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This Issue: Volume 2, Number 130
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SHANGHAI COOPERATION ORGANIZATION SUMMIT SUGGESTS NEW
RUSSIA-CHINA LINKS
By Sergei
Blagov
Wednesday, July 6, 2005
Chinese President Hu (L), Kyrgyz Acting President
Bakiyev (2nd L) and Russian President Putin (R) attend a session of
the SCO. As the six Shanghai Cooperation Organization
(SCO) members gathered Kazakhstan's capital, Astana, on July 5, the
summit meeting seemingly adopted a measure of anti-Western rhetoric.
The SCO states (China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan,
and Tajikistan) not only suggested that the U.S.-led coalition
forces in Afghanistan should announce a timetable for withdrawal,
they also issued a declaration demanding, among other things, a
limit to outside interference in a country's internal affairs.
The SCO leaders signed a joint declaration and a "Concept of
SCO Cooperation against Terrorism, Separatism, and Extremism." The
Tashkent summit last year decided to strengthen the SCO, and the
organization moves towards multilateral cooperation between member
states and growing interaction with other international
organizations, said the declaration.
The SCO declaration, as
well as a bilateral Russo-Chinese declaration on "World Order in the
21st Century" adopted on July 2, did not mention the United States
directly. However, these documents are understood to target
perceived U.S. domination in international affairs. Both
declarations reiterated the principles of mutual respect of
sovereignty and territorial integrity, mutual non-aggression and
non-interference.
Moreover, the SCO urged the U.S.-led
coalition forces in Afghanistan to declare a timetable for
withdrawal from Afghanistan as well as from the Uzbek and Kyrgyz
bases in the region that were set up to support operations in
Afghanistan. According to the declaration, now that the active
military phase of the Afghanistan campaign is over, the coalition
should set a deadline for withdrawing their troops from SCO states
(RIA-Novosti, July 5).
However, the SCO states would not
allow a security vacuum to emerge following the anticipated
coalition withdrawal from the region. The SCO leaders would rather
fill the vacuum themselves: they pledged to boost security
cooperation. Chinese President Hu Jintao said after the summit
meeting in Astana: "We have to make every effort to step up security
cooperation or else all our talks about stability will be
pointless."
Beijing has been repeatedly emphasizing a
security angle, noting that the SCO plays an important role in
safeguarding regional security and promoting member states' common
development. Hu Jintao outlined this view in a written interview
with the Kazakhstan News Agency, on the eve of the SCO summit
(Xinhuanet, July 2).
For some SCO leaders, security
cooperation could be vital. For instance, Uzbekistan's President
Islam Karimov faced bloody riots in Andijan in May and has been
cornered by Western criticism since then. Not surprisingly, when
facing a possible regime change, Karimov came to value Russian and
Chinese backing on the Andijan crackdown. He told a press conference
in Astana on July 5 that the international community should feel the
presence of the SCO on the international arena soon.
Russian
media and analysts appear to agree that the SCO has been leaning
towards anti-Western thinking, and possibly a course of action. The
SCO countries proved vulnerable to "color revolutions," hence the
SCO now re-thinks its concept of operation, Kommersant commented.
Now the SCO aims to counter "color revolutions" through collective
action (Kommersant, July 5).
In the wake of "color
revolutions" in the former Soviet Union and the U.S. invasions of
Afghanistan and Iraq, the SCO seeks to curb U.S. influence in
Central Asia, said Vyacheslav Nikonov, president of the Politika
Foundation, a Moscow-based think tank. The SCO states are "coming to
share an interest in restricting American influence in Asia," he
said (RIA-Novosti, June 29).
However, Russian officials have
tended to deny obvious conclusions, claiming that the SCO does not
intent to sustain repressive post-Soviet regimes. The SCO is not an
"anti-orange" block, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov claimed
in June 2005.
In the meantime, the SCO officials approved
observer status for Iran, Pakistan, and India. The leaders believe
the decision to grant observer status to India, Iran and Pakistan
"will expand the capacity of the organization to develop
multilateral and mutually beneficial cooperation," according to the
declaration.
Iranian First Vice President Mohammad Reza Aref
said that Iran could become a bridge between the SCO and Persian
Gulf states. Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz thanked the SCO
for granting Pakistan observer status and said the region was full
of possibilities to ensure stability and progress. Indian Foreign
Minister Natwar Singh also thanked the SCO for granting his country
observer status and said India would cooperate with the organization
(RIA-Novosti, July 5).
The Russian media commented that the
SCO enlargement was a potentially divisive issue, particularly
between the two largest members: Russia and China. Russia sought to
bring India into the SCO, while China suggested Pakistan for the SCO
enlargement. Subsequently, both India and Pakistan were accepted as
observers (Izvestiya, July 6).
Although touted as an exercise
of the "multi-polar world" concept and "multilateralism," the SCO's
decision to admit Iran inevitably becomes an affront to the West. It
remains to be seen whether the SCO could limit its perceived drift
towards anti-Westernism.
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