US airbase in Kyrgyzstan officially closes
by alethoRT | June 3, 2014
The
US military has finally closed its transit center at Bishkek’s Manas
airport, Kyrgyzstan. During the 12 1/2 years of the Afghan military
campaign the facility remained the primary air supply hub for the ISAF’s
contingent in the war zone.
Formerly
known as Manas Air Base (unofficial name: Ganci Air Base), the facility
became operable in 2001, when the US started Operation Enduring Freedom
against the Taliban forces in Afghanistan.
The
facility soon proved to be absolutely indispensable, as it transported
to and from Afghanistan up to 5.5 million American servicemen and allied
troops from 26 countries – accounting for 98 percent of personnel
rotation during the Afghan campaign.
Under
the base’s current commander, US Air Force Colonel John Millard, there
were days when it hosted up to 4,000 servicemen either being deployed on
a mission to Afghanistan or returning from the warzone.
Another
important job done by the 376th Air Expeditionary Wing in Manas was the
aerial refueling of ISAF fighter jets operating in Afghanistan. Over
the years, Boeing KC-135 Stratotankers performed 33,000 flight refueling
operations in Afghan skies, pumping 1 million tons of aviation fuel
into the tanks of assault fighter jets.
The
US base has been at the center of several scandals, including the fatal
shooting of a local man by an American guard at a base checkpoint. The
killing was not prosecuted by Kyrgyzstan, as US military personnel have
legal immunity in the country. Critics also voiced concerns over
environmental damage and potential terrorist threats from US enemies
against the base.
In
2009, then-Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiev announced plans to shut
the base. Yet after long negotiations with Washington, the airbase was
simply renamed Transit Center Manas.
But
in 2013, the Kyrgyz parliament refused to prolong the contract with
Washington, obliging the US to withdraw all personnel form the base no
later than on July 10, 2014. Now it appears that the demand will be fulfilled one month earlier than the deadline, by the end of next week.
Millard,
who earlier handed over the symbolic keys to the base to Kyrgyz
authorities, told journalists that the US government has left $30
million worth of equipment, facilities and generators to the country’s
government.
The base’s closure has left several hundred locals previously employed at the base without work.
Reportedly, there are 300 American servicemen left at Manas airfield, carrying out the closure of the base.
Yet
its closure does not mean that the US has no more interests in
Kyrgyzstan. A new US embassy is currently being constructed in the
country.
The
new building will reportedly be big enough to host not only a
diplomatic mission but also a detachment of US intelligence personnel to
be stationed in the country.
The
geographical position of Kyrgyzstan, situated right at the crossroads
between Russia, China, Afghanistan and a number of Central Asian
countries, make Kyrgyzstan an ideal place for intelligence gathering and
eavesdropping, to ensure that Washington keeps an eye on the region
after its troops withdraw from Afghanistan.

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