Value to Big Powers May Not Save Kyrgyzstan -- New York Times
MOSCOW — A year and a half ago, the world’s great powers were fighting like polecats over Kyrgyzstan, a landlocked stretch of mountains in the heart of Central Asia.
The United States was ferociously holding on to the Manas Air Base, a transit hub considered crucial to NATO efforts in Afghanistan. Russia was so jealous of its traditional dominance in the region that it promised the Kyrgyz president $2.15 billion in aid the day he announced he was closing Manas. With the bidding war that followed, Kyrgyzstan could be forgiven for seeing itself as a global player.
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More News On Kyrgyzstan
Kyrgyz Leader Wades Into Ethnic Firestorm -- Wall Street Journal
Kyrgyz president says Uzbek barricades will be removed -- Washington Post
US envoy urges independent probe into Kyrgyz riots -- Yahoo News/AP
U.S. urges Kyrgyzstan to end humanitarian crisis -- Yahoo News/Reuters
Humanitarian Crisis Deepens In Kyrgyzstan -- Radio Free Europe
UN Chief Launches Aid Appeal for Kyrgyzstan -- Voice of America
UN launches Kyrgyzstan aid appeal -- Al Jazeera
Refugee issue set to linger as Kyrgyz violence subsides -- Xinhuanet
Ethnic Uzbeks fear going home -- Boston.com
Some Refugees Begin Returning to Kyrgyzstan -- New York Times
Is Kyrgyzstan's Interim Government Equal To The Crisis? -- Radio Free Europe
Ethnic fault lines of Stalin era implode -- Sydney Morning Herald
Clinton Cautious on Blame for Kyrgyz Violence -- Voice of America
Clinton Says Kyrgyz Ex-Leader May Be Behind Unrest -- Bloomberg Businessweek
Clinton: Allegations about Kyrgyz violence must be 'taken seriously' -- CNN
Kyrgyz pogrom is international disgrace -- Adam Oxford, The Guardian opinion
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