A leading Russian newspaper is reporting that the Pentagon is in talks with three Central Asian states – Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan – concerning the transfer of military equipment currently being used by American forces in Afghanistan.
The prospect of the three Central Asian states being the beneficiaries of American largesse is not sitting well with Russia. A Russian diplomat is quoted in the report, published by the business daily Kommersant on June 15, as saying Moscow would consider any gifting of military equipment as “absolutely unacceptable.”
The cost of withdrawing military equipment could be exorbitant for US and NATO forces as they wrap up military operations in Afghanistan by 2014. Meanwhile, the notion that US forces might leave some of the equipment behind for use by Central Asian militaries is not particularly new. Reports that the United States might give materiel to the Uzbek military began circulating in late 2011.
But the process, if the Russian report is to be believed, now seems to be at a fairly advanced stage. Kommersant cited “well informed sources” as saying the three Central Asian states – all of them members of the Kremlin-led Collective Security Treaty Organization – would be given armored vehicles, tank transporters, prime movers, tank trucks, special-purpose graders, bulldozers and water trucks after US and NATO forces pull out of Afghanistan in 2014. Some of this equipment would reportedly be stored at local installations. In addition, the Pentagon plans to provide Afghanistan’s neighbors with medical equipment, communications systems, fire extinguishing equipment and even mobile gyms and other housing-related facilities.
Central Asia: Closed-Door Talks Underway to Leave Pentagon Goodies Behind. June 15, 2012 - 1:06pm
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