U.S. Officials to Visit Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan for Decade-Long Partnership Talks
U.S. officials are set to visit Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan from October 26 to 30, marking a decade of the U.S.-Central Asia partnership under the C5+1 diplomatic platform. The trip follows a series of high-level meetings, including President Tokayev's encounter with U.S. diplomat Matthew Klimow in New York last September.
The U.S. delegation will be led by Sergio Gorre, the U.S. Special Representative for South and Central Asia, and Christopher Landau, the Deputy Secretary of State. This visit is part of the U.S.'s ongoing efforts to strengthen relations and expand trade ties with its Central Asian partners.
In September, President Tokayev met with Sergio Gorre in New York, expressing support for Gorre's mission. During their upcoming visit, Gorre and Landau will meet with government officials from both countries to discuss economic and security issues, further cementing the ties between the nations.
The U.S.-Central Asia partnership, now a decade old, continues to flourish with this upcoming visit. The talks aim to foster stronger economic and security cooperation between the U.S. and its Central Asian partners, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.
Read also:
- American teenagers taking up farming roles previously filled by immigrants, a concept revisited from 1965's labor market shift.
- Weekly affairs in the German Federal Parliament (Bundestag)
- Landslide claims seven lives, injures six individuals while they work to restore a water channel in the northern region of Pakistan
- Escalating conflict in Sudan has prompted the United Nations to announce a critical gender crisis, highlighting the disproportionate impact of the ongoing violence on women and girls.