America’s Unfinished Play in Central Asia
In Central Asia, Washington must replace episodic symbolism with a sustained economic, legal, and supply-chain strategy. Washington has a habit of chasing symbols when it should be building systems. Greenland is a symbol: icy, strategic, dramatic, and easy to explain in one sentence. Central Asia is a system: less theatrical, more complicated, and vastly more important for the next decade of geopolitical competition. If the United States is serious about reducing strategic dependence on China and managing long-term competition with Russia, it should stop treating Central Asia as a periodic talking point and start treating it as a standing priority—beginning with Kazakhstan. Central Asia lies at the intersection of Russia and China and along the main overland routes between Europe and Asia. It is rich in strategic commodities, and Kazakhstan, in particular, is central to discussions of uranium and broader minerals. In other words, supply-chain resilience and geopolit...