about more direct Russian involvement in fuel supplies, since the country has appeared to use its
energy exports as a tool in foreign relations.111
In early February 2011, a U.S.-Kyrgyz agreement on fuel supplies was signed. A few days later,
the Manas Refueling Complex was reincorporated as the Gazpromneft-Aero-Kyrgyzstan joint
venture, with Kyrgyzstan as the minority partner (with 49% of the shares). The US Defense
Logistics Agency placed its first order for fuel with Gazpromneft-Aero-Kyrgyzstan on September
26, 2011, to initially supply 20% of the Transit Center’s aviation fuel needs (estimated at up to 12
million gallons per month), potentially reaching 50% or more by the end of the year. According to
one report, the fuel is directly supplied from Gazprom’s oil refineries and transported by the
Russian Transoil company to the transit center.112
On October 26, 2011, the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) announced that it had awarded a one-
year contract for 2012 for the provision of fuel to the Manas Transit Center to World Fuel
Services Europe (WFSE), a subsidiary of a U.S.-based firm. Under the contract, WFSE will
cooperate with Gazpromneft-Aero Kyrgyzstan to fulfill the aviation fuel needs of the Transit
Center. WFSE is to provide a minimum of 10% of the fuel requirements of the Transit Center and

110 U.S. Department of Defense, Press Release, November 4, 2010.
111 Deirdre Tynan, “Kyrgyzstan: Manas Fuel Supplier Doubles Down on Good News,” Eurasianet, November 4, 2010;
Deirdre Tynan, “Kyrgyzstan: Is Manas Fuel Contract Award Only the Start, not End of Intrigue?” Eurasianet,
November 5, 2010; Deirdre Tynan, “Kyrgyzstan: Manas Fuel Supply Contract to Be Re-Opened?” Eurasianet,
December 22, 2010; Deirdre Tynan, “Kyrgyzstan: Manas Fuel Supplier Hitting Back at Bishkek,” Eurasianet, January
4, 2011.
112 Deidre Tynan, “Kyrgyzstan: Manas Fuel Contract Goes to Kyrgyz-Russian Venture,” Eurasianet, September 27,
2011; CEDR, September 28, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-950073.
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a maximum of 100%, but Gazpromneft-Aero Kyrgyzstan may eventually be called upon to
provide up to 90% of the monthly aviation fuel supplies based on its capabilities and
performance. The new contract does not mention any role for Mina Corporation in providing fuel.
The U.S. Embassy in Bishkek stated that the new contract aimed “to ensure a stable, secure, and
uninterrupted supply of fuel” to the Transit Center.113
The Northern Distribution Network (NDN) to Afghanistan
Because supplies transiting Pakistan to Afghanistan frequently were subject to attacks, Gen.
David Petraeus, the Commander of the U.S. Central Command, visited Kazakhstan and Tajikistan
in late January 2009 to negotiate alternative air, rail, road, and water routes for the commercial
shipping of supplies to support NATO and U.S. operations in Afghanistan (he also visited
Kyrgyzstan to discuss airbase issues; see below). To encourage a positive response for this
Northern Distribution Network, the U.S. embassies in the region announced that the United States
hoped to purchase many non-military goods locally to transport to the troops in Afghanistan.
Kazakhstan and Tajikistan permitted such transit in February 2009, Uzbekistan permitted it in
April 2009, and Kyrgyzstan permitted it in July 2009 (Georgia had given such permission in
2005, Russia in 2008, and Azerbaijan in March 2009).
There are broadly three land routes: one through the South Caucasus into Central Asia; one from
Latvia through Russia, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan; and one from Latvia through Russia,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan. Although some small cargoes reportedly were sent along
the route on an ad hoc basis in late 2008, a much-publicized rail shipment of non-lethal supplies
entered Afghanistan in late March 2009 after transiting Latvia, Russia, Kazakhstan, and
Uzbekistan.114 During his confirmation hearing in July 2011 as Commander of the U.S.
Transportation Command, Gen. William Fraser stated that the aim was to boost the percentage of
surface transit through the NDN.115 The Senate Foreign Relations Committee reported in late
2011 that almost three-fourths of the non-lethal surface shipments to Afghanistan are being
transported via the NDN (this amount may well increase following Pakistan’s halt to shipments in
late November 2011).116 Non-lethal supplies reportedly being shipped to Afghanistan include
cement, lumber, blast barriers, septic tanks, and matting. In addition, increasing volumes of jet
fuel are being purchased in Azerbaijan and Central Asia and transported to Afghanistan.
Supplementing land routes, Uzbekistan’s Navoi airport reportedly is being used to transport
supplies to Afghanistan. After aircraft land at Navoi, the supplies are sent by rail and truck to
Afghanistan.117 According to one report, U.S. Defense Department officials are concerned that

113 U.S. Department of State, Embassy of the United States in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, Manas Fuel Contract Award,
October 27, 2011; Deirdre Tynan, “Kyrgyzstan: The End of an Era at Manas Air Base,” Eurasianet, October 27, 2011.
114 “Northern Route Eases Supplies to U.S, forces in Afghanistan,” International Institute of Strategic Studies, August
2010; Steve Geary, “Northern Distribution Network to Shore Up Afghan Supply Chain,” Defense Logistics, June 28,
2010; “Supply Chain Council Recognizes Alternative Afghanistan Distribution Network,” Journal of Transportation,
May 8, 2010.
115 U.S. Senate, Committee on Armed Services, Confirmation Hearing for William M. Fraser to be Commander, U.S.
Transportation Command, August 2, 2011. See also Subcommittee on Seapower, Hearing on the FY2012 Budget
Request for Strategic Airlift Aircraft, July 13, 2011.
116 U.S. Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, Central Asia And The Transition In Afghanistan: A Majority Staff
Report,
December 19, 2011.
117 A circum-polar air route from the United States transiting Russia and Central Asia to Afghanistan also has begun to
be used. Marcus Weisgerber, “Afghanistan War Spurred Big Changes for Logistics Community,” Federal Times,
September 19, 2011.
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Uzbek officials are delaying the transit of freight across the border into Afghanistan, including by
delaying shipments until bribes are paid. In August 2011, shipments began along a 50-mile rail
line from the town of Hairatan, on Afghanistan’s border with Uzbekistan, to the city of Mazar-e-
Sharif in Afghanistan, which may ameliorate some of the delays.118 Reportedly, the bulk of ISAF
cargo containers shipped through the NDN eventually enter Afghanistan via this Uzbekistan-
Afghanistan rail link.
Besides commercial shipping of non-lethal cargoes, most regional governments allegedly have
quietly given U.S. and NATO military aircraft over-flight privileges for the transport of weapons
and troops to Afghanistan. At the July 2009 U.S.-Russia summit, Russia openly announced that it
was permitting such overflights. Some observers suggested that the announcement was linked to
the assertion of some Russian officials that such transport could substitute for U.S. and NATO use
of Manas and other Central Asian airbases. Presidents Obama and Nazarbayev reportedly agreed
in principle to air flights of troops and unspecified equipment, including along a circum-polar
route transiting Kazakhstan, during their meeting in April 2010, and an air transit agreement was
signed on November 12, 2010.
The United States and NATO are negotiating with Central Asian governments on permitting the
egress of supplies and troops from Afghanistan in line with U.S. and NATO plans to draw down
military operations in Afghanistan in 2014.
Weapons of Mass Destruction
Major U.S. security interests have included elimination of nuclear weapons remaining in
Kazakhstan after the breakup of the Soviet Union and other efforts to control nuclear proliferation
in Central Asia. The United States has tendered aid aimed at bolstering their export and physical
controls over nuclear technology and materials, in part because of concerns that Iran is targeting
these countries.119
After the Soviet breakup, Kazakhstan was on paper a major nuclear weapons power (in reality
Russia controlled these weapons). In December 1993, the United States and Kazakhstan signed a
Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) umbrella agreement for the “safe and secure” dismantling
of 104 SS-18s, the destruction of silos, and related purposes. All bombers and their air-launched
cruise missiles were removed by late February 1994 (except seven bombers destroyed with U.S.
aid in 1998). The SS-18s were eliminated by late 1994. On April 21, 1995, the last of about 1,040
nuclear warheads had been removed from SS-18 missiles and transferred to Russia, and
Kazakhstan announced that it was nuclear weapons-free. The United States reported that 147 silos
had been destroyed by September 1999. A U.S.-Kazakh Nuclear Risk Reduction Center in Almaty
was set up to facilitate verification and compliance with arms control agreements to prevent the
proliferation of WMD.

118 “Uzbek Corridor of Afghan Supply Plagued by ‘Informal Payments,’” The Times of Central Asia, July 2, 2010;
“Construction of Hairatan-Mazar-e-Sharif Railroad Completed” Uzbekistan Daily, November 16, 2010.
119 A Treaty on the Central Asian Nuclear Weapons Free Zone entered into force in January 2009. All five Central
Asian states are signatories. The Treaty prohibits the development, manufacture, stockpiling, acquisition, or possession
of nuclear explosive devices within the zone. See CRS Report RL31559, Proliferation Control Regimes: Background
and Status
, coordinated by Mary Beth Nikitin.
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Besides the Kazakh nuclear weapons, there are active research reactors, uranium mines, milling
facilities, and dozens of radioactive tailing and waste dumps in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. Many of these reportedly remain inadequately protected against theft.
Kazakhstan is reported to possess one-fourth of the world’s uranium reserves, and Kazakhstan
and Uzbekistan have been among the world’s top producers of low-enriched uranium.
Kazakhstan had a fast breeder reactor at Aktau that was the world’s only nuclear desalinization
facility. In 1997 and 1999, U.S.-Kazakh accords were signed on decommissioning the Aktau
reactor. Shut down in 1999, it had nearly 300 metric tons of uranium (some highly enriched) and
plutonium (some weapons-grade) spent fuel in storage pools. CTR aid was used to facilitate
transporting 600 kg of highly enriched uranium (HEU) from Kazakhstan to the United States in
1994, 2,900 kg of up to 26% enriched nuclear fuel from Aktau to Kazakhstan’s Ulba facility in
2001 (which Ulba converted into less-enriched fuel), and 162.5 lb. of HEU spent fuel from Aktau
to Russia in May 2009. In the latter instance, the material originally had been provided by Russia
to Kazakhstan, and was returned to Russia by rail for storage in a series of four shipments
between December 2008 and May 2009. In November 2010, CTR aid was used to facilitate the
shipment of the last of more than 10 metric tons of highly enriched uranium and three metric tons
of weapons-grade plutonium from Aktau to a newly constructed storage site 1,800 miles away at
the former Semipalatinsk Test Site in East Kazakhstan Region.120
Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan hosted major chemical and biological warfare (CBW) facilities
during the Soviet era. CTR and Energy Department (DOE) funds have been used in Kazakhstan
to dismantle a former anthrax production facility in Stepnogorsk, to remove some strains to the
United States, to secure two other BW sites, and to retrain scientists. CTR funding was used to
dismantle Uzbekistan’s Nukus chemical weapons research facility. CTR aid also was used to
eliminate active anthrax spores at a former CBW test site on an island in the Aral Sea. These latter
two projects were completed in 2002. Other CTR aid helps keep former Uzbek CBW scientists
employed in peaceful research. Uzbekistan has continued to cooperate with DOD and DOE—
even after it restricted other ties with the United States in 2005—to receive radiation monitoring
equipment and training.
Trade and Investment
Successive U.S. administrations have endorsed free market reforms in Central Asia, since these
directly serve U.S. national interests by opening new markets for U.S. goods and services and
sources of energy and minerals. U.S. private investment committed to Central Asia has greatly
exceeded that provided to Russia or most other Eurasian states except Azerbaijan. U.S. trade
agreements have been signed and entered into force with all the Central Asian states, but bilateral
investment treaties are in force only with Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. In line with Kyrgyzstan’s
accession to the World Trade Organization, the United States established permanent normal trade
relations with Kyrgyzstan by law in June 2000, so that “Jackson-Vanik” trade provisions no
longer apply that call for presidential reports and waivers concerning freedom of emigration.

120 U.S. Department of Energy, National Nuclear Security Administration, Press Release: Joint Statement By Co-
Chairs of the U.S.-Kazakhstan Energy Partnership On Successful Completion of the U.S.-Kazakhstan BN-350 Spent
Fuel Program,
November 17, 2010; Press Release: NNSA Secures 775 Nuclear Weapons Worth of Weapons-Grade
Nuclear Material from BN-350 Fast Reactor in Kazakhstan
, November 18, 2010.
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In June 2004, The U.S. Trade Representative signed a Trade and Investment Framework
Agreement (TIFA) with ambassadors of the regional states to establish a U.S.-Central Asia
Council on Trade and Investment. The Council has met yearly to address intellectual property,
labor, environmental protection, and other issues that impede trade and private investment flows
between the United States and Central Asia. The United States also has called for greater intra-
regional cooperation on trade and encouraged the development of regional trade and transport ties
with Afghanistan and South Asia. The reorganization of the State Department in 2006 to create
the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs facilitated this emphasis.121
A working group meeting of the U.S.-Central Asia TIFA was held in May 2010 in Tashkent. U.S.
delegation head Madelyn Spirnak, the Senior Advisor for Biotechnology in the State
Department’s Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs, hailed the session as advancing the U.S.-
Central Asian business and government partnership. A major U.S. emphasis was on educating
regional businesses on opportunities to sell supplies that could be transported via the Northern
Distribution Network to support U.S. operations in Afghanistan. The U.S. delegation and
emissaries from Afghanistan, which is an observer to the U.S.-Central Asian TIFA, also urged the
expansion of regional trade with Afghanistan.122
The sixth meeting of the U.S.-Central Asia TIFA was held on September 14-15, 2011, in
Washington, D.C., and included emissaries from Afghanistan participating as observers. Bilateral
sessions and meetings with private industry took place. Kazakhstan provided an overview of the
newly formed Kazakhstan-Belarus-Russia Customs Union, and other attendees provided updates
on efforts to accede to the WTO. The United States stressed adherence to intellectual property
protections and discussed its “new silk road vision” (see below) with the emissaries.123
Building on U.S. government efforts since the mid-2000s to encourage energy and other trade
linkages between Central and South Asia, in July 2011 Secretary Clinton announced that U.S.
policy toward Afghanistan in coming years would focus on encouraging “stronger economic ties
through South and Central Asia so that goods, capital, and people can flow more easily across
borders.”124 She further explained this “new Silk Road vision” at a meeting of regional ministers
and others in September 2011, stating that “as we look to the future of this region, let us take this
precedent [of a past Silk Road] as inspiration for a long-term vision for Afghanistan and its
neighbors. Let us set our sights on a new Silk Road—a web of economic and transit connections
that will bind together a region too long torn apart by conflict and division…. Turkmen gas fields
could help meet both Pakistan's and India's growing energy needs and provide significant transit
revenues for both Afghanistan and Pakistan. Tajik cotton could be turned into Indian linens.
Furniture and fruit from Afghanistan could find its way to the markets of Astana or Mumbai and

121 Remarks at Eurasian National University, October 13, 2005; and U.S. Congress, House International Relations
Committee, Subcommittee on the Middle East and Central Asia, Testimony by Steven R. Mann, Principal Deputy
Assistant Secretary
, July 25, 2006. See also U.S. Embassy, Astana, Kazakhstan, Kazakhstan and the United States in a
Changed World
, August 23, 2006.
122 U.S. Embassy in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, U.S.-Central Asia Trade and Investment Framework Agreement Partners
Meet in Tashkent
, May 5, 2010.
123 Office the U.S. Trade Representative, United States and Central Asian Countries Evaluate Progress on Trade and
Investment Relationship
, Press Release, September 2011.
124 U.S. Department of State, Travel Diary: “India and the United States—A Vision for the 21st Century,” DipNote,
July 20, 2011.
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beyond.”125 Further meetings in Turkey and Germany on the “new Silk Road vision” are planned
for late 2011.
This “new Silk Road vision” seems congruent with suggestions made by a bipartisan group of
analysts and former U.S. officials who have called for enhanced U.S. economic assistance to
Central Asia to bolster the TIFA by focusing on highway and other projects. The group also has
proposed moving beyond TIFA through involvement of foreign and economic ministers in
discussions about regional economic and security cooperation, akin to those undertaken by the
CSTO and the SCO.126
All the states of the region possess large-scale resources that could contribute to the region
becoming a “new silk road” of trade and commerce. The Kazakh and Turkmen economies are
mostly geared to energy exports but need added foreign investment for production and transport.
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan are major cotton producers, a legacy of central
economic planning during the Soviet period. Uzbekistan’s cotton and gold production rank
among the highest in the world and much is exported. It has moderate gas reserves but needs
investment to upgrade infrastructure. Kyrgyzstan has major gold mines and strategic mineral
reserves, is a major wool producer, and could benefit from tourism. Tajikistan has one of the
world’s largest aluminum processing plants. Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan possess the bulk of the
region’s water resources, but in recent years both countries have suffered from droughts.
Despite the region’s development potential, the challenges of corruption, inadequate transport
infrastructure, punitive tariffs, border tensions, and uncertain respect for contracts discourage
major foreign investment (except for some investment in the energy sector). Cotton-growing has
contributed to environmental pollution and water shortages, leading some observers to argue that
cotton-growing is not suited to the largely arid region.
Uzbekistan began to restrict railway and road transport to and from Tajikistan in February 2010,
reportedly to pressure Tajikistan not to build the Roghun dam on the Vakhsh River that might
limit water flows to Uzbekistan. Reportedly, thousands of railcars and trucks faced delays,
including those carrying construction materials bound for Afghanistan to support ISAF, materials
for building the Roghun dam, materials from Iran for completing the Sangtuda-2 hydro-electric
power plant on the Vakhsh River (the plant became operational in September 2011), fuel and
seeds for Tajik farmers, flour, and materials for road construction in Tajikistan. Uzbekistan also
boosted tariffs on railcars and trucks crossing into Tajikistan, restricted gas supplies to Tajikistan,
and restricted Turkmen electricity supplies to Tajikistan, perhaps as part of efforts to pressure
Tajikistan not to build the Roghun dam. In May 2011, media reported that Iran had shipped
equipment through China and Afghanistan for Sangtuda-2 to get around transit delays imposed by
Uzbekistan. Uzbekistan rejected Tajik assertions that shipping delays were political and claimed
that they were caused by increased ISAF rail traffic to Afghanistan, a backup of railcars headed to
Turkmenistan, and track repairs. Tajikistan has repeatedly appealed to the OSCE, the U.N.
Secretary-General, USCENTCOM, and others that Uzbekistan continues to delay rail transit to

125 U.S. Department of State, Secretary Clinton Co-Chairs the New Silk Road Ministerial Meeting, DipNote, September
23, 2011; Fact Sheet on New Silk Road Ministerial, September 22, 2011. See also U.S. Department of State, Remarks,
Robert D. Hormats, Under Secretary for Economic, Energy and Agricultural Affairs, Address to the SAIS Central Asia-
Caucasus Institute and CSIS Forum
, September 29, 2011.
126 Strengthening Fragile Partnerships: An Agenda for the Future of U.S.-Central Asia Relations, The Project 2049
Institute, February, 2011.
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and from Tajikistan.127 Most recently, a bridge support on a railway spur from Uzbekistan to
Tajikistan was damaged by a bomb or by natural means in November 2011, backing up food and
fuel shipments and creating a humanitarian crisis in Tajikistan, according to the U.N. World Food
Program.
According to some reports, Uzbek officials have stepped-up arrests, fines, and other actions
against international business interests in recent months, perhaps due in part to elite infighting
and growing corruption.128 Other international businesses continue to carry out operations.
Energy Resources
U.S. policy goals regarding energy resources in the Central Asian and South Caucasian states
have included supporting their sovereignty and ties to the West, supporting U.S. private
investment, promoting Western energy security through diversified suppliers, assisting ally
Turkey, and opposing the building of pipelines that transit “energy competitor” Iran or otherwise
give it undue influence over the region. The encouragement of regional electricity, oil, and gas
exports to South Asia and security for Caspian region pipelines and energy resources also have
been recent interests.
Until 2004, the Bush Administration retained a Clinton-era position, Special Advisor on Caspian
Energy Diplomacy, to help further U.S. policy and counter the efforts of Russia’s Viktor
Kaluzhny, the then-deputy foreign minister and Special Presidential Representative for Energy
Matters in the Caspian. After the Administration abolished this post as no longer necessary, its
responsibilities were shifted at least in part to a Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
(responsibilities of a former Special Negotiator for Nagorno-Karabakh and Eurasian Conflicts
also were shifted to the Deputy Assistant Secretary). Some critics juxtaposed Russia’s close
interest in securing Caspian energy resources to what they termed halting U.S. efforts.129 A post of
Special Envoy for Eurasian Energy issues was (re-)created in March 2008, with the former Bush
Administration stating that there were “new opportunities” for the export of Caspian oil and gas.
In April 2009, Secretary of State Clinton appointed Richard Morningstar as Special Envoy for
Eurasian Energy.
The Caspian region is emerging as a notable source of oil and gas for world markets. The U.S.
Energy Information Administration has estimated that gas exports from the region could account
for 11% of global gas export sales by 2035, belying arguments by some observers that the region
would be a marginal contributor to world energy supplies. According to British Petroleum (BP),
the proven natural gas reserves of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan are
estimated at over 450 trillion cubic feet (tcf), among the largest in the world.130 The region’s
proven oil reserves are estimated to be 48 billion barrels, comparable to Libya. Kazakhstan

127 Konstantin Parshin, “Tajikistan: Repercussions of Tajik-Uzbek Feud May Be Felt All the Way to Afghanistan,”
Eurasianet, April 1, 2010; Konrad Mathesius, “Boxcar Diplomacy Puts Tajik Businesses at Tashkent’s Mercy,”
Eurasianet, August 6, 2010; CEDR, November 18, 2010, Doc. No. CEP-950138; November 19, 2010, Doc. No. CEP-
950234 and Doc. No. CEP950214; December 30, 2010, Doc. No. CEP-950116; March 30, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-
950190; May 10, 2011, Doc. No. CEP-964198.
128 Catherine Fitzpatrick, “Uzbekistan: Foreign Investors Suffering amid Tashkent's "Bizarre" Business Behavior,”
Eurasianet, August 16, 2011.
129 Eurasia Daily Monitor, May 31, 2007.
130 BP Statistical Review of World Energy, June 2010.
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possesses the region’s largest proven oil reserves at about 40 billion barrels, and also possesses
64tcf of natural gas. Kazakhstan is increasingly producing more gas than it consumes, but since it
re-injects some of its gas into the fields, it still must import a small amount of gas. Kazakhstan’s
oil exports are about 1.3 million barrels per day (bpd). Turkmenistan possesses about 286tcf and
Uzbekistan about 59tcf of proven gas reserves, and both possess less than 1 billion barrels of oil
reserves.
Russia’s temporary cutoffs of gas to Ukraine in January 2006 and January 2009 and a brief
slowdown of oil shipments to Belarus in January 2010 (Belarus and Ukraine are transit states for
oil and gas pipelines to other European states) have highlighted Europe’s energy insecurity. The
United States has supported EU efforts to reduce its overall reliance on Russian oil and gas by
increasing the number of possible alternative suppliers. Part of this policy has involved
encouraging Central Asian countries to transport their energy exports to Europe through pipelines
that cross the Caspian Sea, thereby bypassing Russian (and Iranian) territory, although these
amounts are expected at most to satisfy only a small fraction of EU needs.131
The Central Asian states long were pressured by Russia to yield large portions of their energy
wealth to Russia, in part because Russia controlled most existing export pipelines.132 Russia
attempted to strengthen this control over export routes for Central Asian energy in May 2007
when visiting former President Putin reached agreement in Kazakhstan on supplying more
Kazakh oil to Russia. Putin also reached agreement with the presidents of Turkmenistan and
Kazakhstan on the construction of a new pipeline to transport Turkmen and Kazakh gas to Russia.
The first agreement appeared to compete with U.S. and Turkish efforts to foster more oil exports
through the BTC. The latter agreement appeared to compete with U.S. and EU efforts to foster
building a trans-Caspian gas pipeline to link to the SCP to Turkey. The latter also appeared to
compete with U.S. and EU efforts to foster building a pipeline from Turkey through Greece,
Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary to Austria (the so-called Nabucco pipeline).
Seeming to indicate a direct challenge to these plans by Russia and the West, China signed an
agreement in August 2007 with Kazakhstan on completing the last section of an oil pipeline from
the Caspian seacoast to China, and signed an agreement with Turkmenistan on building a gas
pipeline to China (see also below).133 In March 2008, the heads of the national gas companies of
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan announced that their countries would raise the gas
export price to the European level in future years. They signed a memorandum of understanding
on the price with Russia’s Gazprom state-controlled gas firm, which controls most export
pipelines. According to analyst Martha Olcott, “the increased bargaining power of the Central
Asian states owes more to the entry of China into the market than to the opening of [the BTC
pipeline and the SCP]. Russia’s offer to pay higher purchase prices for Central Asian gas in 2008
and 2009 came only after China signed a long-term purchase agreement for Turkmen gas at a
base price that was higher than what Moscow was offering.”134

131 For details, see CRS Report RL33636, The European Union’s Energy Security Challenges, by Paul Belkin. See also
International Crisis Group. Central Asia’s Energy Risks, May 24, 2007.
132 According to a plan published by Russia’s Institute of Energy Strategy covering the period 2007-2030, “Russian
control over a large share of Central Asian gas needs to be maintained.” See Minpromenergo (Ministry of Industry and
Energy), Institut energeticheskoi strategii, Kontseptsiya energeticheskoi strategii Rossii na period do 2030g., 2007. As
reported by Philip Hanson, “How Sustainable Is Russia’s Energy Power?” Russian Analytical Digest, No. 38 (2008).
133 An oil and gas conference involving Kazakh, Chinese, and Russian energy ministries and firms has met annually
since 2004 to “exchange views” on possible regional cooperation. ITAR-TASS, December 5, 2007.
134 Martha Olcott, “A New Direction for U.S. Policy in the Caspian Region.”
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In testimony in June 2011, Morningstar stated that U.S. policy encourages the development of
new Eurasian oil and gas resources to increase the diversity of world energy supplies. In the case
of oil, increased supplies may directly benefit the United States, he stated. A second U.S. goal is
to increase European energy security, so that some countries in Europe that largely rely on a
single supplier (presumably Russia) may in the future have diverse suppliers. A third goal is
assisting Caspian regional states to develop new routes to market, so that they can obtain more
competitive prices and become more prosperous. In order to achieve these goals, the
Administration supports the development of the Southern Corridor of Caspian (and perhaps Iraq)
gas export routes transiting Turkey to Europe. Of the three vying pipeline consortia—the
Nabucco, the Interconnector-Turkey-Greece-Italy, and the Trans-Adriatic pipeline groups—the
Administration will support the project “that brings the most gas, soonest and most reliably, to
those parts of Europe that need it most.” The Administration also supports the diversification of
Kazakhstan’s export routes and the boosting of oil production as a significant addition to world
oil supplies. At the same time, Morningstar rejected views that Russia and the United States are
competing for influence over Caspian energy supplies, stating that the Administration has formed
a Working Group on Energy under the U.S.-Russia Bilateral Presidential Commission.135
Kazakhstan’s Oil and Gas
Until recently U.S. foreign direct investment (FDI) played a dominant role in the development of
Kazakhstani oil and gas resources, amounting to about $29 billion in Kazakhstan (over one-third
of all FDI in the country) from 1993-2009.136 According to some reports, China provided about
$13 billion in investments and loans to Kazakhstan’s energy sector in 2009, eclipsing U.S. FDI.
Some U.S. energy firms and other private foreign investors have become discouraged in recent
years by harsher Kazakh government terms, taxes, and fines that some allege reflect corruption
within the ruling elite. In 2009, the Karachaganak Petroleum Operating (KPO) consortium (the
main shareholder is British Gas, and U.S. Chevron is among other shareholders), which extracts
oil and gas from the Karachaganak fields in northwest Kazakhstan, was faced with an effort by
the Kazakh government to obtain 10% of the shares of the consortium. Facing resistance, the
government imposed hundreds of millions of dollars in tax, environmental, and labor fines and oil
export duties against KPO. Both the government and KPO appealed to international arbitration.
In December 2011, KPO agreed to transfer 10% of its shares to the Kazakh government, basically
gratis, and in exchange the government mostly lifted the fines and duties.137
Kazakhstan’s main oil export route has been a 930-mile pipeline completed in 2001—owned by
the Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC), in which Russian shareholders have a controlling
interest—that carried 693,000 bpd of oil in 2009 from Kazakhstan to Russia’s Black Sea port of
Novorossiysk. Kazakhstan's other major oil export pipeline, from Atyrau to Samara, Russia, has a
capacity of approximately 730,000 bpd. Lengthy Russian resistance to increasing the pumping
capacity of the CPC pipeline and demands for higher transit and other fees, along with the
necessity of offloading the oil into tankers at Novorossiysk to transit the clogged Turkish Straits,

135 U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on Europe and Eurasia, Hearing on
European and Eurasian Energy: Developing Capabilities for Security and Prosperity, Testimony of Ambassador
Richard L. Morningstar, Special Envoy for Eurasian Energy
, June 2, 2011.
136 U.S. Department of State. Robert O. Blake, Jr., Assistant Secretary, Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs:
Remarks Before the Washington International Business Council
, February 24, 2010.
137 Press Release: Agreement Reached with Republic of Kazakhstan on Karachaganak, BG Group, December 14, 2011,
at http://www.bg-group.com/MEDIACENTRE/PRESS/Pages/14Dec2010.aspx.
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Central Asia: Regional Developments and Implications for U.S. Interests

spurred Kazakh President Nazarbayev to sign a treaty with visiting Azerbaijani President Aliyev
in June 2006 to barge Kazakh oil across the Caspian Sea to Baku to the BTC pipeline.
Kazakhstan began shipping about 70,000 bpd of oil through the BTC pipeline at the end of
October 2008. Another accord resulted from a visit by President Nazarbayev to Azerbaijan in
September 2009 that provides that up to 500,000 bpd of oil will be barged across the Caspian to
enter the BTC or the Baku-Supsa pipeline. When the volumes exceed 500,000 bpd, a trans-
Caspian pipeline may be built.
Apparently to counter Kazakh’s export plans via Azerbaijan, then-President Putin’s May 2007
agreement with Nazarbayev (see above) envisaged boosting the capacity of the CPC pipeline.
However, this project did not materialize in the timely fashion, so Kazakhstan proceeded to
upgrade its Caspian Sea port facilities. Kazakhstan also barges some oil to Baku to ship by rail to
Georgia’s Black Sea oil terminal at Batumi, of which Kazakhstan became the sole owner in early
2008. Kazakhstan began barging oil from Batumi to the Romanian port of Constantsa in late 2008
for processing at two refineries it purchased. Some Kazakh oil arriving in Baku also could be
transported through small pipelines to Georgia’s Black Sea port of Supsa or to Russia’s Black Sea
port of Novorossiisk, although in the latter case Kazakhstan might be faced with high transit
charges by Russia.138
In December 2010, the CPC approved a plan to upgrade the pumping capacity of the oil pipeline
to 1.4 million bpd, with several phases of construction through 2015. As of the end of 2011,
construction reportedly has faced delays.
In addition to these oil export routes to Europe not controlled by Russia, in 2009 Kazakhstan and
China completed an oil pipeline from Kazakhstan’s port city of Atyrau to the Xinjiang region of
China that initially carries 200,000 bpd to China. Some Russian oil has been transported to China
through this pipeline, the first Russian oil to be transported by pipeline to China.
Russia is the major purchaser of Kazakh gas through the Central Asia-Center gas pipeline
network. According to British Petroleum (BP) data, Kazakhstan exported 422 bcf of gas to Russia
in 2010.139 Kazakhstan completed its sections of the Central Asia-China gas pipeline in 2009-
2010. At the end of October 2008, China and Kazakhstan signed a framework agreement on
constructing a gas pipeline from Beyneu, north of the Aral Sea, eastward to Shymkent, where it
will connect with the Central Asia-China gas pipeline. The pipeline is planned initially to supply
176.6 bcf to southern Kazakhstan and 176.6 bcf to China. Pipeline construction began in
September 2011 and to be completed by 2015.
Kazakh officials have appeared to make contradictory statements about providing gas for the
prospective Nabucco pipeline. Kazakhstan’s Deputy Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Aset
Magaulov stated at a Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council Security Forum in June 2009 that
Kazakhstan would not have a surplus of gas that it could send through the Nabucco pipeline.140
President Nazarbayev appeared to support the possible transit of Kazakh gas through Turkey
when he stated on October 22, 2009, during a visit to Turkey, that “Turkey ... will become a
transit country. And if Kazakhstan’s oil and gas are transported via this corridor then this will be

138 ITAR-TASS, May 29, 2008; CEDR, December 11, 2007, Doc. No. CEP-950096; April 26, 2008, Doc. No. CEP-
950045.
139 “Natural Gas: Trade Movements 2010,” BP Statistical Review of World Energy, June 2011, p. 29.
140 ITAR-TASS, June 25, 2009.
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advantageous to both Turkey and Kazakhstan.”141 In late October 2009, however, the Kazakh
Ministry of Energy reiterated that “the main problem for our country [regarding the supply of
natural gas to Nabucco] is the limited availability of gas” because of existing contracts for
projected gas production. It suggested that Kazakhstan might be a potential supplier for Nabucco
if gas production exceeds expectations, but that Kazakhstan could not transport any gas via
Nabucco until the legal status of the Caspian Sea was resolved, which would permit building a
connection to Nabucco.142 Reacting to the decision of the European Commission to facilitate talks
on building a trans-Caspian gas pipeline (see below), Minister of Oil and Gas Sauat Mynabyev
stated in early October 2011 that “we do not have available resources for the gas pipeline yet.”143
Turkmenistan’s Gas
The late President Niyazov signed a 25-year accord with then-President Putin in 2003 on
supplying Russia up to 211.9 billion cubic feet (bcf) of gas in 2004 (about 12% of production),
rising up to 2.83 trillion cubic feet (tcf) in 2009-2028 (perhaps then constituting an even larger
percentage of production). Turkmenistan halted gas shipments to Russia at the end of 2004 in an
attempt to get a higher gas price but settled for all-cash rather than partial barter payments.
Turkmenistan and Russia continued to clash in subsequent years over gas prices and finally
agreed in late 2007 that gas prices based on “market principles” would be established in 2009.
Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, and Russia signed accords in May and December 2007 on building a
new gas pipeline that was planned to carry 353 bcf of Turkmen and 353 bcf of Kazakh gas to
Russia. However, the Turkmen government appeared to have reservations about building another
pipeline to Russia.
Seeking alternatives to pipeline routes through Russia, in December 1997 Turkmenistan opened
the first pipeline from Central Asia to the outside world beyond Russia, a 125-mile gas pipeline
linkage to Iran. Turkmenistan provided 282.5 bcf of gas to Iran in 2006 and reportedly a larger
amount in 2007. At the end of 2007, however, Turkmenistan suddenly suspended gas shipments,
causing hardship in northern Iran. Turkmen demands for higher payments were the main reason
for the cut-off. Gas shipments resumed in late April 2008 after Iran agreed to a price boost. In
mid-2009, Turkmenistan reportedly agreed to increase gas supplies to up to 706 bcf per year.144 At
the end of 2009, a second gas pipeline to Iran was completed—from a field that until April 2009
had supplied gas to Russia (see below)—to more than double Turkmenistan’s export capacity to
Iran. BP reports that Turkmenistan supplied 229.5 bcf of gas to Iran in 2010.
As another alternative to pipelines through Russia, in April 2006, Turkmenistan and China signed
a framework agreement calling for Chinese investment in developing gas fields in Turkmenistan
and in building the Central Asia-China gas pipeline with a capacity of about 1.0 tcf per year
through Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan to China. Construction of the pipeline began in August 2007
and gas began to be delivered through the pipeline to Xinjiang and beyond in December 2009. A
second parallel line was completed in 2010. BP reports that Turkmenistan supplied 125.3 bcf of
gas to China in 2010.

141 CEDR, October 22, 2009, Doc. No. CEP-950337.
142 ITAR-TASS, October 31, 2009.
143 Interfax, October 6, 2011.
144 Iran: Daily Report, January 21, 2008, Doc. No. IAP-11017; January 24, 2008, Doc. No. IAP-950014; April 26,
2008, Doc. No. IAP-950049; and May 6, 2008, Doc. No. IAP-950052.; CEDR, July 12, 2009, Doc. No. CEP-950097.
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Perhaps an additional attempt to diversify gas export routes, Berdimuhammedow first signaled in
2007 that Turkmenistan was interested in building a trans-Caspian gas pipeline. Turkmenistan
signed a memorandum of understanding in April 2008 with the EU to supply 353.1 bcf of gas per
year starting in 2009, presumably through a trans-Caspian pipeline that might at first link to the
SCP and later to the proposed Nabucco pipeline (see below). Berdimuhammedow also has
revived Niyazov’s proposal to build a gas pipeline through Afghanistan to Pakistan and India.
On the night of April 8-9, 2009, a section of a gas pipeline from Turkmenistan to Russia
exploded, halting Turkmen gas shipments. Russia claimed that it had notified Turkmenistan that it
was reducing its gas imports because European demand for gas had declined, but Turkmenistan
denied that it had been properly informed.145 After extended talks, visiting President Medvedev
and President Berdimuhamedow agreed in December 2009 that Turkmen gas exports to Russia
would be resumed, and that the existing supply contract would be altered to reduce Turkmen gas
exports and to increase the price paid for the gas. Turkmenistan announced on January 9, 2010,
that its gas exports to Russia had resumed. The incident appeared to further validate
Turkmenistan’s policy of diversifying its gas export routes. BP reports that Turkmenistan supplied
341.8 bcf of gas to Russia in 2010.
Seeming to indicate interest in a trans-Caspian pipeline, Berdimuhamedow asserted on July 10,
2009, that there are “immense volumes of natural gas in Turkmenistan [that] make it possible for
us to carry out certain work related to the implementation of various [gas export] projects,
including the Nabucco project.”146 At an international oil and gas conference held in November
2010 in Ashkhabad, Turkmen Deputy Prime Minister Baimurad Khodzhamukhamedov stated that
the country would have an excess of 1.4 tcf of gas, more than enough to fill the proposed
Nabucco pipeline, and that “the construction of the trans-Caspian gas pipeline will be coordinated
in compliance with all environmental standards and after expert examinations, which meets the
policy of diversification of natural gas sales pursued by Turkmenistan.”147 At a summit meeting of
heads of state of the Caspian Sea littoral states also held in November 2010, President
Berdimuhammedow reportedly asserted that a sub-set of littoral states could agree on a sub-sea
pipeline. However, Turkmenistan’s claims against Azerbaijan regarding some offshore oil and gas
fields have stymied a formal agreement on a trans-Caspian pipeline between the two countries.
In September 2011, the Council of the European Union approved opening talks with Azerbaijan
and Turkmenistan to facilitate an accord on building a trans-Caspian gas pipeline. Such a link
would provide added gas to ensure adequate supplies for the planned Nabucco pipeline. Hailing
the decision, EU Energy Commissioner Günther Oettinger stated that “Europe is now speaking
with one voice. The trans-Caspian pipeline is a major project in the Southern Corridor to bring
new sources of gas to Europe. We have the intention of achieving this as soon as possible.”148 The
Russian Foreign Ministry denounced the plans for the talks, and claimed that the Caspian Sea
littoral states had agreed in a declaration issued in October 2007 that decisions regarding the Sea
would be adopted by consensus among all the littoral states (Russia itself has violated this

145 OSC Feature, Open Source Center, April 14, 2009, Doc. No. FEA-844966; CEDR, April 14, 2009, Doc. No. CEP-
950339; ITAR-TASS, April 3, 2009; Sergey Blagov, “Turkmenistan: Ashgabat Wonders Whether Russia Still Has Deep
Pockets,” Eurasia Insight, March 26, 2009.
146 CEDR, July 11, 2009, Doc. No. CEP-950124.
147 ITAR-TASS, November 19, 2010.
148 European Commission, Press release: EU Starts Negotiations on Caspian Pipeline to Bring Gas to Europe,
September 12, 2011.
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provision by agreeing with Kazakhstan and with Azerbaijan on oil and gas field development). It
also claimed that the proposed pipeline was different from existing sub-sea pipelines in posing an
environmental threat.
In December 2010, the presidents of Turkmenistan, Pakistan, and Afghanistan and the prime
minister of India signed an agreement on constructing the Turkmenistan- Afghanistan-Pakistan-
India (TAPI) gas pipeline. Turkmenistan long has called for building this pipeline to diversify its
export options, but financing for the project remains problematic because of ongoing conflict in
Afghanistan. Support for TAPI is part of the Administration’s “new Silk Road vision” (see
above).
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan is a net importer of oil. The country consumes the bulk of its gas production
domestically, but has used its network of Soviet-era gas pipelines to export some gas to Russia
and to other Central Asian states (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan). Gas exports to the
latter two states have been substantially reduced in recent years because of payment arrears.
According to BP, Uzbekistan exported 364 bcf of gas to Russia, 102 bcf to Kazakhstan, about 7
bcf to Kyrgyzstan, and about 6 bcf to Tajikistan in 2010. Gas is provided to Russia and
Kazakhstan through the Russian-owned Central Asia-Center Pipeline system. Reportedly,
Uzbekistan was an unreliable gas exporter during the winter of 2010-2011, restricting supplies to
Russia and Kazakhstan to divert them to cold-weather domestic use. Gazprom complained in
November 2011 that Uzbekistan was again reducing its gas exports due to cold weather.
Kazakhstan faced similar reductions, including in its major city of Almaty, leading it to urgently
conclude an agreement with the China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) to obtain gas
from the Central Asia-China Pipeline.149
Uzbekistan largely has been closed to Western energy investment, although efforts to attract
international energy firms appeared to increase in 2010-2011. Russian firms Gazprom and Lukoil
are the largest investors in Uzbek gas development and production. Reportedly, Gazprom pays
European-pegged gas prices for only a fraction of imports from Uzbekistan. In 2005, CNPC and
Uzbekistan’s state-owned Uzbekneftegaz firm announced that they would form a joint venture to
develop oil and gas resources. In 2007, Uzbekistan and China signed an agreement on building a
326-mile section of the Central Asia-China Pipeline, and a construction and operation joint
venture between Uzbekneftegaz and CNPC, Asia Trans Gas, began construction in 2008.
Uzbekistan also has signed a framework agreement to eventually supply 353 bcf of gas per year
through the pipeline. A production sharing consortium composed of Uzbekneftegaz, Lukoil, the
Korea National Oil Corporation, and CNPC is exploring for gas in the Aral Sea region.
U.S. Aid Overview
For much of the 1990s and until September 11, 2001, the United States provided much more aid
each year to Russia and Ukraine than to any Central Asian state (most such aid was funded from
the FSA account in Foreign Operations Appropriations, but some derived from other program and
agency budgets). Cumulative foreign aid budgeted to Central Asia for FY1992 through FY2010

149 Interfax, November 14, 2011.
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amounted to $5.7 billion, about 14% of the amount budgeted to all the Eurasian states, reflecting
the lesser priority given to these states prior to September 11.
Budgeted spending for FY2002 for Central Asia, during OEF, was greatly boosted in absolute
amounts ($584 million) and as a share of total aid to Eurasia (about one-quarter of such aid). The
former Bush Administration since then requested smaller amounts of aid, although the
Administration continued to stress that there were important U.S. interests in the region. The
former Bush Administration highlighted the phase-out of economic aid to Kazakhstan and the
Congressionally imposed restrictions on aid to Uzbekistan (see below) as among the reasons for
declining aid requests. In April 2008, then-Assistant Secretary of State Richard Boucher stated
that another reason for declining U.S. aid to the region was a more constrained U.S. budgetary
situation. Aid to Central Asia in recent years has been about the same or less in absolute and
percentage terms than that provided to the South Caucasian region.
The Obama Administration boosted aid to Central Asia in FY2009 to about $494.5 million (all
agencies and programs), but aid declined to $436.3 million in FY2010, despite a boost in
assistance to Kyrgyzstan (see below). Estimated “function 150” foreign assistance to Central Asia
was $149.3 in FY2011 and the Administration has requested $162.7 million in “function 150” aid
for Central Asia for FY2012 (see Table 1 and Table 2).150 The Administration stated in FY2010
and FY2011 that it was prioritizing foreign assistance to Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. In Tajikistan,
the Administration stated that aid would help increase the stability of a country “situated on the
frontline of our ongoing military stabilization efforts in Afghanistan.” In Kyrgyzstan, the
Administration stated that aid would improve security, combat drug-trafficking, reform the
economy, and address food insecurity.151 Following the April and June 2010 instability in
Kyrgyzstan, the Administration provided $77.6 million in addition to regular appropriated aid for
stabilizing the economy, holding elections, and training police as well as urgent food and shelter
aid.
The Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), created in 2004 to provide U.S. aid to countries
with promising development records, announced in late 2005 that Kyrgyzstan was eligible to
apply for assistance as a country on the “threshold” of meeting the criteria for full-scale
development aid. In March 2008, the MCC signed an agreement with Kyrgyzstan to provide $16
million over the next two years to help the country combat corruption and bolster the rule of law.
This threshold program was completed in June 2010, and Kyrgyzstan has requested another
threshold grant.
Congressional Conditions on Kazakh and Uzbek Aid
In Congress, Omnibus Appropriations for FY2003 (P.L. 108-7) forbade FREEDOM Support Act
(FSA) assistance to the government of Uzbekistan unless the Secretary of State determined and
reported that it was making substantial progress in meeting commitments under the Strategic

150 The “function 150” aid numbers include funds from the Aid for Europe, Eurasia, and Central Asia (AEECA)
account, Global Health and Child Survival (GHCS), Non-proliferation, Anti-terrorism, Demining and Related
Programs (NADR), Foreign Military Financing (FMF), International Military Education and Training (IMET), and
Food for Peace. The totals do not include Defense or Energy Department funds, funding for exchanges, the value of
privately-donated cargoes, or Millennium Challenge Corporation aid to Kyrgyzstan.
151 U.S. Department of State, Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations for FY2010, May 2009, p. 44;
Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations for FY2011, Volume II, March 2010, p. 85.
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Partnership Declaration to democratize and respect human rights. The conference report (H.Rept.
108-10) also introduced language that forbade assistance to the Kazakh government unless the
Secretary of State determined and reported that it significantly had improved its human rights
record during the preceding six months. However, the legislation permitted the Secretary to waive
the requirement on national security grounds.152 The Secretary reported in mid-2003 that
Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan were making such progress. Some in Congress were critical of these
findings. By late 2003, the former Bush Administration had decided that progress was inadequate
in Uzbekistan. Since FY2005, the Secretary of State annually has reported that Kazakhstan has
failed to significantly improve its human rights record, but aid restrictions have been waived on
national security grounds.
Consolidated Appropriations for FY2004, including foreign operations (P.L. 108-199) and for
FY2005 (P.L. 108-447), and Foreign Operations Appropriations for FY2006 (P.L. 109-102)
retained these conditions, while clarifying that the prohibition on aid to Uzbekistan pertained to
the central government and that conditions included respecting human rights, establishing a
“genuine” multi-party system, and ensuring free and fair elections and freedom of expression and
media. These conditions remained in place under the continuing resolution for FY2007 (P.L. 109-
289, as amended). In appropriations for FY2008 (Consolidated Appropriations; P.L. 110-161),
another condition was added blocking the admission of Uzbek officials to the United States if the
Secretary of State determines that they were involved in abuses in Andijon. Omnibus
Appropriations for FY2009 (P.L. 111-8, Secs. 7075 [Kazakhstan] and 7076 [Uzbekistan])
reiterated these conditions on assistance to Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. Consolidated
Appropriations for FY2010 (P.L. 111-117) referenced Secs. 7075 and 7076, but added that
Uzbekistan would be eligible for expanded IMET. The Department of Defense and Full-Year
Continuing Appropriations Act, FY2011 (P.L. 112-10), directed that assistance would be provided
under the authorities and conditions of FY2010 foreign operations appropriations.
In late 2009, Congress permitted (P.L. 111-84, Sec. 801)—for the first time since restrictions on
aid to Uzbekistan were put in place—the provision of some assistance on national security
grounds to facilitate the acquisition of supplies for U.S. and NATO operations in Afghanistan
from countries along the Northern Distribution Network. In 2012, $100,000 is requested under
the Foreign Military Financing program to provide non-lethal equipment to facilitate
Uzbekistan’s protection of the Northern Distribution Network.
On September 22, 2011, the Senate Appropriations Committee approved a foreign operations
appropriations bill, S. 1601 (Leahy), that provides for a waiver for assistance to Uzbekistan on
national security grounds and to facilitate U.S. access to and from Afghanistan. According to one
media account, the Administration had called for such a waiver in order to facilitate security
assistance, including FMF, for Uzbekistan.153 Some human rights groups have protested against
the possible bolstering of U.S. security assistance to Uzbekistan.154 P.L. 112-74, Consolidated
Appropriations for FY2012, contains similar waiver language (see below, “Legislation”).

152 The language calling for “substantial progress” in respecting human rights differs from the grounds of ineligibility
for assistance under Section 498(b) of Part I of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (P.L. 87-195), which includes as
grounds a presidential determination that a Soviet successor state has “engaged in a consistent pattern of gross
violations of internationally recognized human rights.” The Administration has stated annually that the president has
not determined that Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan have engaged in “gross violations” of human rights.
153 Joshua Kucera, “Uzbekistan: Military Aid to Tashkent Would Help Protect NDN - State Department,” Eurasianet,
September 28, 2011.
154 International Crisis Group (ICG), “Joint Letter to Secretary Clinton Regarding Uzbekistan,” States News Service,
(continued...)
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Besides bilateral and regional aid, the United States contributes to international financial
institutions that aid Central Asia. Recurrent policy issues regarding U.S. aid include what it
should be used for, who should receive it, and whether it is effective.
Legislation
P.L. 112-74, H.R. 2055 (Culberson)
Consolidated Appropriations for FY2012. Conference report H.Rept. 112-331 filed on December
15, 2011. Passed by the House on December 16, 2011. Passed by the Senate on December 17,
2011. Signed into law on December 23, 2011. Provides for the Secretary of State to waive
conditions on assistance to Uzbekistan for a period of not more than 6 months and every 6
months thereafter until September 30, 2013, on national security grounds and as necessary to
facilitate U.S. access to and from Afghanistan. Requires that the waiver include an assessment of
democratization progress. Calls for a report on aid provided to Uzbekistan, including
expenditures made in support of the Northern Distribution Network in Uzbekistan and any
credible information that such assistance or expenditures are being diverted for corrupt purposes.
Extends a provision permitted expanded IMET assistance for Uzbekistan.
Table 1. U.S. Foreign Assistance to Central Asia,
FY1992 to FY2011, and the FY2012 Request
(million current dollars)
FY1992 thru
Central Asian
FY2010
FY2011
FY2012
Country
Budgeteda

Estimateb
Requestb
Kazakhstan 2,050.4

17.5
21.4
Kyrgyzstan 1,221.71

41.4 46.6
Tajikistan 988.57

44.5
45.0
Turkmenistan 351.55

11.1
10.3
Uzbekistan 971.36

11.3
11.8
Regional 130.44

23.5c 27.6c
Total 5,714.03

149.3
162.7
As a Percentage of
14%
26%
28%
aid to Eurasia
Sources: State Department, Office of the Coordinator of U.S. Assistance to Europe and Eurasia, Congressional
Budget Justification for Foreign Operations, FY2012
, April 8. 2011; Country/Account Summary FY2011, 653(a)
Allocations: Final
, August 2011.

(...continued)
September 27, 2011; Human Rights Watch, “Don't Lift Restrictions Linked to Human Rights until Tashkent Shows
Improvement,” States News Service, September 7, 2011. The joint letter by ICG and other human rights groups called
on Secretary Clinton to affirm that “U.S. policies towards the Uzbek government will not fundamentally change absent
meaningful human rights improvements, including the release of imprisoned pro-democracy activists, an end to
harassment of civil society groups, effective steps to end torture, and the elimination of forced child labor in the cotton
sector.”
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a. Includes funds from the Aid for Europe, Eurasia, and Central Asia (AEECA) account and Agency budgets.
Excludes some classified coalition support funding.
b. Includes funds from the Aid for Europe, Eurasia, and Central Asia (AEECA) account and other “Function
150” programs. Does not include Defense or Energy Department funds, funding for exchanges, or
Millennium Challenge Corporation aid to Kyrgyzstan.
c. Includes only funds from the AEECA account and the State Department’s Global Health and Child Survival
programs.

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Table 2. U.S. Assistance to Central Asia, FY1992-FY2001
million current dollars
Country
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
Kazakhstan 20.33 51.47 202.75 138.85 79.32 53.52 75.85 72.60 77.95 80.01
Kyrgyzstan 13.03
108.22 90.36 44.43 63.63 23.85 50.29 61.12 49.73 43.07
Tajikistan
11.61 33.72 45.26 33.71 45.36 14.75 36.57 38.16 38.69 76.48
Turkmenistan 14.71 57.28 22.38 21.82 25.33 6.25 8.94 15.94 10.91 12.57
Uzbekistan
5.62 15.00 34.07 14.44 23.34 30.88 26.84 46.88 39.06 48.33
Regional
0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 20.00 0.60 7.87 0.00 4.50 7.57
Total
2057.3 2258.69 2388.82 2248.25 2252.98 2126.85 2204.36 2233.7 2220.84 2269.03
Source: Derived from U.S. Department of State, Office of the Coordinator for Europe and Eurasia.
Notes: Includes all agencies and accounts.
Table 3. U.S. Assistance to Central Asia, FY2002-FY2010 (and Totals, FY1992-FY2010)
million current dollars
Total
(FY1992-
Country
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
FY2010)
Kazakhstan
97.4 97.88 111.00 84.91 81.31 167.55 179.52 220.28 157.90
2050.4
Kyrgyzstan 94.47 53.85 55.25 55.23 43.44 71.25 71.23
111.74
117.52
1221.71
Tajikistan 136.34 48.71 53.01 65.69 42.81 49.94 67.33 67.44 82.99
988.57
Turkmenistan 18.93 10.98 10.42 18.94 10.44 19.84 16.83 20.78 28.26
351.55
Uzbekistan 224.14 90.77 84.25 78.28 49.30 35.90 38.33 48.55 37.38
971.36
Regional
13.88 9.99 3.41 5.02 5.43 7.59 6.66
25.71
12.21
130.44
Total
2587.16 2315.18 2321.34 2313.07 2238.73 2359.07 2387.9 2503.5 2446.26 5714.03
Source: Derived from U.S. Department of State, Office of the Coordinator for Europe and Eurasia.
Notes: Includes all agencies and accounts.
CRS-58




Figure 1. Central Asia: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan

Source: CRS (September 2010).

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Author Contact Information

Jim Nichol

Specialist in Russian and Eurasian Affairs
jnichol@crs.loc.gov, 7-2289


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