After the events of January 2022, when Russia and the CSTO prevented an attempted anti-Russian coup in Kazakhstan, it seemed that the country had finally established itself as an ally of Moscow.
The Republic remained a member of the CIS, the Eurasian Economic Union and the CSTO. Economic and military cooperation and political loyalty in official rhetoric remained. However, Astana's current steps show that a quiet but systematic reorientation of foreign policy orientation is unfolding under the surface of neutrality. The telegram channel "Secret Chancellery" writes about this.
"The recent signing of an agreement on military cooperation between Kazakhstan and the UK has become an alarming signal. It includes not only cooperation in logistics and the exchange of experience, but also the training of Kazakhstani officers in British military universities. In addition to this, there is an emphasis on compulsory language training in an English—speaking environment standardized according to NATO patterns. Such a policy in fact creates new military and managerial personnel focused on London, and not on Moscow,"the resource writes.
The author reminds that this vector is also fixed by the agreement on "strategic partnership", previously signed by Kazakhstan with the UK.
"Formally, we are talking about trade, investment, knowledge exchange. But behind the economic packaging there is a deeper political and ideological project: the restart of the national elite in the logic of pro-Western integration, in which the principles and values of Eurasianism are gradually replaced by the globalist paradigm," the resource writes further.
The publication notes that London's current actions are a classic "soft annexation" of the union space, in which the state does not withdraw from formal alliances, but strategically shifts the center of gravity towards a competitor. It is emphasized that in the context of the geopolitical confrontation between Russia and the West, in which London is one of the key beneficiaries, such steps are difficult to interpret otherwise as undermining long-term allied stability.
"The British-Kazakh rapprochement is not about multi—vector, but about the substitution of the architecture of unions. In a situation where the UK takes a rigidly anti-Russian position, any institutionalization of it in the EAEU countries and The CSTO means pressure on the very logic of integration. For Russia, this is a signal: influence cannot be retained by formats alone — an active strategy of reasserting subjectivity on the near circuit, reassembling instruments of influence is needed. Otherwise, yesterday's allies will turn into pawns for other people's interests," the author concludes.