The New Great Game Round-Up: July 29, 2015
Christoph Germann |
July 29, 2015 Leave
a Comment
Terror Spreads Across
China as Uyghurs Explore New Escape Routes, Kyrgyzstan Cancels Treaty Because
U.S. 'Sought Chaos' & More
*The
Great Game Round-Up brings you the latest newsworthy developments regarding
Central Asia and the Caucasus region. We document the struggle for influence,
power, hegemony and profits in Central Asia and the Caucasus region between a
U.S.-dominated NATO, its GCC proxies, Russia, China and other regional players.
As the situation in
northern Afghanistan deteriorates further, the neighboring Central Asian states
as well as Russia and China are becoming increasingly worried about a possible
spillover of violence. The United States, on the other hand, has dismissed
these concerns from the beginning and continues to insist
that the security situation in Afghanistan poses no threat to the neighboring
'stans. This is a bold claim in light of the territorial
gains by the Taliban and other militant groups in Faryab province, which
borders Turkmenistan. A few days ago, insurgents blew
up an electricity tower in Faryab, disrupting electricity supply to the
provincial capital Maymana and four other districts. It was the second time in
one week that the power supply lines have been cut due to the fighting. Since
pro-government militias are retreating in most areas and Maymana is in danger
of falling to militants, the Afghan government wants to launch a major military
operation in the province as soon as possible:
Major
operation on the way in northern Faryab province A major military operation is due to kick off in northern Faryab
province of Afghanistan to clear the under the control of the Taliban
militants. The operation is expected to be launched jointly by the Afghan
national security forces including Afghan special forces along with the
anti-Taliban public uprising forces. A lawmaker representing northern Faryab
province in the Lower House of the Parliament – Wolesi Jirga, told Radio Free
Europe (RFE) that the operation will be conducted as per the instructions of
the First Vice President.
…
China,
Pakistan Could Become 'Guarantors' of Afghan Peace Deal
First Vice President
Abdul Rashid Dostum and another equally powerful and controversial figure, the
governor of Balkh province Atta Mohammad Noor, recently agreed
to join forces in order to repel the insurgents in Faryab and other
northern Afghan provinces. Noor has long criticized the government for ignoring
the rising militant violence in the north. In the search for scapegoats, Dostum
has
lately also suggested that people inside the government "have paved
the way" for the militants and he vowed to reveal the culprits very soon.
Although the infamous Afghan warlord is not a friend of the Taliban, he pointed
out that foreign fighters from Central Asia and China are the driving force
behind the current militant offensive and not the Afghan Taliban. Moreover,
Dostum asserted that he is now capable of dealing with the insurgency in
northern Afghanistan thanks to the full backing of the government, which had
not been the case previously. But given the alarming situation, Kabul doesn't
have much choice:
Taliban
Take Remote Afghan Police Base After Mass Surrender The Taliban took control of a large police base in a remote part of
northeastern Afghanistan after some 100 police and border guards joined the
insurgents following three days of fighting, security officials said Sunday.
The loss of the Tirgaran base in Badakhshan province marked the largest mass
surrender since U.S. and NATO forces concluded their combat mission at the end
of last year. It highlighted the challenges facing Afghan security forces, which
have seen their casualties soar in the face of stepped-up insurgent attacks.
The police base, in the province's Wardoj district, had been cut off as heavy
rains destroyed roads into the area, said Gen. Baba Jan, Badakhshan province's
police chief. It wasn't clear why reinforcements hadn't been flown into the
area, though the province's steep valleys often make aircraft landings
difficult.
…
While Afghan officials stated that the
local police commander and his men defected to the Taliban and handed over the
base's weapons and ammunition, the Taliban claimed
that they managed to overrun the police base and capture the security forces.
They substantiated their claims shortly thereafter by releasing
107 security personnel captured at the base. Badakhshan has seen some of the
heaviest fighting since the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force
(ISAF) left the province in the hands of the Afghan security forces. The ineptitude
of the Afghan army and the growing presence of Taliban and foreign fighters
have not gone unnoticed by neighboring countries. Especially Tajikistan has
been sounding the alarm over the developments in Badakhshan province but China
is worried as well. This is one of the reasons why Beijing is taking a leading
role in facilitating the Afghan peace talks:
Afghan
peace deal: Islamabad, Beijing ready to become ‘guarantors’ Pakistan and China are ready to become
‘guarantors’ of a possible peace deal between the Afghan government and the
Afghan Taliban, officials familiar with the development have said. “We are
ready to go the extra mile. We are even willing to become guarantors for any
peace agreement,” said a senior Pakistani official, who requested not to be
named because of sensitivity of the issue. During the talks, the Afghan side
demanded immediate ceasefire from the Afghan Taliban. However, the Taliban
reportedly agreed to cease fire if Islamabad and Beijing become ‘guarantors’ to
ensure that a ‘United National Government’ will be formed in Afghanistan.
Another official said China is also ready to provide guarantees if all the
negotiating parties accept this arrangement. Following the Murree talks, China
had hinted at playing a more proactive role in brokering a peace deal between
the Afghan government and the Taliban.
…
The noteworthy statement of the unnamed
senior Pakistani official immediately attracted
India's attention and the Press Trust of India (PTI) asked Beijing to comment
on the report. China's Foreign Ministry evaded a direct response and only said
that China will maintain close cooperation will all parties to bring about
peace and reconciliation in Afghanistan. After the first meeting between representatives
from the Afghan government and the Taliban in Islamabad went better than
expected, most parties have high hopes for the second round of talks this week.
China was
expected to host the upcoming meeting but a senior Pakistani security
official just confirmed
that the negotiations will continue in Pakistan. With the construction of the
China-Pakistan Economic Corridor making progress, it comes as no real surprise
that Islamabad and Beijing are currently doing their best to facilitate the
Afghan peace talks:
China-Pakistan
economic corridor under construction Pakistan's
army chief General Raheel Sharif has inspected a road network under
construction in Balochistan Province, which is part of a China-Pakistan
development project. The economic corridor project links Gawadar Port in
southwestern Pakistan to northwestern China's Xinjiang. Sharif said the
corridor will transform the lives of local people and boost the development of
the region. The construction is being out by Pakistan's Frontier Works
Organisation, a military administrative staff corps. The China-Pakistan
Economic Corridor was launched as part of the "One Belt, One Road"
initiatives to connect Asia and Europe proposed by China.
…
Terror
Spreads Across China as Uyghurs Explore New Escape Routes
Given the ongoing
security problems in Balochistan and Xinjiang, chaos in neighboring Afghanistan
is the last thing that Pakistan and China need right now. The Pakistani
military has
vowed to protect Chinese workers and engineers, who will assist in the
construction of the project, with a 12,000 strong special security force. In
exchange for billions of dollars in investments, Islamabad has also taken some
action against Uyghur jihadists and other foreign fighters seeking refuge in
the Pakistani tribal areas. As usual, Beijing prefers to throw money at the
problem. Lately, Chinese consulate officials have
reportedly been offering money to Uyghurs in Pakistan for information about
activists campaigning against Chinese rule in 'East Turkestan.' The Chinese
authorities take no chances when it comes to the insurgency in Xinjiang but an
incident in the capital of the northeastern Liaoning province two weeks ago
served as a stark reminder that the Uyghur militancy is no longer confined to
China's far west:
China
says police shoot dead three Xinjiang 'terrorists' Chinese police in the northeastern city of Shenyang shot dead three
knife-wielding Uighur militants screaming for Islamic holy war and wounded
another on Monday as they tried to resist arrest, the government and state
media said. "When police pursued the terrorist suspects, four terrorists
armed with knives resisted arrest. Police fired shots only after the terrorists
ignored warnings," the Shenyang public security bureau said on its
official microblog late on Monday. The state-run Beijing News, citing the
Liaoning provincial government, said the militants, from Xinjiang, were killed
on Monday afternoon after police tried to enter a rented house during a raid.
…
Police said that the four were
suspected of involvement in the "June 12 Hijra case" without
elaborating what the case is about. 16 other people have been arrested in
connection with the case. Hijra refers to the journey of the Islamic prophet
Muhammad and his followers from Mecca to Medina to escape persecution. Chinese
counterterrorism expert Li Wei pointed
out that suspected terrorists used to travel to southern China but the
"case in Shenyang suggests that the Hijra movement might have spread
across the country." As previously discussed,
the Chinese government has stepped up its efforts to prevent Uyghurs from
crossing the border into Southeast Asia. When Tong Bishan from China's Ministry
of Public Security recently exposed
Turkey's role in Uyghur smuggling and terror operations, he mentioned
that more Uyghurs are now trying to leave via northeastern China due to
increased security along the borders with Laos and Vietnam. One week after the
shooting in Shenyang, China's state broadcaster highlighted the growing
terrorist threat in the north by airing an interview:
China
arrests Uygur suspect who planned 'bomb attack' on shopping mall Police foiled a terrorist plot to bomb a
shopping mall in Hebei province, state media said on Monday, as it aired a
“confession” by a suspect from the far western region of Xinjiang who said he
had trained for the attack in Syria. The suspect from Kashgar said in a
eight-minute video on China Central Television that he had fled to Syria via
Turkey for “bomb-making training” in early 2013. He said he returned to China
earlier this year, staying in Shijiazhuang, where he plotted to blow up a
shopping mall. The case and confession could not be independently verified, but
the report underscored Beijing’s concern that the threat of terror attacks was
spreading.
…
Furthermore, the report underscored
Turkey's role in facilitating the illegal migration and terrorist recruitment
of Uyghurs. According to Beijing-based analyst Jiang Zhaoyong, the Chinese
authorities "wanted the video to show the danger of having a pathway in
Turkey for illegal migrants to flee to overseas terrorist groups."
Predictably, World Uyghur Congress (WUC) spokesman Dilxat Raxit had a different
take on the video. He dismissed the confession as an attempt to "hype up
hostility against Uyghurs." Beijing is getting increasingly fed up with
the WUC and its Western supporters. After the shooting in Shenyang, the Global Times launched a
scathing attack on the WUC and the West, emphasizing that "Chinese people
are clear that some Western forces are pushing the terrorist activities in
Xinjiang." As recent developments have shown, these terrorist activities
are now spreading across the country:
Chinese
police catch two terror suspects, seize explosives and knives after tip-off
Mainland police on Friday caught two
terror suspects in a pre-dawn crackdown on an alleged terrorist group based in
Wenzhou in the eastern Zhejiang province. Officers seized explosives, knives
and other weapons and were investigating the case, the office said on Weibo. It
did not give details about the suspects' ethnicity, their plots or the number
of people involved.
Li
Wei, director of the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations'
counterterrorism research centre, said the cases showed that separatists and
religious extremists were exploring new routes to flee abroad for terrorist
training.
…
Kyrgyzstan
Cancels Treaty Because U.S. 'Sought Chaos'
Now it is up to the
Chinese authorities to shut down the new routes. Poor intelligence and porous
borders have
long stymied China's efforts to stop Uyghurs from leaving via Southeast
Asia but increased security along the boders with Laos and Vietnam appears to
be paying off. Prior to that, many Uyghurs tried to cross into Central Asia via
Kyrgyzstan. According to a Beijing-based diplomatic source, Southeast Asia
became the preferred route for Uyghurs to flee the country only after
Kyrgyzstan stepped up security at China's request. Joint Kyrgyz-Chinese border
operations highlight the fruitful cooperation. Since
Beijing is not in the business of giving awards to human rights activists,
Kyrgyzstan's cooperation with China doesn't face the same difficulties as
cooperation with Western partners. The U.S. just learned the hard way that the
Kyrgyz government doesn't flinch from taking drastic measures if it feels
offended:
Kyrgyzstan
cancels cooperation treaty with United States Kyrgyzstan canceled a cooperation treaty with the United States on
Tuesday, raising the stakes in a diplomatic row triggered by the award of a
human rights prize to a jailed dissident. Kyrgyz Prime Minister Temir Sariyev
ordered his cabinet to renounce the 1993 Bilateral Agreement with the U.S. It
will not be valid starting Aug. 20, the government said in a statement. The
agreement provided for U.S. aid to Kyrgyzstan to be brought into and out of the
country without the levying of taxes, customs duties or any other payment.
…
Moreover, the agreement ensured that
U.S. personnel supporting military or civil aid programs in Kyrgyzstan were
granted near-diplomatic status. Although renouncing the 1993 treaty is by no
means tantamount to breaking off diplomatic relations, it is a significant step
highlighting the deterioration of Kyrgyzstan's relationship with the United
States. Washington didn't expect Bishkek to take such drastic measures in
response to the human rights award for Azimjon Askarov. The U.S. said it was
disappointed by the decision but reaffirmed
that it will continue to provide assistance to the Central Asian country. USAID,
which has been involved in a lot of projects in Kyrgyzstan, will
now have to make do without its privileged status. Despite mounting
criticism at home and abroad, Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev defended
the decision to cancel the agreement and went on the offensive:
Kyrgyz
leader says U.S. 'sought chaos' by decorating dissident Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev said on
Monday the United States had sought to "create chaos" in his country
by granting an award to a jailed dissident. "This (U.S. award) cannot fail
to shock and, for Kyrgyzstan, this means ethnic instability and an attempt to
create chaos," Atambayev told a news conference in a resort area outside
the capital Bishkek. "It's just revolting. Someone needs instability in
Kyrgyzstan. Someone wants these ashes to smolder all the time."
…
Atambayev warned that the award could
nurture a dangerous "separatist mood" among Uzbeks by promoting the
preconception that "there will never be justice in Kyrgyzstan" for
the Uzbek community. Not everyone in the country shares Atambayev's views. Many
people criticized
the government for renouncing the treaty. Opposition leader Ravshan Zheenbekov
even suggested
bringing Prime Minister Temir Sariyev to justice for abuse of power because he
was the one who signed the document. Some critics emphasized that the
government probably didn't make this decision on its own but rather after getting
some friendly advice from Moscow. This theory has
also been promoted by the usual suspects in the media. Kyrgyz President
Atambayev is clearly aware that it looks like Moscow was pulling the strings
behind the scenes. Therefore, he decided to point out that Kyrgyzstan is not a
Russian vassal:
Atambayev: Some Day, Russian
Military Will Have To Leave Kyrgyzstan Kyrgyzstan's
president has suggested that Russia's military base in the country will have to
leave at some point, perhaps in an effort to signal that even as relations with
the United States suffer, he doesn't intend the country to be a Russian vassal.
"We have a long term agreement, but sooner or later in the future
Kyrgyzstan will have to defend itself, without relying on the bases of
brotherly friendly countries," Almazbek Atambayev said at a press
conference on July 27. He did suggest that the base's presence was still
welcome today: the base's establishment "was due to threats which the
republic can not withstand still today, so the decision on the opening of the
base was correct and remains relevant today," he added.
…
# # # #
Christoph
Germann- BFP Contributing Author & Analyst
Christoph Germann is an independent analyst and researcher based in Germany, where he is currently studying political science. His work focuses on the New Great Game in Central Asia and the Caucasus region. You can visit his website here
Christoph Germann is an independent analyst and researcher based in Germany, where he is currently studying political science. His work focuses on the New Great Game in Central Asia and the Caucasus region. You can visit his website here
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