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Uzbekistan rejoins Russian-led security bloc

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  • Uzbekistan rejoins Russian-led security bloc

    Uzbekistan rejoins Russian-led security bloc
    YURAS KARMANAU

    AP Worldstream; Jun 24, 2006

    Uzbekistan has rejoined a Russian-led security pact of ex-Soviet
    nations, another step by the authoritarian Central Asian state toward
    Moscow's orbit after the rupture of its ties with Washington.

    Uzbekistan was one of the founding members of the Collective Security
    Treaty in 1992.

    But in 1999, in an effort by Uzbek President Islam Karimov to keep
    his distance from Moscow, Uzbekistan quit the organization to join a
    rival regional body known as GUAM, which is seen as a counterweight
    to Russian interests.

    Karimov told a summit of the six-nation security body in the Belarusian
    capital, Minsk, that Uzbekistan would resume full membership because
    it also belonged to a parallel ex-Soviet economic body.

    "Uzbekistan having become a member of the Eurasian Economic Community
    cannot stop halfway, and so we have reinstated our membership in the
    Collective Security Treaty," he said Friday.

    Putin welcomed the decision, saying that from this moment on,
    Uzbekistan was "a fully fledged member of our organization and will
    participate fully in its activities."

    Since the violent crackdown on an uprising in Andijan in May 2005,
    which prompted harsh U.S. criticism, Karimov's regime has turned
    away from the West and switched its allegiance to Russia and
    China. Uzbekistan last year left GUAM,
    which now is dominated by pro-Western countries.

    The Collective Security Treaty links Russia with Armenia, Belarus,
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. It is one of several overlapping
    organizations seen as means for Moscow to preserve its influence
    in its former Soviet backyard and to resist what it perceives as
    U.S. efforts to expand its role in the region.

    Earlier this month, at a summit of a separate Asian security body
    that links China, Russia and four Central Asian states, Karimov
    accused unnamed outside interests of sowing discord in the region
    and said the U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan had proven ineffective
    in combatting the drug trade and improving security.

    Belarus' authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko _ dubbed
    "Europe's last dictator" by the United States and other Western nations
    for his relentless crackdown on dissent _ has repeatedly accused the
    West of harboring aggressive intentions and sought to build closer
    economic and military ties with Russia and other ex-Soviet nations.

    Belarus this week is hosting the largest ever joint military
    maneuvers with Russia, envisaging a joint response to an unnamed
    outside military threat.

    Leaders of Russia, Belarus and four Central Asian nations _ Uzbekistan,
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan _ on Friday also held a summit
    of their Eurasian Economic Community in the Belarusian capital,
    focusing on plans to form a customs union of trade agreements.

    Numerous previous attempts by the ex-Soviet nations to form a customs
    union and coordinate their economic policies have failed because of
    sharp differences in size and level of development of their economies
    and fears of Russian domination.
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