Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 9 – Two of the three
Central Asian states adjoining Afghanistan – Tajikistanand Uzbekistan – have
recently increased their border defenses, while the third – Turkmenistan – is counting
on its neutrality to protect it from ethnic or Islamist threat coming from the
territory of their neighbor now that the US-led coalition there is leaving.
Tajikistan, which shares the longest
border with Afghanistan of the three (1370 kilometers) and members of its
titular nationality are to be found on both sides of the border, announced this
week that it is creating a special military area to prevent against any cross-border attacks (rus.ozodi.org/content/article/26781112.html).
Uzbekistan, which has the shortest
border with Afghanistan of the three (137 kilometers) but which also has
co-ethnics in that country, has announced a series of measures to counter what
it says is the increasing activity of armed formations and drug traders in
northern Afghanistan (gundogar.org/?022500000000000000011062015010000#15394).
The most important of these
measures, it appears, is the putting in place of a new system of communication
among guard posts along the border. As a result, if one is threatened, others
can come to its aid without having to call in additional military or security
forces. That move supplements its river defense forces which are already in
place.
According to the Afghanistan
Analysts Network, which Gundogar.org cites, Uzbekistan’s section of the border “is
the best-defended part of the border of the post-Soviet countries with that
state.”
The situation in Turkmenistan is
less clear, information about that country always being more difficult to glean
than in the case of the other two. But it seems clear that it is significantly
less well-prepared than Uzbekistan or Tajikistan to counter any threats coming
from Afghanistan along the 744 kilometer border it shares with it.
According to an analysis on the Centrasia.ru
portal, Tajikistan benefits from having Russian troops on its territory,
Uzbekistan has a relatively effective military and security service, but
Turkmenistan has a military which is hardly worthy of the name and may not be
able to fulfill its most pressing tasks (centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1420446000).
Turkmenistan President Gurbanguly
Berdymukhammedov hopes that his policy of neutrality and cooperation with the
Taliban and Turkmen ethnic groups in Afghanistan will allow him to proceed
without having to find out. But other Turkmens are increasingly worried that
that the Taliban may use Turkmenistan’s neutrality against it and seek to
seize its gas fields.
Because Turkmenistan does not have
the military alliance with a major power as Tajikistan does or the military
and security apparatus of Uzbekistan, they have pressed for an expansion of the
military and succeeded in getting Ashgabat to agree to hiring some
professional soldiers.
Given high unemployment, many
Turkmens are interested in the income that such service might provide. But the
quality of military life is so bad – Turkmens routinely refer to their army
as “a prison,” some report – that draft avoidance and resistance is rife,
making it unclear whether even the appearance of professional sergeants will
be sufficient to resist any incursion.
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