File photo of John Kerry
Washington:
Washington's top diplomat, Secretary of State John Kerry, is to visit all five republics in Central Asia for the first time, his office said Tuesday.
After talks on the crisis in Syria in Austria on Friday, Kerry will fly to Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan -- returning on November 3.
State Department spokesman John Kirby said this would be "the first ever visit by a US secretary of state to all five central Asian republics in the same trip."
In the Kyrgyz capital Bishkek, Kerry will witness the opening of a new chancery at the US embassy and a new campus of the American University of Central Asia.
The main political day of the trip will be in the Uzbek city of Samarkand, where Kerry will meet his counterparts from all five former Soviet republics.
Kirby said this new diplomatic format would be known as the "C5+1" and "allow the secretary and ministers to discuss regional and global opportunities as well as challenges."
In Astana, Kerry will hold the fourth meeting of a US-Kazakhstan strategic dialogue and deliver a speech on Central Asia's role in the world.
And in Ashgabat and Dushanbe, he will meet senior officials.
Since the fall of the Soviet Union, the newly independent republics of Central Asia have had differing fates, though their peoples have largely suffered under authoritarian rule.
The United States has been cautiously critical of rights abuses by the local regimes because they need to assure northern supply lines to US troops in neighboring Afghanistan.
The countries also have a shared interest in combating Islamist extremism, but Washington is a side player in the subtle play for influence between China -- the region's main economic partner -- and Russia.
After talks on the crisis in Syria in Austria on Friday, Kerry will fly to Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan -- returning on November 3.
State Department spokesman John Kirby said this would be "the first ever visit by a US secretary of state to all five central Asian republics in the same trip."
In the Kyrgyz capital Bishkek, Kerry will witness the opening of a new chancery at the US embassy and a new campus of the American University of Central Asia.
The main political day of the trip will be in the Uzbek city of Samarkand, where Kerry will meet his counterparts from all five former Soviet republics.
Kirby said this new diplomatic format would be known as the "C5+1" and "allow the secretary and ministers to discuss regional and global opportunities as well as challenges."
In Astana, Kerry will hold the fourth meeting of a US-Kazakhstan strategic dialogue and deliver a speech on Central Asia's role in the world.
And in Ashgabat and Dushanbe, he will meet senior officials.
Since the fall of the Soviet Union, the newly independent republics of Central Asia have had differing fates, though their peoples have largely suffered under authoritarian rule.
The United States has been cautiously critical of rights abuses by the local regimes because they need to assure northern supply lines to US troops in neighboring Afghanistan.
The countries also have a shared interest in combating Islamist extremism, but Washington is a side player in the subtle play for influence between China -- the region's main economic partner -- and Russia.
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