EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
America needs an effective strategy for Greater Central Asia to enhance its competitive position in a region that will significantly impact the Russia-China relationship, geopolitical competition in Asia, and key resource markets including uranium, oil, and natural gas. The proposed strategy ensures open access in Greater Central Asia while securing opportunities for profitable American investment through technological partnership, resource development, and logistical facilitation.
FINDINGS:
- Greater Central Asia requires an inclusive regional definition that includes Azerbaijan, Afghanistan, and considers Mongolia, Georgia, and Armenia as critical extensions of the core region.
- The region represents significant opportunities for U.S. investment and access to critical resources including uranium, rare earths, and lithium that are increasingly important to America's technological advancement.
- The current U.S. bureaucratic structure hinders a unified regional approach, with different agencies treating interconnected parts of Greater Central Asia as separate regions.
- Greater Central Asia lies at the intersection of multiple nuclear powers' interests, making stability in the region vital to global security.
- The region is central to U.S.-China competition, as China's pathway to Europe and the Middle East runs through Greater Central Asia.
RECOMMENDATIONS:
- Appoint a Special Presidential Envoy for Greater Central Asia at the National Security Council to coordinate U.S. strategy and activities across the region.
- Create a non-governmental U.S.-Greater Central Asia Business Council to assist with regional economic integration and standardization.
- Establish a Greater Central Asia Regional Security Framework focused on intelligence sharing and counter-terrorism cooperation.
- Rebrand the U.S. platform for regional interaction as C6+1 and prioritize region-wide initiatives over those directed at individual states.
- Accelerate engagement with emerging elites through educational programs and professional advancement opportunities that attract them to the U.S.
Click here to download the full report.