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World / Asia

Trump to host his first summit with Central Asian leaders

Published: 06 Nov 2025 - 11:23 pm | Last Updated: 06 Nov 2025 - 11:27 pm
US President Donald Trump speaks during an event about weight-loss drugs in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / AFP)

US President Donald Trump speaks during an event about weight-loss drugs in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / AFP)

AFP

Almaty, Kazakhstan: US President Donald Trump will host all five Central Asian leaders in Washington on Thursday for the first time, a few months after they held separate summits with Russia's Vladimir Putin and China's Xi Jinping.

The West has upped its interest with the resource-rich region, where Moscow's traditional influence has been questioned since the Kremlin's Ukraine invasion and where China is also a major player.

Since the Ukraine war, the leaders of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan have stepped up contacts with other countries in the so-called "C5+1" format.

Washington and the European Union have intensified their diplomacy with the landlocked countries that gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, with a first US-Central Asia summit in 2023.

Russia, China, the West and Turkiye have all competed for influence in the resource-rich region.

This year, EU chief Ursula von der Leyen, Russian President Vladimir Putin and China's leader Xi Jinping have all visited the region for summits with the five Central Asian leaders.

At the same time, ending most regional conflicts has enabled Central Asian countries to put on a united front in diplomacy.

China -- which shares borders with Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan -- has presented itself as a main commercial partner, investing in huge infrastructure projects.

The ex-Soviet republics still see Moscow as a strategic partner but have been spooked by Russia's invasion of neighbouring Ukraine.

Turkey has built on its cultural ties with Central Asia and taken advantage of a distracted Russia to boost military and trade ties.

The West established some ties with the region in the early 2000s, when Western troops used bases in Central Asia during Afghanistan campaigns.

Resource-rich region

The United States and European Union are drawn by the region's huge -- but still mostly unexploited -- natural resources as they try to diversify their rare earths supplies and reduce dependence on Beijing.

Other than rare earths, Kazakhstan is the world's largest uranium producer, Uzbekistan has giant gold reserves and Turkmenistan is rich in gas. Mountainous Kyrgyzstan and

Tajikistan are also opening up new mineral deposits.

Russia remains firmly established in the region's energy sector, supplying hydrocarbons through Soviet-era infrastructure and building nuclear plants.

Central Asia is also one of the world's most polluted regions and hardest hit by climate change. All five countries have struggled with a shortage of water.

Complicated logistics

But exploiting these giant reserves remains complicated in the impoverished states with harsh and remote terrains.

Almost as large as the EU, but home to only about 75 million, Central Asia is landlocked and covered by deserts and mountains. It is sandwiched between countries that have strained ties with the West: Russia to the north, China to the east and Iran and Afghanistan to the south.

But, on the Silk Road for centuries, it is attempting to revive its historic role as a trading hub.

The five Central Asian states have forged several partnerships to break free from their dependence on Moscow.

Both Beijing and Brussels support the development of a transport route across the Caspian Sea that allows reaching Central Asia from Europe through the Caucasus, bypassing Russia.

Between 2021, shortly before Russia's Ukraine invasion, and 2024, the transport of goods by this road saw a 660 percent increase, official statistics show.