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The specificity of acquisition of state independence in the Central Asian Republics
[journal article]
Abstract The author of the article shows how difficult and specific was the path of independence of Central Asian states. After the collapse of the USSR, the independent states of the region, which had never solved domestic political issues on their own, faced many different problems. History has shown who g... view more
The author of the article shows how difficult and specific was the path of independence of Central Asian states. After the collapse of the USSR, the independent states of the region, which had never solved domestic political issues on their own, faced many different problems. History has shown who gained independence and by what means. From both theoretical and practical points of view, all the new five states were not ready to become independent. The most bitter and bloody path was taken by Tajikistan, which was dragged into civil war for five years. Each state in the Central Asian region, which has similar traditions and culture to its neighbors, followed its own unique path of development. At the same time, all states of the Central Asian region have faced identical internal political problems: the threat of Islamic radicalism, socio-economic and intraconfessional problems, and problems of extremism, terrorism and separatism. The problem of Islamic radicalism has become particularly acute in Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. Along with internal political and internal economic problems, the newly independent states have also faced foreign policy problems, namely border settlement and water and energy regulation. At present, the region is emphasizing the establishment of close cooperation between the newly independent states.... view less
Keywords
Central Asia; USSR successor state; political independence; nation; political development; domestic policy; foreign policy; conflict
Classification
Political Science
Free Keywords
Central Asian region; issues of self-preservation; security issues
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 104-115
Journal
Siberia Humanitarian (2023) 3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.32324/2949-1568-2023-3-104-115
ISSN
2949-1568
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0