Carnegie Council

SEARCH:

People Topics

Text Size: A A

Print this Page Email this Page Bookmark and Share

U.S./NATO-Russia Cooperation on Afghanistan and Central Asia

Introduction

David C. Speedie

August 17, 2009

We publish today the second set of papers under the U.S.-Russia strand of our U.S. Global Engagement Program.

These papers—two from Americans, two from Russians—embrace an ambitiously broad spectrum of issues, covering U.S./NATO-Russia cooperation on Afghanistan and Central Asia. Four major points may be seen to emerge from the spirited discussion in the papers:

1. The United States/NATO and Russia have clear and urgent common interests in promoting long-term stability in Afghanistan. These include containing and defeating "radical extremist" forces, reversing the noxious effects of the opium trade from that country, and preventing instability in Afghanistan from impacting an extended region. Despite these shared interests, cooperation between Russia and the West is "episodic," rather than strategic or systematic.

2. Afghanistan must be seen, not in isolation, but in a broader regional (Central Asian) context. This is true both in terms of the importance of the region (strategic location, energy resources) and of the formidable challenges (instability, economic reversals). Russia and the West both see advantages and interests to be protected (thus the recent competition for a military presence in the otherwise marginal Kyrgyzstan), but should avoid a new "Great Game" of promoting self-interest over shared concerns.

3. Afghanistan is now, as one paper writer states, "Obama's War." From campaign pledge to return to the "right" war, the President has: appointed new military and diplomatic leadership in Kabul, including a special envoy; invested in an enhanced troop presence; and made strenuous, if incomplete, efforts to drum up international support for the military and reconstruction effort in Afghanistan.

4. The very future of NATO may be viewed through the Afghan lens. The (lack of) commitment of NATO partners, given military and economic constraints, exemplifies the strains and stresses on an alliance that has expanded both geographically and in terms of mission. While the American and Russian paper writers differ considerably in their views of NATO's continuing relevance and role, even the American view of NATO as the most "successful" and "durable" military alliance in history is tempered by the urging to revisit and reconsider the original NATO treaty, which current challenges may be rendering obsolete.

Related Resources:

blog comments powered by Disqus

Please Note

To search our resources by topic, keyword, author, country etc., click on TOPICS at the top of this page.

YouTube Highlights from Carnegie Council events are now available on our YouTube channel.

Carnegie Council Merchandise

Carnegie Council Merchandise Support the Council! Visit the Carnegie Council store at CaféPress.com and shop for Council-branded merchandise (external site).

Related

Articles, Papers, and Reports
Obama's War

Articles, Papers, and Reports
State of Denial? NATO at 60 and the War in Afghanistan

Articles, Papers, and Reports
Prospects for U.S.-Russia Cooperation in Central Asia

Articles, Papers, and Reports
Pakistani, Afghan, and Iranian Factors of Influence on the Central Asian Region

Program
U.S. Global Engagement Program

Biography

David C. Speedie

Keywords
Security, Terrorism, Warfare

Topics
Afghanistan War
Armed Conflict
Collective Security
International Relations
War on Terror

Regions
Asia, Central Asia

Country
Afghanistan

Features

Policy Innovations Online Magazine

The central address for a fairer globalization.
> More

blue dot separator

Global Ethics Corner Videos

Weekly 90-second videos on newsworthy ethical issues.
> More

Ethics & International Affairs

Go to the Journal for articles on ethics and foreign policy.
> More

postprandial-ft