POST-SOVIET CENTRAL ASIA AND AFGHANISTAN AT THE INTERSECTION OF THE MAJOR ASIAN STATES’ INTERESTS
Journal: Vestnik RUDN. International Relations (Vol.18, No. 2)Publication Date: 2018-07-17
Authors : Dina Malysheva;
Page : 259-272
Keywords : the post-Soviet Central Asia; Afghanistan; China; regional security; “One Belt; One Way”; “the China Pakistan Economic Corridor”;
Abstract
The article is analyzing the current situation in Afghanistan; it reveals the challenges and risks that emanate from this conflict zone and affect the security sphere of the five post-Soviet states of Central Asia (CA) and their Asian neighbors. Attention is paid to the growth of drug trafficking and the terrorist threat from Afghanistan by the “Islamic state” (IS, a terrorist group banned in Russia). The diplomatic initiatives taken by Russia, China, and other states to achieve national reconciliation in Afghanistan are considered. Military-political and economic projects in Central Asia (“One Belt, One Way”, and “China-Pakistan Economic Corridor”), which are alternatives to the Russia-initiated integration in the sphere of economy (Eurasian Economic Union - EAEU) and security (the Collective Security Treaty Organization - CSTO) are analyzed taking into account the rivalry within the China-India-Pakistan triangle. In connection with the recent changes in the Asian strategy of the United States, the peculiarities of India-Pakistan interaction with the post-Soviet states of Central Asia and with Afghanistan have been revealed. The chronological framework of the article is а period following the partial withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2014 of the American military contingent, brought to the beginning of 2018, when a new geopolitical reality began to form in the Central Asian region.
Other Latest Articles
- POST-SOVIET STATES: CHALLENGES OF DEVELOPMENT
- Review of the book: The Politics and Complexities of Crisis Management in Ukraine: A Historical Perspective / Ed. by G. Simons, M. Kapitonenko, V. Lavrenyuk, V. Vlaeminck. London: Routledge, 2018. - 252 p
- Review of the book: Hannah M. The Best “Worst President”: What the Right Gets Wrong About Barack Obama. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2016. - 324 p
- RUDN University and Latin-Caribbean America: new directions of interaction in the educational sphere
- The role of humanitarian cooperation in contemporary foreign policy of Spain
Last modified: 2020-08-14 08:31:05