• KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00205 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10608 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00205 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10608 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00205 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10608 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00205 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10608 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00205 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10608 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00205 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10608 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00205 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10608 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00205 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10608 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
18 February 2026
29 January 2026

Opinion: Central Asia–Japan Summit Signals Shift in Eurasian Geoeconomics — and Russia’s Waning Role

Image: TCA, Stephen M. Bland

In December 2025, Tokyo hosted the first leaders-level Central Asia + Japan summit — a watershed moment for Eurasian diplomacy that quietly reshapes the region’s strategic architecture. The declaration adopted at the summit lays out a clear economic-geostrategic vision: Japan is no longer a peripheral partner, but a central engine of multi-vector engagement with Central Asia. In the process, it exposes a growing gap in Russia’s regional influence — not because of rhetoric, but because of substance.

Japan’s Agenda: Economy, Connectivity, Human Capital

The Tokyo Declaration pivots on three pragmatic pillars that align tightly with Central Asian development priorities:
Green growth and sustainability – decarbonization, energy security, and climate resilience;
Connectivity – transport, logistics, customs facilitation, and digital corridors;
Human resource development – education, training, exchanges, and technology transfer.

This is not diplomatic abstraction. It reflects Japan’s long-term model of engagement: concessional finance, technology cooperation, and capacity building rather than quick geopolitical wins. In practical terms, there is now a numerical investment target – a combined public-private cooperation envelope of three trillion yen (approximately $20 billion) over five years -marking a shift from consultative dialogue to project delivery at scale.

Importantly, the summit also reinforced cooperation in emerging domains such as artificial intelligence, digital transformation, and resilient supply chains – areas where Central Asia aims to leap ahead rather than merely catch up. This underscores how cooperation is being framed: not as charity, but as co-production of future-oriented infrastructure and capabilities.

The significance of the summit lies not only in the declaration itself, but in the trajectory it has set for Japan–Central Asia engagement in the months ahead.

What This Means for Russia: Substance Trumps Symbolism

At first glance, Russia’s absence from explicit mention in the declaration may seem benign; after all, engagement with external partners often requires diplomatic balance. Yet silence in this case is meaningful.

For decades, Russia’s influence in Central Asia was rooted in security ties, historical institutions, and energy networks. These were powerful structural levers in the twentieth century, but they are increasingly less relevant in an era defined by diversified markets and technological competition. The Tokyo summit highlights several structural realities:

Russia does not offer a comparable economic agenda, particularly in green technologies, digital infrastructure, or human capital development.

Russia’s model remains reactive, centered on existing corridors and legacy links rather than on new corridors of integration connecting Central Asia with Asian and European value chains.

Russia is overweighted in traditional domains such as security and media presence, yet underweighted in economic agency suited to the twenty-first century.

By contrast, Japan’s approach addresses precisely the gaps Central Asian states prioritize: employment, logistics, energy transition, and technological self-sufficiency. Even more strikingly, this shift is occurring without anti-Russian rhetoric. The summit was framed as an exercise in cooperation and development, not rivalry. Nevertheless, the outcomes effectively relegate Russia to the background — a clear indicator of the structural erosion of Moscow’s regional primacy.

Multi-Vector Policy in Practice: Central Asia’s Agency

For Central Asian states, the Tokyo summit validates a multi-vector foreign policy that has matured beyond balancing great powers into actively aggregating opportunities across partners.

Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan have each pursued diversified partnerships with the European Union, the United States, China, South Korea, and now Japan to hedge risks and accelerate development. Japan’s expanding engagement offers non-zero-sum cooperation in global public goods such as climate action and digital standards, long-time horizons that reduce dependence on any single patron, and capacity building that enables autonomous national policies rather than clientelist ties.

This reflects a broader transformation in Central Asian foreign policy thinking: external partners are increasingly viewed not as patrons, but as nodes within a regional development network.

Russia’s Levers Are Narrowing

Russia continues to retain certain advantages – geographic proximity, a shared history, large migrant communities, and legacy energy infrastructure. Yet these are increasingly static assets rather than drivers of future growth.

Several dynamics accelerate this shift. Technology and innovation now anchor influence more than simple market access. Japan’s emphasis, alongside other partners, on artificial intelligence, digital ecosystems, and supply chain resilience highlights this reality. Russia’s capacity in these areas remains limited and largely domestically oriented.

At the same time, Central Asian states increasingly seek interoperability with global standards rather than exclusive integration within Eurasian Economic Union mechanisms. Security cooperation, while still relevant, no longer guarantees economic primacy. A partner that offers security assurances without a credible long-term economic vision is becoming a less attractive anchor for national policy.

This does not represent a collapse of Russia’s presence in Central Asia. Rather, it marks a rebalancing in which Russia’s centrality is no longer a default condition – a distinction of considerable strategic importance.

Implications for Regional Stability

A decline in Russian influence might be assumed to create a power vacuum. The Tokyo Declaration suggests otherwise. Central Asia is not seeking a vacuum, but collaboration across multiple external partners. Rather than a zero-sum contest between Moscow and Tokyo, the region is shaping a networked order that maximizes agency and minimizes dependency.

Such an approach offers a pragmatic pathway to stability. Economic interdependence, investment in human capital, and diversified infrastructure linkages can mitigate traditional security dilemmas. This model of engagement is constructive, non-confrontational, and closely aligned with the region’s long-term interests.

Conclusion

Japan’s elevation of the Central Asia + Japan dialogue to a leaders-level summit represents more than a ceremonial milestone. It signals a new phase of geoeconomic competition and cooperation in which Central Asia is no longer merely a space of influence, but an active participant shaping its own future.

For Russia, the challenge is existentially strategic rather than rhetorical. If economic engagement and technological partnership remain outside its effective toolkit, Moscow’s regional leverage will continue to erode — not as a result of overt geopolitical antagonism, but because Central Asian states are choosing partners that help them build the future.

This is Eurasia’s emerging architecture: plural connectivity rather than monopolistic patronage. Japan’s model resonates because it aligns with the needs of Central Asian societies and economies and, in doing so, quietly redraws the map of influence. The long-term implications of this shift are likely to become even more visible as initiatives move from declaration to implementation. For Central Asia, this evolution does not constitute an abandonment of old partners, but an affirmation of agency and diversification.

 

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the publication, its affiliates, or any other organizations mentioned.

Anvar Nazirov

Anvar Nazirov is a Doctor of Sciences, analyst, international expert, and entrepreneur based in Tashkent, Uzbekistan.

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