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Post-Soviet Security Bloc Unaware Of U.S. Plans For C.Asia Bases

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  • Post-Soviet Security Bloc Unaware Of U.S. Plans For C.Asia Bases

    POST-SOVIET SECURITY BLOC UNAWARE OF U.S. PLANS FOR C.ASIA BASES

    RIA Novosti
    15:03 | 18/ 12/ 2008

    MOSCOW, December 18 (RIA Novosti) - The head of a post-Soviet security
    bloc said on Thursday he had no information about the possible
    deployment of new U.S. military bases in Kazakhstan or Uzbekistan.

    A senior Russian military official expressed concern on Tuesday about
    what he said were U.S. plans to set up military bases in the former
    Soviet republics.

    "This is the first time I have heard about the deployment of such
    bases, and I cannot confirm this information," said Nikolai Bordyuzha,
    general secretary of the Collective Security Treaty Organization
    (CSTO).

    He added that "any such decision" would have to be agreed on with
    the CSTO.

    "The Secretariat has received no such notification," he said.

    The CSTO is a security grouping comprising the former Soviet republics
    of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Uzbekistan,
    and Tajikistan.

    The press secretary of the U.S. embassy in Uzbekistan said earlier
    on Thursday that the U.S. administration had no plans to deploy any
    military bases in Uzbekistan.

    The Kazakh Defense Ministry also denied any knowledge of U.S. plans
    to deploy military bases in the country.

    "We know nothing about such plans, and we cannot confirm this
    information," a ministry source said.

    Gen. Nikolai Makarov, chief of the General Staff of Russia's Armed
    Forces said on Tuesday that, "The U.S. has opened bases in Romania
    and Bulgaria, and according to our information plans to establish
    them in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan."

    Former Soviet republics in Central Asia have been the focus of
    increased rivalry between Moscow and Washington of late.

    The United States has recently stepped up ties with oil-rich
    Kazakhstan, which allowed U.S. planes to fly over its territory during
    the 2001 U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan and also contributed troops
    to Iraq.

    Observers in Russia say that Washington will need more bases in
    countries neighboring Afghanistan due to president-elect Barack
    Obama's plans to increase the U.S. military presence in the war-ravaged
    country by 20,000 troops.

    The U.S. has run an airbase in Kyrgyzstan since the war in Afghanistan.

    Uzbekistan expelled U.S. troops from its airbase in 2005, but has
    recently sought closer ties with the U.S. and other Western powers.

    Gen. Makarov also blamed Washington for pushing Georgia and Ukraine
    toward NATO membership. He said Russia had been surrounded by the
    military alliance's forces.

    The statement came amid an ongoing dispute over Washington's
    plans to place a missile base in Poland and a radar in the Czech
    Republic. Moscow opposes the plans as a threat to its national
    security. The U.S. says the missile defenses are needed to counter
    possible strikes from "rogue" states.
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