Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06DUSHANBE250
2006-02-07 04:07:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Dushanbe
Cable title:  

DPT ACTING LEADER: "WE DON'T FEEL YOUR SUPPORT"

Tags:  PREL PGOV KDEM TI 
pdf how-to read a cable
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RUEHDBU/AMEMBASSY DUSHANBE 7735
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 DUSHANBE 000250 

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STATE FOR EUR/CACEN, SA, DRL
NSC FOR MERKEL

E.O. 12958: DECL: 2/7/2016
TAGS: PREL PGOV KDEM TI
SUBJECT: DPT ACTING LEADER: "WE DON'T FEEL YOUR SUPPORT"

REF: A) DUSHANBE 0151 B) CEP20020206027174

CLASSIFIED BY: Richard E. Hoagland, Ambassador, EXEC, Embassy
Dushanbe.
REASON: 1.4 (b),(d)



C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 DUSHANBE 000250

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STATE FOR EUR/CACEN, SA, DRL
NSC FOR MERKEL

E.O. 12958: DECL: 2/7/2016
TAGS: PREL PGOV KDEM TI
SUBJECT: DPT ACTING LEADER: "WE DON'T FEEL YOUR SUPPORT"

REF: A) DUSHANBE 0151 B) CEP20020206027174

CLASSIFIED BY: Richard E. Hoagland, Ambassador, EXEC, Embassy
Dushanbe.
REASON: 1.4 (b),(d)




1. (C) The Ambassador and PolOff met for an hour on February 6
with Deputy Chairman of the Democratic Party of Tajikistan
(DPT),Rahmatullo Valiyev. The imprisoned Mahmadruzi Iskandarov
is still the DPT's titular head. The meeting was within the
context of a DPT effort, as evidenced by its February 6 press
release, to engage foreign embassies and international
organizations to press for Iskandarov's release. In fact,
Valiyev had little to say on this account and, instead, made a
long and sometimes emotional plea for more overt U.S. support
for his party.


2. (C) Valiyev opened by noting Russian Ambassador Ramazan
Abdulatipov has already endorsed President Rahmonov for
re-election this year and commented, properly, that this is
interference in Tajikistan's internal affairs (refs). He
accused the U.S. Embassy of "going silent" on support for
democracy and independent media - "We don't feel your support" -
and made a veiled request for U.S. financial support for his
party, because its membership base is urban intelligentsia "who
are poor." Although independent polls show the DPT with only
about 1.5% support in the Tajik electorate, Valiyev argued that
his party's real support is at least 60%, "because the one
million Tajiks who have gone to Russia to work have done so
because they hate Rahmonov." (COMMENT: His glaring fallacy is
that they are all, therefore, DPT supporters. END COMMENT.)


3. (C) The Ambassador explained that the United States supports
the democratic process, not specific parties and personalities.
He noted his widely publicized December speech to youth
activists calling for greater democracy and independent media,
and reminded Valiyev that U.S. NGOs continue to work to build
civil society in Tajikistan, which is the long-term foundation
for true democracy. The Ambassador further noted that he and
his colleagues continue to work intensively through quiet
diplomacy to keep Tajikistan from going further down the wrong

path, but he acknowledge this is frustrating for Tajikistan's
democratic forces because it is not visible cannot be
publicized. The Ambassador noted it would be as inappropriate
for him or the U.S. Embassy to endorse the DPT as Abdulatipov's
open support for Rahmonov.


4. (C) Valiyev criticized the International Monetary Fund for
forgiving Tajikistan's $99 million debt under the Highly
Indebted Poor Countries mandate, and he said the United States
should "stop giving Rahmonov money." The Ambassador explained
that U.S. assistance funds programs, not the government and
individuals, and is for activities in the interest of the nation
and people of Tajikistan, like border security and
counter-narcotics. Valiyev acquiesced but disagreed with the
strategy, because his view is the sooner Rahmonov is "cut off,"
the sooner the DPT can come to power. (COMMENT: According to
independent polls, without the President's Peoples Democratic
Party in the mix, the Communist Party and the Islamic
Renaissance Party would rise to the top of the lists at this
time. END COMMENT.)


5. (C) Valiyev criticized U.S. exchange programs for sending
Tajik government officials, who are predominantly from the
President's party, to the United States. The Ambassador
explained that exchange participants are chosen not for their
political party allegiance, but for their expertise and
likelihood of rising to more important positions in the future.

DUSHANBE 00000250 002 OF 002


He emphasized that we find many reform-minded younger officials
whom we want to encourage.


6. (C) Valiyev reminded us that he had sent Secretary Rice a
letter shortly after her October 13 visit to Dushanbe, asking
her to intervene for Iskandarov at the European Court of
Justice. He asked, in the name of his party presidium, if she
had yet done so. The Ambassador assured Valiyev that the
Secretary surely had read his letter, but that it would be

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inappropriate for her to intervene in a court action on behalf
of an individual.


7. (C) Valiyev pressed that only the United States can bring
democracy to Tajikistan - neither Russia, China, nor Iran will
do so. The Ambassador assured Valiyev that working to enlarge
the democratic space in Tajikistan is one of his highest
priorities.


8. (C) COMMENT: The three so-called democratic parties in
Tajikistan have miniscule support, in part because they are to
varying degrees personality-based, and also because they do not
have a critical mass of party workers to build broader support.
Also, none at this time has a savvy and charismatic politician
as a leader. That said, should such a leader improbably emerge,
Rahmonov would certainly quash him, as he did Iskandarov. While
we must acknowledge that Rahmonov's action against Iskandarov
was politically motivated, we also should not forget in a more
unguarded moment in the past Valiyev admitted to the Ambassador
that Iskandarov had surely been corrupt when he was Chairman of
TojikGaz - "He's a rich man! How do you think he got his
money?" - one of the charges on which he was eventually
convicted. We continue to believe that the Tajik people would
naturally gravitate toward a populist democratic leader, should
one ever emerge. However, at this time, no such leader exists.
Our long-term task is to remain committed to building civil
society in Tajikistan. There is no reason democracy cannot
blossom here, but it will not happen in the short term. END
COMMENT.
HOAGLAND