SOURCE: KREMLIN.RU
28 January 2020
SHOULD POMPEO’S CENTRAL ASIA TOUR WORRY THE KREMLIN? Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Uzbekistan: it has been a long time since a senior U.S. official last made a long tour of post-Soviet countries. Furthermore, these are nations whose ties with the United States are of utmost importance for Moscow. Pompeo’s visits, especially those to Minsk and Kyiv, might be of predominant significance for how the events will eventually unfold in the postSoviet area that Moscow has recognized as its traditional sphere of influence. And Washington’s top diplomat’s trips to Nur-Sultan and Tashkent corroborate growing U.S. activity in Central Asia.
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ecretary of State Mike Pompeo will travel on January 30 to Kyiv for meetings with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and other officials, including Foreign Minister Vadym Prystaiko and Defense Minister Andriy Zahorodniuk. In Kyiv, Pompeo is expected to underscore U.S. support for Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, the U.S. State Department said in a statement. The U.S. top diplomat’s trip to Ukraine previously had been scheduled for early January, but was postponed amidst escalating tensions in the
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Middle East. What seems to draw attention is the mere fact that Pompeo is set to participate in a wreath-laying ceremony commemorating those killed in battles in Donbas. On February 1, in Minsk, Pompeo is scheduled to meet with Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko and Foreign Minister Vladimir Makei, confirming Washington’s normalization of bilateral relations. Lukashenko has sought better relations with the West since Russia’s annexation of Crimea as Belarus is fearful that Russia could eventually try to swallow it up. In 16