Narcotics,Radicalism, and Armed Conflict in Central Asia: The Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan |
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Authors: | Svante E. Cornell |
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Affiliation: | 1. Central Asia-Caucasus Institute and Silk Road Studies Program, School of Advanced International Studies , Johns Hopkins University , Washington , DC , USA;2. Department of East European Studies , Uppsala University , Sweden scornell@silkroadstudies.org |
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Abstract: | While the academic debate on security has broadened in recent years, it has failed to cohesively include transnational organized crime and drug trafficking as a security issue. However, especially in weak states in developing and postcommunist regions, these phenomena are having an increasingly negative effect on security in the military, political, economic, and societal sense. Security issues in Central Asia are a prominentexample of the links between drug trafficking and military threats to security. This is illustrated most clearly by the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), which has been both a major actor in the drug trade from Afghanistan to Central Asia as well as the most serious violent nonstate actor in the region. The link between the drug trade and armed conflict is of fundamental importance to understanding the challenges to Central Asian security. |
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