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As Russian Troops Leave, What’s Next for Kazakhstan?

As Russian Troops Leave, What’s Next for Kazakhstan?

January 13, 2022
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As Russian Troops Leave, What’s Next for Kazakhstan?

January 13, 2022
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As Russian Troops Leave, What’s Next for Kazakhstan?
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Here is today’s Foreign Policy brief: CSTO troops begin withdrawal from Kazakhstan, OSCE talks over Ukraine begin, and Britain seeks to move forward on India trade deal.

If you would like to receive Morning Brief in your inbox every weekday, please sign up here.

As CSTO Troops Leave, Kazakhstan Faces the Unknown

Here is today’s Foreign Policy brief: CSTO troops begin withdrawal from Kazakhstan, OSCE talks over Ukraine begin, and Britain seeks to move forward on India trade deal.

If you would like to receive Morning Brief in your inbox every weekday, please sign up here.

As CSTO Troops Leave, Kazakhstan Faces the Unknown

A contingent of troops dispatched by the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) will begin withdrawing from Kazakhstan today, less than a week after they were deployed by the Russian-led organization to help quell rare protests over fuel prices across the country.

The relatively swift withdrawal of the 2,500 troops allays fears that the mostly-Russian force would continue and grow within the country. It also helps President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev regain an air of legitimacy after calling for foreign help last week.

Tokayev blames the protests that engulfed the country on “terrorists,” while Russian President Vladimir Putin suggested there were outside influences instigating a so-called “color revolution.” Erica Marat and Assel Tutumlu, writing in Foreign Policy on Tuesday, rejected that notion.

As well as arresting more than 10,000 people, it appears Tokayev is now cleaning house behind the scenes, targeting associates and family members of former President Nursultan Nazarbayev. On Tuesday, Tokayev appeared to order a shakedown of Nazarbayev-connected businesses, announcing that a yet to be disclosed group of companies would be expected to pay “significant and regular contributions” to a special social fund.

Fears of a crackdown has caused Kazakhstan’s well-heeled to flee, with private jet tracking data showing several planes leaving the country headed to destinations including London, Dubai, and Geneva.

While Tokayev attempts to assert himself domestically, his wider loyalties following his request for CSTO support last week are now an open question. The security bloc’s rapid acceptance of Tokayev’s plea marks a turning point for the Russian-led group, which had previously rejected requests from Armenia and Kyrgyzstan for outside support.

“The CSTO has always been viewed as a fig leaf for Russia and patronized as a talking shop, as something that lacks capacity,” Alexander Cooley, a Central Asia expert and professor of political science at Barnard College told Foreign Policy. “Well, here you have a case where not only was there an intervention, but the speed at which the decision was reached was really jarring.”

For Cooley, the practical role of the troops—a relatively small group mostly charged at securing key infrastructure—is less important than the political role: “This is really about the Kremlin strongly backing Tokayev in this internal standoff. Sending a clear signal to Kazakh security services that might be wavering that now the Kremlin backs authority and the government. Its role as a kind of regime preservation vehicle is now clear.”

Whether Kazakhstan moves deeper into Russia’s orbit after this episode is unclear, Cooley sees Russia’s intervention as opportunistic, but with a potential payoff down the line once the focus moves elsewhere. “They saw they could put Tokayev in a type of political debt, and we don’t know how that’s going to be repaid.”

What We’re Following Today

OSCE meets. The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe holds discussions regarding Russia and Ukraine, the final event of a weeklong diplomatic effort to calm tensions in the region. Wednesday’s NATO-Russia Council yielded little progress as neither side appeared to budge from their positions. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s president has said he is optimistic that peace talks to end the war in the eastern Donbass region of Ukraine could take place soon with a summit of Ukrainian, French, German, and Russian leaders planned for the end of January.

An India-U.K. trade deal? British Trade Minister Anne-Marie Trevelyan is in India today for talks aimed at making progress on a sweeping bilateral trade deal between the two countries. Discussions are currently in the “pre-negotiation” phase according to a U.K. trade spokesman with formal negotiations expected to begin later this year. The deal is aimed at doubling trade between the two countries by 2030, a figure that currently stands at $15.4 billion.

Cameroon’s civil war. Sen. Henry Kemende, an opposition lawmaker in Cameroon’s Social Democratic Front (SDF) party, was shot dead by suspected separatists in the city of Bamenda in the country’s Anglophone region on Wednesday, the latest instance of violence as the country fights an insurgency from English-speakers who wish to form a breakaway state. The killing comes as Cameroon hosts the African Cup of Nations, the continent’s premier international soccer tournament.

Lithuania’s Taiwan stance. Lithuania’s government is under public pressure over its supportive stance toward Taiwan after a poll conducted for the foreign ministry last month leaked to local media. The polls showed 58 percent of those surveyed viewed Lithuania’s approach to China and Taiwan either negatively or very negatively. China has blocked Lithuanian imports over the country’s warming ties with Taiwan, which include allowing Taiwan to open a de facto embassy in Vilnius.

Brazil’s election. With months remaining before Brazilians go to the polls and neither of the two presumed frontrunners formally declaring their candidacies, former Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has opened up an enormous lead over current President Jair Bolsonaro in a Wednesday poll. Asking to vote for a preferred candidate if the election were held that day, 45 percent opted for Lula, while just 23 percent chose Bolsonaro. The incumbent president faces low approval ratings, with 50 percent of Brazilian voters saying his government is bad or terrible.

A Chinese woman was left stranded at the house of a man she met on a blind date for four days after her city was placed under a rapid lockdown.

The woman, known as Ms. Wang, had gone over to the man’s house for a meal when his neighborhood in Zhengzhou had been put under a strict lockdown due to COVID-19 cases in the area.

In a post on social media, Wang said that the situation was “not ideal” but that the man had cooked for her every day they had been stuck together. “He doesn’t speak much,” she added. It’s not clear whether Wang has made it home, or is still on her extended date.

The post As Russian Troops Leave, What’s Next for Kazakhstan? appeared first on Foreign Policy.

Tags: Foreign & Public DiplomacykazakhstanMilitaryRussia
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