http://www.isn.ethz.ch/news/sw/details.cfm?ID=10489

Great powers courting volatile Uzbekistan

The "heart" of Central Asia - as its president, Islam Karimov, calls
it - Uzbekistan has become an object of interest and contention for
world and regional power centers due to its geostrategic significance.
The major players are the United States, Russia and China, all of
which covet access to its abundant energy and mineral resources, and
view it as an essential element in their designs for dominant
influence in the region.

By Dr. Michael A. Weinstein for PINR

Bordering Kazakhstan on the north and west, Turkmenistan and
Afghanistan on the south, and Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan on the east,
Uzbekistan is a post-Soviet state that has been ruled by Karimov since
1990, shortly before it declared independence in 1991 when the Soviet
Union broke apart. Since then, Karimov has used the country's
strategic importance to establish a dictatorship and to resist
successfully domestic and foreign pressures for democratic and market
reforms. Uzbekistan has been and continues to be perceived as too
great a prize for interested powers to risk destabilizing Karimov's
regime, which, through its repressive practices, has awakened
widespread public discontent and armed opposition, some of which
subscribes to Islamic revolution. Aware of the Karimov regime's
instability, interested powers have not seen any better alternative to
it. 
The domestic democratic and secular opposition, which is banned from
participating in elections and state institutions, is divided and
fractious; the Islamists are unacceptable to the interested powers;
and Karimov has been willing to work with all sides, favoring one or
the other according to his calculations of which tilt will best secure
his continued rule for the moment.

 With 26.5 million people, Uzbekistan has the largest population among
Central Asian states and the strongest military. The country is the
second largest cotton exporter in the world and is also a major
exporter of gold and oil. Its largest export partners are Russia and
China, and its largest import partners are Russia and the US.
Population disaffected by corruption

The country's economy remains dominated by state controls, which has
caused foreign investment to lag, and by the crony capitalism that has
become familiar in the successor states of the Soviet Union. The
relative stagnation of Uzbekistan's economy has led to high rates of
unemployment, particularly among youth, creating the conditions for
armed opposition. Karimov's policy of import substitution and currency
controls has awakened dissent among the trading class. As a result of
cronyism, the gap between the wealthy and privileged few, and the
majority of poor (60 percent of the population lives on less than a
dollar a day) has widened since independence. 

Unlike his counterpart in Turkmenistan, President Saparmurat Niazov -
another dictator from the Soviet era - Karimov has not been able to
alleviate immiseration by providing free energy and subsidized travel
to the population. He holds his power uneasily and has responded to
threats to it by tightening repression rather than by attempting to
compromise with disaffected groups or to execute reforms. Karimov's
often repeated maxim for Uzbekistan's development is "Never destroy
the old house unless you build a new one." In practice, that has meant
keeping the old Soviet structure and trying to patch it up as it falls
apart, with the addition of a few new outbuildings.
The Karimov regime's inherent instability

Governing a country with several regional centers, Karimov gains his
support from an alliance of dispersed political elites that profit
from the state and crony economy, and are jealous of their spheres of
influence. Called "clans" in local parlance, those elites are united
only in their respective self interest and have no unified policy.
They have found it expedient to back Karimov and he has used their
coalition of convenience to perform the role of arbiter and to
centralize his power. 

Yet the clans do not always agree and do not have great personal
loyalty to Karimov, who performs a balancing act to keep the political
system coordinated. In contrast to Niazov, who managed Turkmenistan's
transition from Communist ideology by formulating an ultra-nationalist
ideology and engendering a cult of personality, Karimov functions in
an ideological void. Perceiving the greatest threat to his power
coming from Islamism, he has attempted to exert control over religion
by permitting only state-licensed Muslim clerics, who preach moderate
and regime-friendly Islam, to practice, and repressing those who do not. 

Analysts agree that Karimov's policies have aroused support for
radical Islamism among Uzbekistan's 70 per cent Sunni Muslim ethnic
Uzbek population. Karimov has not made fine distinctions among
religious tendencies, suppressing even peaceful forms of Islam that do
not accord with state criteria, which has increased disaffection with
his regime. 

Armed opposition to Karimov's regime began in earnest in late March
and early April, 2004, when a series of bombs went off in Uzbekistan's
capital Tashkent and the city of Bukhara, killing 47 people. Over the
five days of unrest, as security forces strove to repress the
violence, the perpetrators remained a mystery. Karimov blamed Islamic
revolutionaries, specifically Hizb-ut-Tahrir - a transnational group
originating in Jordan that envisions a caliphate spanning Central
Asia. Before the World Trade Center bombings on September 11, 2001,
Uzbekistan had experienced Islamic insurgency in the form of the
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), an al-Qaeda-linked group.
Karimov's support for US "terror war"

During the US-led war against the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, the
IMU joined their allies and most of their fighters were thought to
have been killed or captured. Karimov was reluctant to attribute
responsibility for the 2004 attacks to the IMU, because he had stated
that they had been eliminated as a threat. 

Western analysts and the excluded opposition parties did not accept
Karimov's line, arguing that whether or not the perpetrators had links
to Islamism, Uzbekistan's economic conditions and the repressive
tactics of the Karimov regime had awakened resentment far beyond the
sector of the country's population sympathetic to Islamic revolution.
They believed that the scope and coordination of the operations were
beyond Hizb-ut-Tahrir's capabilities and could only have been
undertaken with domestic support and participation. 

In the wake of the bombings, Karimov's security forces imposed a
crackdown, rounding up and arresting suspects, and eventually putting
15 of them on trial on July 28. On July 30, suicide bombers struck the
US and Israeli embassies, and the prosecutor general's office in
Tashkent, killing themselves and two other people. The IMU claimed
responsibility. After the US war in Afghanistan, Karimov became one of
the strongest and most vocal supporters of Washington's "war on
terrorism." 

He has let the US establish its largest military base in Central Asia,
housing 1'000 troops, and has cooperated with the NATO stabilization
force in Afghanistan. At the same time, he has used the "war on
terrorism" as a cover for his repression of all opposition, spreading
the definition of "terror" so broadly that it includes all forms of
non-official Islam, arousing the very resentment that leads to
increased support of the revolutionaries. With the 2004 bombings,
Karimov now faces a genuine problem of armed opposition, an
increasingly disaffected population, and a temptation to intensify
repression.
Police state

Karimov's tactics of maintaining his rule and the dominance of the
state-related "clan" networks has included rigid press controls,
prison killings and torture, a captive judiciary, police intimidation,
travel restrictions, import controls, suppression of non-governmental
organizations and the exclusion of all peaceful opposition parties
from the ballot. 

As Karimov has tightened repression, domestic opposition unrelated to
Islamism has surfaced. Through the autumn of 2004, civil unrest
bubbled up in Uzbekistan's bazaars when traders resisted efforts by
the police to enforce restrictions on imports. Traders fought police
and in one incident on November 1, in the Silk Road city Kokand, two
police cars were torched. 

There have also been demonstrations against social conditions,
including one on December 23 when a group of sight-impaired women
protested the conditions of the hostel in which they live, which has
no water and central heating. In a December 25 demonstration, teachers
protested the arrest of their school director on charges of abuse of
power; they claimed that the director was arrested because he had
refused to send his students to work on cotton plantations as
"voluntary" unpaid laborers. Despite his repressive tactics, or
perhaps because of them, Karimov seems to be unable to cap dissent and
disorder. According to analyst David Lewis of the International Crisis
Group, "The government's still in control - there's just the sense
that they're not sure how to react, the sense of political instability
has risen."
Foreign aid and HR violations

As the Karimov regime faces growing civil unrest and loss of
authority, and seeks to right itself, interested powers continue to
jockey for influence over it. The US, Russia, and China, as military
and economic powers, have strategic and economic interests in
Uzbekistan, and Japan has economic interests there. During 2004, the
balance of power tilted against the US, as Karimov cultivated stronger
ties with the other players, partly due to Washington's cancellation
of foreign aid to Tashkent on the basis of human rights violations
and, more fundamentally, because US investment had not come up to
expectations. 

After Tashkent's embrace of the "war on terrorism" in 2001, it
appeared that Washington would become the strongest outside influence
in Central Asia. Since then, Moscow has striven to regain its foothold
in the region, and Beijing and Tokyo have moved to establish footholds
there too. Washington and Moscow have divided interests in Uzbekistan,
which bring them into collaboration and conflict, whereas Japan and
China have coherent and mutually conflicting interests. 

On July 1, 2004, US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European
and Eurasian affairs, B. Lynn Pascoe, told Congress that "it is
necessary to further boost and strengthen US-Uzbek bilateral
relations" because of Uzbekistan's strategic importance in maintaining
regional security. Nonetheless, on July 14, Washington canceled US$18
million in non-military aid to Tashkent because Secretary of State
Colin Powell refused to approve the Karimov regime's human rights
record. The aid freeze was a signal to Tashkent of Washington's
displeasure at the failure of Karimov to achieve stability through its
repressive tactics. 

It did not affect military cooperation and, on October 20, NATO
Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer announced that Tashkent's
human rights violations would not impede its relations with the
organization, and that he expected NATO to sign a cooperation
agreement with Tashkent in the near future. Washington's primary
security interests in Uzbekistan, which concern the stabilization of
Afghanistan, are not likely to be affected by any adverse response of
Karimov to the aid freeze. The US will keep its base and Karimov will
be eager to accept Washington's help in beefing up his armed forces.
Great Power competition

However, Washington's overall power is likely to be diminished,
especially in the geoeconomic sphere. The "great game" in Uzbekistan
concerns the eventual destination of the country's energy reserves.
Washington wants Uzbekistan's oil and gas to flow to Japan rather than
to China, and has reportedly worked behind the scenes in Moscow to
block a gas pipeline to China and to push for infrastructure in Russia. 

A Russo-American accord on the energy issue is checked by Moscow's
strategic interest in restoring influence in Uzbekistan at the expense
of Washington, which has moved Moscow closer to Beijing. At the June
30 summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) in Tashkent,
Moscow firmed up a strategic partnership agreement with the Karimov
regime that includes joint military exercises, and Beijing granted
Tashkent a USUS$1.5 billion aid package - the largest that it has ever
disbursed to a country. The SCO, which also includes Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan, is an effort by Moscow and Beijing to
counter Washington's influence in Central Asia, and to build an
alliance that creates a "transcontinental bridge" between the European
Union and Southeast Asia, excluding US influence. 

At the same time that Moscow and Beijing have attempted to draw
Tashkent more firmly into the SCO orbit, Tokyo has continued to court
the Karimov regime, unconcerned with its human rights violations,
obstacles to economic reform and suppression of domestic opposition.
On August 21, Japanese Foreign Minister Yoriko Kawaguchi visited
Tashkent with a preferential credit of US$150 million, adding to the
US$1.8 billion of aid and investment that Tokyo has given Uzbekistan
over the last several years. In a press conference on August 26,
Karimov singled out Japan as a "fair country" that deserves a seat on
the UN Security Council more than France does.
Economic cooperation and energy policy

The increased activity of Moscow, Beijing, and Tokyo in Uzbekistan
signals a turn toward more immediate regional power centers by
Tashkent and away from Washington and the EU. In the months before the
US aid freeze, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
had suspended loans for most of its projects in Uzbekistan, due to the
absence of economic reform and democratization. 

It appears that the Euro-American alliance considers Karimov to be a
bad investment and is willing to concede influence over his regime as
long as its security interests are met regarding Afghanistan. How the
issue of energy distribution will be resolved remains to be seen.
Washington will continue to appeal to Moscow's economic interests in
order to try to block energy exports to China; Beijing will continue
to woo Tashkent with aid and investment, and seek ultimately to bring
Russia into its sphere of economic influence; and Tokyo will pursue
its efforts to compete with Beijing on Uzbekistan's economic front. 

Under more favorable domestic political conditions, Karimov's position
would be strengthened by the courtship of emerging regional power
centers. As it stands, the Euro-American alliance seems to be betting
that eventually its inherent instability will bring Tashkent's crony
and statist regime down, offering the opportunity for a reassertion of
Western influence. China, Russia and Japan are placing their wagers on
the Tashkent regime, hoping to draw Uzbekistan into their orbits
firmly enough to secure their interests even with a successor regime.
Regime's future difficult to predict

Western analysts and Uzbekistan's democratic opposition speculate that
Karimov fears a Georgian-style Rose Revolution or a Ukrainian-style
Orange Revolution more than it does Islamic revolutionaries. At
present, domestic dissent has not reached a level at which mass direct
action against the regime seems likely, but dissent is building and
the Islamists have reactivated their armed struggle.

>From a geostrategic perspective, Uzbekistan is one of the most
unpredictable and problematic areas of great power conflict in the
world; it bears close watching by those concerned with the future
configuration of world politics. Recent developments point to a
confirmation of the drift toward multipolarity, but that could change
if the current regime in Tashkent loses its hold on power. 

Faithful to his strategy of "reforming" Uzbekistan's political system
through "evolution" rather than "revolution," Karimov engineered
elections on December 26 for a new bicameral parliament that he billed
as a move to decentralize and institutionalize state power. The
previous parliament had a single chamber that was elected by local
bodies; the new one has a directly elected lower house that is charged
with legislation and an indirectly elected and partially appointed
upper house that can block the projects of the lower house, but cannot
initiate legislation itself. 

According to Karimov, the new parliament marks a "devolution of
power"; he will give up his post as chairman of the cabinet of
ministers while retaining the presidency, and will no longer have the
right to sign cabinet resolutions, although he will still issue
decrees. The election demonstrated Karimov's gradualism; although the
new parliament refurbishes the "old house" of Communism, it leaves the
latter standing. The five parties participating in the election all
pledged their loyalty to Karimov and, according to the Russian
newspaper Kommersant, campaigned on their support for him. In
contrast, the four parties opposed to Karimov, which had filed for
places on the ballot, were banned from participation on the basis of
"technical violations." 

The Central Election Commission claimed that 85 percent of eligible
voters participated in the elections; the international press reported
a light turnout, along with instances of "proxy voting," in which
family members came to the polls and cast ballots for their kin. As
would be expected, the democratic opposition criticized the elections
as illegitimate. Otanazar Oripov, leader of the Erk Democratic Party,
summed up the opposition's stance: "The event called 'elections' were
not elections: there was no choice, no competition and no opposition."
Abdurahim Polat, head of the Birlik Party, was blunter, calling the
elections "clowning and buffoonery."
OSCE treads softly as Karimov blasts opposition
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which
sent a nominal team of 21 election monitors, echoed the opposition in
more diplomatic language. Lubomir Kopaj, who headed the "observation
mission," concluded: "Regrettably, the implementation of the election
legislation by the authorities failed to ensure a pluralistic,
competitive and transparent election.

" Focusing on the electoral process itself, rather than the prior
exclusion of the opposition, the Commonwealth of Independent States,
which had sent a full team of monitors, deemed the elections to be
"legitimate, free and transparent." In a street interview with
journalists after he had voted, Karimov responded to criticism of the
elections by accusing the OSCE of cultural imperialism: "I accept with
understanding constructive criticism from the OSCE and observers
currently monitoring the elections. 

But do you not agree with me in saying that a body attempting to
artificially create an opposition similar to itself in Uzbekistan is
no democracy either?" Karimov then moved on to discredit the
opposition, remarking that the Birlik Party "has no practical backing"
in the country and that members of the Erk Party had supported the
Taliban regime in Afghanistan and had "fought against Uzbekistan."
 Reaffirming his gradualist approach, Karimov told his critics that
they should "look for opposition from among young people" and even
"create this opposition" from "young people who have studied in
America and Europe;" but that they should not "create opposition from
those who are rejected." Reform will come, according to Karimov,
through generational change; for the present, Uzbekistan will have to
make do with the "old house.

" As the parliamentary elections played out, Russian President
Vladimir Putin ratified the Moscow-Tashkent strategic partnership
agreement, and Uzbekistan's Foreign Minister Sadyk Safayev pledged
that Tashkent will continue to cooperate with Washington in the "war
on terrorism." On December 28, newspapers and news services around the
world reported that Uzbekistan is one of the recipients of suspected
terrorists from the custody of US security agencies - a process of
"rendition" of detainees to cooperating countries that apply torture.

This article originally appeared in Power and Interest News Report,
PINR, at (www.pinr.com). All comments should be directed to
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