INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The United States is negotiating with Uzbekistan and Tajikistan to trade nearly 50 military aircraft flown across the border as the Afghan
government collapsed last summer for help hunting terrorists in Afghanistan, according to two people with knowledge of the talks, Politico
reported.The new rulers, the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA), have insisted the aircraft — a mixture of light attack planes and
helicopters — are Afghan property and demanded them back.But Uzbek authorities say they are the property of the United States and will not
be returned.According to Politico, little has been said publicly about the issue, in part because of the sensitivity of Afghan-Uzbek
relations and Russia&s economic and military influence in Central Asia.But they reported that behind the scenes, United States officials
have been quietly working to use the aircraft as leverage to gain a foothold in a region where the United States military no longer has a
presence on the ground, according to a senior Defense Department official and a congressional aide with direct knowledge of the
negotiations, speaking on condition of anonymity.According to Politico, the official said the goal is to provide a number of aircraft to the
Uzbek and Tajik governments in exchange for an informal agreement to &deepen our security relationships& on border security and
counterterrorism.The deal could include anything from increased intelligence sharing to, in the long-term, basing troops or aircraft in
those countries as a regional staging post.Both countries border Afghanistan and are much closer than the American bases hundreds of
kilometers away in the Middle East.Both Central Asian countries are &certainly very interested& in keeping those aircraft, the senior DoD
official said.The post US looks to trade Afghan aircraft for counterterrorism help in Central Asia first appeared on Ariana News.