Central Asia's Second Chance

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Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2005 - Asia, Central - 389 pages

A leading authority on Central Asia offers a sweeping review of the region's path from independence to the post-9/11 world. The first decade of Central Asian independence was disappointing for those who envisioned a straightforward transition from Soviet republics to independent states with market economies and democratic political systems. Leaders excused political failures by pointing to security risks, including the presence of terrorist training camps in Afghanistan. The situation changed dramatically after 9/11, when the camps were largely destroyed and the United States introduced a military presence. More importantly the international community engaged with these states to give them a "second chance" to address social and economic problems. But neither the aid-givers nor the recipients were willing to approach problems in new ways. Now, terrorists groups are once again making their presence felt and some states may be becoming global security risks. This book explores how the region squandered its second chance and what might happen next.

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Contents

After September 11 An Unexpected Chance
1
The First Ten Years of Independence
20
The Geopolitics of Central Asia prior to September 11
52
Copyright

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About the author (2005)

Martha Brill Olcott , selected by Washingtonian magazine for its list of "71 People the President Should Listen To" about the war on terrorism, is a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace specializing in Central Asian and Caspian affairs. She has followed interethnic relations in Russia and the former Soviet states for more than thirty years and has traveled extensively throughout Central Asia. Olcott codirects the Carnegie Moscow Center Project on Religion, Society, and Security in the former Soviet Union.

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