Washington
Times - 01.06.2002
The
Washington Times
U.S. Senators
Visit War Zone
By Marina
Kozlova
TASHKENT,
Uzbekistan, Jan. 6 (UPI) -- U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman said Sunday that
a Senate delegation has discussed questions of democracy and human
rights with Uzbek President Islam Karimov.
"The reality is that where there is
no freedom and economic opportunity there is the ground in which
extremism can grow," said Lieberman.
Lieberman, a Democrat from Connecticut,
and Republican John McCain of Arizona are jointly leading a Senate
delegation to Central Asia to gather information on the war against
terrorism.
The senators will also visit U.S. troops
based in and around Afghanistan besides meeting regional leaders during
their weeklong stay in the region.
In Afghanistan, they are also expected to
meet the leaders of the new interim government and express their support
for the political process that began after the collapse of the Taliban
regime on Nov. 13.
The nine-member Senate team assured the
Uzbek president that "our interest in this region is going to be
permanent," said Lieberman after his meeting with Karimov. He
described his meeting with the Uzbek president as "very
productive."
In the Uzbek capital, Tashkent, the
senators also met with the representatives of the Supreme Assembly and
the Defense Ministry and "listened to their views on
terrorism."
Uzbekistan borders Afghanistan and 1,500
U.S. Soldiers are stationed at an Uzbek military base close to the
Afghan border.
According to Karimov, "it has not yet
been decided how long will the U.S. soldiers stay in Uzbekistan."
Such questions, he says, "will be decided on the basis of the
mutual interests of the two states and the situation in the
region."
Before arriving in Uzbekistan the senators
visited Turkey. They will go to Tajikistan, Pakistan, Oman and India
before returning home.
On Saturday, President Bush's special
envoy for Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad, also visited Uzbekistan. An
Afghan-American, Khalilzad is considered the Bush administration's top
security adviser on Afghanistan.