Russian
President Vladimir Putin agreed a deal with Kyrgyzstan that will allow Russia
to keep a military base in the country until 2032 as Moscow and Washington
jostle for influence in the region.
The
agreement, essentially a set of memorandums of intent ahead of formal treaties,
also foresees Russia wiping out nearly $500 million in debt owed by Kyrgyzstan,
a significant sum for the central Asian ex-Soviet state.
Landlocked
Kyrgyzstan is the only nation in the world to host both Russian and U.S. bases.
Both Moscow and Washington are seeking to extend their presence in the country
following the ousting of President Kurmanbek Bakiyev in a revolution in 2010.
The
agreements signed during Putin’s visit include a document spelling out the
terms for the presence of Russia’s Kant base and another document to settle
Kyrgyzstan’s debt to Russia.
A source
in the Kyrgyz government told Agence France-Presse Russia would be able to keep
its base in the country for another 15 years after 2017. “A new document should
be developed by 2017,” the source said, adding the agreement could then be
extended every five years.
Kyrgyzstan
is also home to a U.S. air base which is a vital transit point used to ferry
troops to Afghanistan, refuel warplanes and evacuate wounded soldiers.
The
current lease on the Manas air base expires in 2014, and U.S. Defense Secretary
Leon Panetta travelled to Kyrgyzstan in March in an effort to persuade the
local government to leave the door open to renewing access to the base after
2014.
Speaking
to reporters, Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev confirmed that his government
would like to turn the Manas base into a civilian airport after 2014, while
Putin sought to stress that the fate of the U.S. base was not the subject of
yesterday’s talks.
Kyrgyz
Finance Minister Olga Lavrova said that Russia had agreed to write off
Kyrgyzstan’s $489-million debt.
“Part of
the sum in the amount of $189 million will be fully written off in a lump sum,”
she said. “The other part in the amount of $300 million will be written off in
annual installments beginning from 2016.”
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