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CSTO: Moscow-Led Security Group Harbors Aspirations Of Going Global

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  • CSTO: Moscow-Led Security Group Harbors Aspirations Of Going Global

    CSTO: MOSCOW-LED SECURITY GROUP HARBORS ASPIRATIONS OF GOING GLOBAL
    Sergei Blagov

    Eurasianet
    http://www.eurasianet.org
    3/24/10

    Russian officials want to establish a global presence for the
    Collective Security Treaty Organization in the wake of the signing of
    a cooperation pact between the Moscow-led group and the United Nations.

    The UN-CSTO pact was signed in Moscow on March 18 by UN
    Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and Nikolai Bordyuzha, the CSTO's
    secretary general.

    A joint declaration issued in Moscow suggested the CSTO could
    become involved in UN operations covering "conflict prevention and
    conflict resolution, [as well as] combating terrorism, trans-national
    criminality [and] illegal arms trafficking." Cooperation would take
    into account "the respective spheres of competence and the procedures
    of either organization," the joint declaration added.

    Bordyuzha portrayed the pact as the UN's "recognition of our
    organization's authority and its ability to contribute to safeguarding
    global security." Russian officials have long expressed interest in
    raising the CSTO's international profile. Bordyuzha, accordingly,
    indicated that CSTO forces could participate in UN missions in
    different parts of the globe in the not too distant future. The
    CSTO comprises Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan,
    Russia and Uzbekistan.

    Any CSTO force deployed under UN auspices would likely be drawn from
    the organization's rapid deployment forces (KSBR), which currently
    comprises 10 battalions (five from Russia, two each from Kazakhstan and
    Tajikistan and one from Kyrgyzstan). The KSBR is due to be replaced
    soon by the Russian-led Rapid Reaction Force (KSOR). [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The UN cooperation pact marks a potential watershed in the
    CSTO's long-standing quest to bolster its legitimacy as a security
    organization. Russian officials are especially eager for the CSTO to
    be seen as NATO's equal. Since the CSTO's inception in 2002, NATO
    has kept the Moscow-led group at arm's length. Russian officials,
    including Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, have been increasingly
    vociferous in complaining about NATO's stance, accusing the Atlantic
    Alliance of maintaining "ideological" stereotypes.

    While the UN cooperation pact may make it more difficult for NATO
    to avoid engagement, alliance officials in Brussels remain plainly
    reluctant to work with the CSTO in any meaningful way. On February
    22, Bordyuzha voiced hope that the CSTO could cooperate with NATO on
    combating narcotics trafficking out of Afghanistan. NATO officials
    have not publicly responded to the CSTO proposal, but Bordyuzha still
    suggested that joint cooperation remained a possibility.

    With or without NATO's cooperation, Russia appears intent on getting
    involved in anti-trafficking efforts concerning Afghanistan. During a
    meeting in Moscow on March 16 between Russian Deputy Foreign Minister
    Alexei Borodavkin and visiting Afghan security officials, both sides
    stated that the CSTO could play a role in containing the trafficking
    problem. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Editor's Note: Sergei Blagov is a Moscow-based specialist in CIS
    political affairs.
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