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Kyrgyzstan agrees to host second Russian base - Kremlin

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  • Kyrgyzstan agrees to host second Russian base - Kremlin

    Kyrgyzstan agrees to host second Russian base - Kremlin

    MOSCOW, July 29 (RIA Novosti) - The deployment of a Russian military
    base in southern Kyrgyzstan has been coordinated with Kyrgyz
    authorities, an aide to the Russian president said on Wednesday.
    "Everything has been agreed, in principle," Sergei Prikhodko said on
    the eve of an informal summit of the Collective Security Treaty
    Organization (CSTO), to be held in Kyrgyzstan on Friday.
    The post-Soviet CSTO security bloc comprises Armenia, Belarus,
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.
    Russia earlier offered to deploy a battalion-sized unit as part of the
    CSTO rapid reaction force in the Batkenskaya region of Kyrgyzstan.
    "In essence, this is not a Russian base. These are efforts in line
    with CSTO plans to set up a joint rapid reaction force," Prikhodko
    said.
    Russia's security strategy until 2020, recently approved by President
    Dmitry Medvedev, envisions the CSTO as "a key mechanism to counter
    regional military challenges and threats."
    The leaders of the post-Soviet security bloc signed on June 14 an
    agreement on creating a joint rapid reaction force, which will
    comprise large military units from five countries - Kazakhstan,
    Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.
    Russia already operates an airbase in the city of Kant, some 20
    kilometers (12 miles) outside the Kyrgyz capital, Bishkek.
    Some 250 Russian officers and 150 enlisted personnel from Russia's 5th
    Air Army are deployed at the base, as well as Su-25 Frogfoot strike
    aircraft and Mi-8 transport helicopters.
    Prikhodko said Moscow was not concerned about the presence of a
    U.S. transit center in Kyrgyzstan to support an international
    contingent which is fighting Taliban militants in Afghanistan.
    Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev signed on July 7 a law allowing the
    U.S. to continue using its Manas airbase for the transit of troops and
    supplies to Afghanistan.
    "If the operation of the center is carried out in line with its stated
    mandate, we will have no formal cause for concern," the
    ing that if the mandate is violated, Kyrgyzstan will have to provide
    explanations to other CSTO members.
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