ID | 153849 |
Title Proper | Uzbekistan's defensive self-reliance |
Other Title Information | Karimov's foreign policy legacy |
Language | ENG |
Author | Fazendeiro, Bernardo Teles |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | President Islam Karimov's death provides an opportunity to gauge the origins and consequences of Uzbekistan's foreign policy. This article is aimed at contributing to that on-going conversation. To do so, it assesses the nature of Uzbekistani foreign policy, which the author categorizes as a type of defensive self-reliance, and to what extent the latter conditioned the government of Uzbekistan's international engagement. The author describes the main features of self-reliance and argues that the pursuit thereof led to five key trends: the relentless concern with international equality; a focus on bilateral relations; an aggressive defence of Uzbekistan's image; a drive for self-sufficiency; and a reluctance to embrace expansionist ideological agendas. To make his argument, the author begins by conceptualizing and distinguishing between ‘defensive’ and ‘offensive’ manifestations of self-reliance. He then traces the patterns of Uzbekistani self-reliance and concludes with a brief assessment of potential consequences were the foreign policy to change in the near future. The conclusion suggests that a shift from defensive to offensive self-reliance may constitute a problematic change to Uzbekistani foreign policy, but that relaxing any other of those trends may help open up the republic and the region of post-Soviet central Asia as a whole. |
`In' analytical Note | International Affairs Vol. 93, No.2; Mar 2017: p.409–427 |
Journal Source | International Affairs Vol: 93 No 2 |
Key Words | Post-Communism ; Central Asia ; Uzbekistan ; Self-Reliance ; Karimov ; Foreign Policy |