Islam Karimov, the leader of
Uzbekistan since 1989, has officially been pronounced
dead, ending a days-long Schrödinger dilemma. The ensuing power vacuum and leadership
scramble will lay bare the true nature of the indeterminate Russia-China nexus.
Between the coup attempt in Turkey,
Chinese embassy bombing in Kyrgyzstan
and Europe “going down the drain,”
much has been whispered about the rise of autocratic Eurasia and the decline of
the democratic West. Beijing and Moscow, the thinking goes, are working
together to systematically challenge the dominance of Washington and its
allies. A few recent developments have stoked speculation over this alleged
anti-Democratic alliance: the Russian use of Iranian airbases to
bomb Syrian rebels, murmurs that Turkey may host
Russian jets and Kremlin news outlets boasting of a coming
Russian-Chinese military alignment.
Moscow’s military muscle in Central Asia is significant, but so is Beijing’s
economic clout. In the wake of Karimov’s passing, China may very well assert
itself in Uzbekistan, in spite of Russian preferences. Or perhaps, the Beijing
and Moscow will overcome their differences, stick it to Washington and use
their great-power influence to resolve the Uzbek transfer of power to their own
benefit. Uzbekistan’s transition could serve as a litmus test for the practical
utility of a supposed Russia-China cabal.
Washington will fume about Karimov’s atrocious legacy—the
killing of protesters, the disappearing of dissidents and the delivery of their
corpses to their families—but change is not on the horizon. Many will pressure the White
House to intervene under the banner of human-rights defender. But the United
States should resist that urge and, for the time being, play the role of
passive observer. Lecturing Beijing and Moscow will only harden their stances.
Russia has, more or less, dominated
Central Asia for at least the last century and a half. Islam Karimov was
appointed leader of Uzbekistan in the late Soviet period. After the collapse of
the USSR, Moscow has sought to continue projecting itself into Central Asia.
Whatever its motives—creating a buffer zone between it and a rising China, the
prestige of maintaining a “sphere of influence” or legitimate concerns about
radical Islam—Russia will remain a key player in the region.
While the United States has made
half-hearted attempts to build relationships in Central Asia, China is the only
credible alternative to Russia. Considering Beijing’s policy
orientation—Central Asia is critical to its One
Belt, One Road concept—its influence in these former Soviet states will likely
grow ten-fold. In economic terms, this
has already happened. Turkmen oil and gas flow in abundance to China, crossing
through Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan in the process. With significant portions of
its energy needs tied to Central Asia, Beijing dreads regional instability.
Russia and China, evidently, have more skin in the game than Washington.
It would be sensible and prudent for China
and Russia to use Karimov’s death as an opportunity to solidify ties. The two
nations have gone to great lengths to showcase their friendship in recent
years. Only two months ago, President Xi Jinping reiterated that the
countries were “Friends Forever.” But the budding love affair is far from
straightforward. After the sanctions over Crimea, Chinese investment in Russia
fell short, disappointing Kremlin officials who expected Beijing to help defray
its losses. Which brings us to a larger point: Russia and China have been in
lockstep on every issue; often China pursues its own interests at the expense
of Russia. The two nations, for instance, signed a cyber
nonaggression deal last year, only to have Chinese cyber attacks on Russia increase nearly
threefold in the last year. Regardless, the two are planning a show of solidarity in
the South China Sea through joint naval exercises this year.
Despite an erratic ebb
and flow in bilateral tensions, China and Russia will likely work together to
ensure Uzbekistan’s stability. With the Islamic State still festering in Iraq,
Syria and beyond, a new caliphate appearing in Central Asia would be to the
disadvantage of all. The leaders of Central Asia are keen to use the threat of ISIS as a
tool to strengthen their grip on power; Moscow and Beijing will likely use the
same tactic to crush dissent and maintain order. Ensuring Central Asia remains
stable may help create a common sense of purpose and align the national
priorities of both China and Russia. The United States would be wise to closely
monitor Uzbekistan.
Blake Franko is an assistant editor at the
National Interest.
Erwin Schrödinger, the Austrian quantum physicist and the Schrödinger’s Cat mind experiment.
ReplyDeleteIn the hypothetical experiment, which the physicist devised in 1935, a cat is placed in a sealed box along with a radioactive sample, a Geiger counter and a bottle of poison.
If the Geiger counter detects that the radioactive material has decayed, it will trigger the smashing of the bottle of poison and the cat will be killed.
The experiment was designed to illustrate the flaws of the ‘Copenhagen interpretation’ of quantum mechanics, which states that a particle exists in all states at once until observed.
If the Copenhagen interpretation suggests the radioactive material can have simultaneously decayed and not decayed in the sealed environment, then it follows the cat too is both alive and dead until the box is opened