Nikolay Bordyuzha, Secretary General of CSTO
October 21, 2007 1948 - born in Oryol 1972 - graduates, Perm Command-Engineering School 1975 - serves in KGB 1976 - Commissioner, Senior Commissioner, Department Deputy Head Army Counter-Intelligence, KGB 1989 - Head, Staff Administration Department, KGB 1991 - Deputy Head of Staff Directorate, Federal Government Communications and Information Agency 1992 - Deputy Commander, Border Troops of the Russian Federation 1995 - Deputy Director, Federal Border Guards Service of The Russian Federation 1998 - Director, Federal Border Guards Service of the Russian Federation 1998 - Head, Presidential Administration of The Russian Federation 1998 - Secretary, Security Council of the Russian Federation 1999 - Chairman, State Customs Committee of the Russian Federation 1999 - Russian Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary To Denmark 2001 - Professor, Academy of Problems of Security, Defense, Law and Order 2003 - Secretary General, Collective Security Treaty Organisation
CSTO – a NATO for the East?
The members of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation - Russia and six neighbouring states – have agreed to set up a collective rapid reaction force to combat terrorism, military aggression, and drug trafficking.CSTO news conference (Part 1) CSTO news conference (Part 2)
The decision was made during a CSTO summit in Moscow, attended by the leaders and foreign ministers of the member-states: Russia, Belarus and five countries in the Caucasus and Central Asia - Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, the current chair of the group, said the decision was momentous.
What is CSTO?
“I would like to emphasise the importance of this decision to establish rapid reaction forces. It’s aimed at strengthening the military capacity of our organisation.”
Speaking at a media conference, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said the new units “will not be less powerful than those of NATO”.
He said: “the reason behind the creation of the collective forces of operative functioning is a considerable conflict potential which is accumulating in the CSTO zone”.
Medvedev added that the force “should become an effective tool which would maintain security in the region”.
Up to now, the organisation has positioned itself as an important political and military alliance in the post-Soviet space. But other countries haven’t perceived it as such.
- Created on May 15, 1992.
- Main goal: to provide security in the post-Soviet space; to prevent international terrorism and extremism.
- Main threats: Afghanistan and Pakistan.
- Member states: Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan. Former member-state: Georgia.
0 comments