"For years, Russia and China have had a tacit division of labor in the Central Asian region that both consider their strategic backyard: Moscow provided security oversight, while Beijing helped develop the area's economies.
This month's uprising in Kazakhstan, Central Asia's biggest economy, reaffirmed that Moscow's security primacy remains undisputed -- despite China's growing military might and Beijing's recent attempts to expand its own security footprint.
Russia dispatched thousands of troops to Kazakhstan within hours of President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev's request on Jan. 5. It was only on Monday that China offered security assistance, in a call between its Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Kazakhstan's top diplomat Mukhtar Tileuberdi. By then, the immediate crisis had passed and Mr. Tokayev's grip on the country was no longer in peril.
China has invested tens of billions of dollars in Kazakhstan and the rest of Central Asia, much of it in the oil, gas and minerals sector, over the past decade. The region is crucial to Beijing's global ambitions: It was during a visit to Kazakhstan in 2013 that President Xi Jinping announced the precursor of his signature Belt and Road initiative. Of all the Central Asian leaders, Mr. Tokayev has the greatest personal affinity with China. A Mandarin speaker, he began his career as a Soviet diplomat in Beijing.
Yet China doesn't have the military or intelligence capabilities to protect its regional allies in their hour of need. "China lacks the kind of tools that Russia possesses, such as the airborne troops who speak a language that the locals would understand, and who are ready to fly out and help," said Alexander Gabuev, a China expert at the Carnegie Moscow Center. "These Russian paratroopers defend China's own economic interests," he added. "They protect a secular, pragmatic, friendly regime that's headed by a Sinologist fluent in Chinese."
Yet, this overt Russian troop deployment in Kazakhstan also has highlighted new risks for Beijing, and may end up spurring China to compete with Russia in regional-security matters in coming years, said Dean Cheng, a China expert at the Heritage Foundation think tank.
"The Chinese are definitely going to have to start reassessing the vulnerability of their economic investments," he said. "Before, they held the economic trump cards and could play them and probably sway the local governments in their favor. Now, they have to think about a security component that may weigh against that: Chinese investments are now operating at the pleasure of Russian military forces."
Beijing's security assistance to Kazakhstan and other Central Asian nations is likely to be limited to the areas in which China excels at home, such as surveillance technologies, facial-recognition systems and communications-control equipment that could nip future protests in the bud.
"China is ready to work with Kazakhstan to enhance cooperation between law enforcement and security departments, strengthen bilateral cooperation against external interference, uphold the two countries' political system and political power security, forestall and foil any attempt at instigating 'color revolutions,'" Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said on Monday.
Although all Central Asian states are, to varying degrees, wary of Russia, their former colonial power, China is usually looked upon with an even greater suspicion. While no Central Asian government dared to openly criticize Beijing for its repression of ethnic Uyghurs, Kazakhs and Kyrgyz in Xinjiang, it is an issue that reverberates within public opinion, particularly in Kazakhstan." [1]
The cat days for the Lithuanian authorities with incitement to color revolutions are over.
1. World News: Moscow Trumps Beijing in Region
Trofimov, Yaroslav. Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]. 11 Jan 2022: A.8.
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