INTERNAL CONTRADICTIONS OF THE SHANGHAI COOPERATION ORGANIZATION

In recent years, China has perceptibly strengthened its position in Central Asia largely due to the multisided cooperation format embodied by the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO). From Beijing’s perspective, it is not only a key organization, but essentially a regional integration project. Mo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kaukenov, Adil
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Central Asia & Central Caucasus Press AB 2013
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Online Access:http://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/internal-contradictions-of-the-shanghai-cooperation-organization
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Summary:In recent years, China has perceptibly strengthened its position in Central Asia largely due to the multisided cooperation format embodied by the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO). From Beijing’s perspective, it is not only a key organization, but essentially a regional integration project. Moreover, Central Asia’s development is closely tied to the development of Xinjiang, in which the Chinese leadership is making large investments in order to eliminate the separatist moods in this unsettled region. Nevertheless, the SCO has substantial systemic contradictions that the new CPR leadership headed by Xi Jinping is trying to overcome. The West initially had a passive attitude toward the SCO. At that time, the North Atlantic Alliance regarded the Shanghai Five as a structure that did not pose a threat to the West’s interests; on the contrary, it showed a decrease in Moscow’s previously dominating role in Central Asia due to the appearance of a new player—China. Later, however, as China’s cooperation with the region’s countries, primarily with Kazakhstan in the oil sector, started to mount, Washington began having a different opinion. The SCO’s prospects for the Central Asian countries are determined by this organization’s capability to maintain the balance of power in the region. Moreover, the region’s countries are interested in acquiring additional investments and capital (Chinese) through the organization’s channels. An analysis of the main areas of development of this structure based on the interests of the Central Asian countries is required for a more precise definition of the SCO’s prospects for the region’s countries.