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Putin Orders Support of Tajik Military After US Pullout From Afghanistan

© RIA NovostiShoigu said a program to modernize the Tajik army might cost up to $200 million
Shoigu said a program to modernize the Tajik army might cost up to $200 million - Sputnik International
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President Vladimir Putin has instructed the Russian military to assess the risks of the withdrawal of US and international coalition troops from Afghanistan and help Tajikistan face potential threats after the pullout, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said Thursday.

NOVO-OGARYOVO, August 1 (RIA Novosti) – President Vladimir Putin has instructed the Russian military to assess the risks of the withdrawal of US and international coalition troops from Afghanistan and help Tajikistan face potential threats after the pullout, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said Thursday.

“President Vladimir Putin’s orders are straightforward: to assess all risks and to help the Tajik armed forces face these risks,” Shoigu said after talks between Putin and his Tajik counterpart, Emomali Rakhmon.

Shoigu said a program to modernize the Tajik army might cost up to $200 million and involve repairs of existing equipment as well as purchases of new weaponry.

The program would be implemented in three stages – in 2013-2015 – and in two five-year periods later on, he said.

According to the Military Balance Report by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, Tajik armed forces personnel totaled 16,300 as of 2011, and include land-based and mobile units, an air force and an anti-aircraft force that mostly use outdated Soviet-era military equipment.

At the same time, Tajikistan largely relies on the presence of a Russian base on its territory.

A total of 7,000 Russian troops are stationed at three military facilities, collectively known as the 201st military base: in Dushanbe; the southwestern city of Qurgonteppa, some 100 kilometers from Dushanbe; and Kulob, about 200 kilometers to the southwest of the capital.

The base was opened in 2004 and hosts Russia’s largest military contingent deployed abroad. Moscow and Dushanbe agreed in October 2012 that the base would remain in Tajikistan until at least 2042.

Tajik President Rakhmon said Thursday that the Tajik parliament would ratify the agreement on the 201st military base this fall.

The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), which has been fighting the radical Islamist Taliban movement in Afghanistan since 2001, is expected to withdraw from the war-torn country in 2014.

Russia’s military intelligence agency, the GRU, said in May that it expected the influence of the Taliban to grow in Afghanistan after international coalition forces are pulled out.

GRU head Lt. Gen. Igor Sergun said the situation in Afghanistan posed a “serious challenge to international stability” and the ISAF withdrawal in 2014 could also increase the threat of terrorism and religious extremism.

 

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