11 March 2010

Military Base in Central Asia? Win! Rankle the Russians While Doing It? Bonus!

So after establishing dueling airbases, the US and Russia are now establishing anti-terror training camps in Kyrgyzstan. Win for the Kyrgyzstanianis!

U.S. General David Petraeus arrived in Kyrgyzstan on Wednesday, a day after the United States said it would build an anti-terrorism training center for the former Soviet republic in Central Asia.

Both the United States and Russia have military air bases in Kyrgyzstan, and the visit by Petraeus, head of U.S. Central Command, is likely to irritate Moscow, which sees the poor but strategically placed country as part of its sphere of influence.

The U.S. embassy said Petraeus had arrived and would hold two days of talks with Kyrgyz officials but gave no details.

Kyrgyzstan alarmed the United States last year when it said it would close the U.S. Manas air force base after receiving a promise of $2 billion in aid from Russia.

It later reversed its decision after Washington paid $180 million to keep the base, vital for supplying U.S. forces in nearby Afghanistan.

Russia, while saying it does not see Washington as a strategic competitor in Central Asia, has made clear that the U.S. military presence is not welcome. The presence of the two bases has come to symbolize Russia-U.S. rivalry in the region.

On Tuesday, the U.S. embassy said the $5.5 million anti-terrorist center would be built in Batken in southern Kyrgyzstan -- where Russian and Kyrgyz officials had earlier said Moscow might consider building a similar military facility.


By: Brant

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Perhaps we could share logistics and intel with the Russians? KBR can run both bases.

Brant said...

There's a contract out for bid right now for installation of a comm system that's going to span the country, and be used by the US, not the locals.