INTERNATIONAL CRISIS
GROUP - NEW REPORT
China’s Central Asia Problem
Bishkek/Beijing/Brussels, 27 February 2013: China’s influence is growing rapidly in Central Asia at a time
when the region is looking increasingly unstable.
China’s Central Asia Problem, the latest
report from the International Crisis Group, examines Beijing’s strong
relationship with its neighbours in that troubled region (Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan). Already the dominant
economic force in the region, it could soon become the pre-eminent external power
there, overshadowing Russia and the U.S.
But the Central Asian
republics are increasingly beset by domestic problems. They are also vulnerable
to a potentially well-organised insurgent challenge. Jihadists currently
fighting beside the Taliban may re-focus their interest on the region after the
2014 NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan. Many in Beijing are alarmed by the range
of challenges Central Asia faces.
“China’s strategy seems
to be the creation of close ties with Central Asia to reinforce economic
development and stability, which it believes will insulate itself, including
its Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, as well as its neighbours from any
negative consequence of NATO’s 2014 withdrawal from Afghanistan. It also hopes
that economic development will counteract growing dissatisfaction with the
political status quo in each country”, says Deirdre Tynan, Crisis Group’s
Central Asia Project Director.
“The problem is that
large parts of Central Asia look more insecure and unstable by the year. Afghanistan
is a complicating factor, but many of Central Asia’s problems are the result of
poor governance”, Tynan adds.
Since the collapse of the
Soviet Union, China and its Central Asian neighbours have strengthened
relations, initially on the economic front but increasingly on political and
security matters as well. Central Asia’s socio-economic and political problems
make it prone to turmoil and vulnerable to extremist organisations, both
foreign and domestically generated. Instability or conflict in one or more of
the Central Asian states would impact China, as its economic interests depend
on a stable security landscape. China’s investments are exposed not only to
potential security crises but also to political whims of autocrats and
grassroots violence.
China is starting to take
tentative political and security initiatives in the region, mostly through the
Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO). However, the SCO, which includes
Russia as well as the five Central Asian states, has shown itself ineffective
in times of unrest. Central Asia’s international partners, including Russia and
China, must be wary of attempts by the region’s leaders to push their
populations to the brink, be it through political repression, divisive
nationalism or economic deprivation. To address these threats, Beijing and
Moscow need to view each other with less suspicion.
“China’s business
practices in the region are driving suspicions of its intentions to an all-time
high”, says Stephanie Kleine-Ahlbrandt, Crisis Group’s China Adviser. “If
Chinese economic expansionism continues to fail to deliver benefits to the
working population and enriches only certain political families, this could
contribute to regional instability”.
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