China in Central Asia-Rising China, sinking Russia
In a vast region, China’s economic clout is
more than a match for Russia’s
LESS than a decade ago little doubt
hung over where the newly independent states of Central Asia had to pump their
huge supplies of oil and gas: Russia, their former imperial overlord, dominated
their energy infrastructure and markets. Yet today, when a new field comes on
stream, the pipelines head east, to China. As if to underline the point, this
week China’s president, Xi Jinping, swept through Central Asia, gobbling up
energy deals and promising billions in investment. His tour left no doubts as
to the region’s new economic superpower.
In Turkmenistan, already China’s
largest foreign supplier of natural gas, Mr Xi inaugurated production at the
world’s second-biggest gasfield, Galkynysh. It will help triple Chinese imports
from the country. In Kazakhstan $30 billion of announced deals included a stake
in Kashagan, the world’s largest oil discovery in recent decades. In Uzbekistan
Mr Xi and his host, President Islam Karimov, unveiled $15 billion in oil, gas
and uranium deals, though details in this opaque country were few.
China
is the biggest trading partner of four of the region’s five countries (the
exception being Uzbekistan). During Mr Xi’s trip, Chinese state media reported
that trade volumes with Central Asia topped $46 billion last year, up 100-fold
since the countries’ independence from the Soviet Union two decades ago. Though
neither side puts it like this, China’s growing presence clearly comes at
Russia’s expense. Russia still controls the majority of Central Asia’s energy
exports, but its relative economic clout in the region is slipping—other than
as a destination for millions of migrant labourers. For years Russia has
treated the region as its exclusive province, insisting on buying oil and gas
at below-market rates through Soviet-era pipelines, while re-exporting it at a
markup. The practice helped drive Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, both with huge
energy reserves, into China’s arms.
Yet Russia and China have much riding
on their bilateral relationship. The government in Moscow is eager to benefit
from its eastern neighbour’s economic might, while in Beijing policymakers view
Russia as a critical ally on the world stage. (Knowing the premium China places
on protocol, it was no accident that Mr Xi’s very first official visit as
president was to Moscow; and that he went to St Petersburg for the G20 summit
in the middle of his Central Asian tour.) All this suggests the two giants will
aim to co-operate as much as compete, at least for the moment. As for Central
Asians, says Vasily Kashin, a Moscow-based China expert, Russia has accepted
that “they will try to get the best deals out of this rivalry.”
When it comes to security issues in
Central Asia, in public China still defers to Russia. Both look warily on as
NATO withdraws from Afghanistan. China’s chief concern is the threat posed by
Uighur separatists and their sympathisers in Central Asia. And so, in security
matters too, China’s influence is growing. As The Economist went to
press, Mr Xi was expected in Bishkek, capital of Kyrgyzstan, to attend the
annual summit of the Shanghai Co-operation Organisation, a block which China
was instrumental in founding. A chief aim is to counter the “three evil forces”
of terrorism, extremism and separatism.
Arguably, Chinese investment in
Central Asia promotes that goal, by improving living standards and thus
stability in a region that shares a 2,800km (1,750-mile) border with Xinjiang,
China’s westernmost province and Uighur homeland. Yet China’s soft power is
undermined by a beast it is not good at fighting: resentment. Chinese
contractors are flooding into Central Asia, building roads and pipelines and
even, in Tajikistan’s capital, Dushanbe, the government buildings. The cruel
irony is not lost on the millions of unemployed men leaving for Russia to look
for jobs. But it is lost, says Deirdre Tynan of the International Crisis Group,
a think-tank, on policymakers.
“Central Asia’s governments see China as a
wealthy and willing partner, but on the ground little is being done to ease
tensions between Chinese workers and their host communities,” she warns.
A few years ago a Kazakh activist,
protesting against his government’s plans to lease land to China, publicly
decapitated a toy panda. But local Sinophobia does not stop at silly gestures.
When Kyrgyzstan ceded disputed territory to China a decade ago, the protests
which that set off eventually brought down the president. More recently Chinese
workers in Kyrgyzstan have been getting badly beaten up. Central Asia is not
yet happily in the Chinese fold. The Economist
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