Russia’s closure of the NDN marks the end of an era.
Last Friday, Russian Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedevsigned a decree closing the Northern Distribution Network (NDN). NATO had used the NDN to deliver supplies to the war in Afghanistan since 2008. Although the route, according to the Moscow Times, hasn’t been used in recent months and the UN Security Council resolution under which Moscow agreed to allow NATO passage through its territory expired at the end of last year, the closure still takes on a geopolitical light.
Moscow linked its choice to close the route to UNSC resolution 1386, which was the 2001 resolution that authorized the original ISAF mission in Afghanistan and encouraged regional states to allow transit and overflight. A subsequent resolution in 2013 set December 31, 2014 as resolution 1386′s expiration date.
RT, reporting the closure, notes that “all previous decisions on NATO cargo transit to Afghanistan have now been revoked. This includes an act allowing delivery of military hardware and equipment via rail, motor vehicles, or through Russian airspace.”
The NDN emerged as an alternate route for NATO to move supplies into and out of Afghanistan in 2008 in response to flaring tension on the Afghan-Pakistan border. Pakistan every so often would shut the border to NATO traffic, generally in protest over drone strikes in its territory. With few options, NATO pressed for a northern transportation network through Central Asia.
Early last year, Afghan President Karzai sat as a lame duck on the bilateral security agreement that would permit NATO and American troops to remain in the country on a training mission. NATO military planners had to face the possibility of a “zero option”–complete withdrawal. At the same time, tensions between the West and Russia were on the rise. Defense planners were nervous, one told the Christian Science Monitor that plotting the withdrawal was “a heck of a process and of course we’re always looking out for any disruptions to it,” he added that “political problems with Russia is certainly one of them.”
Last March, as Russia annexed Crimea, our own Ankit Panda examined what the emerging mess in Ukraine had to do with the winding down of the war in Afghanistan. It all came down to the logistics of withdrawal. “Russia’s prized geography places it at the center of the network,” Panda wrote, “should the political situation between Putin and the U.S. and NATO continue to deteriorate, the U.S. road out of Afghanistan could get complicated.”
Far be it for me to suggest that Russian President Vladimir Putin hesitated, but he did not block the exit of NATO equipment from Afghanistan at the moment it would hurt the alliance the most.
A number of developments since this time last year serve to mitigate the actual effects, though not the optics, of Russia’s move to close the NDN officially. For one thing, after the difficult and drawn out Afghan election last summer, a BSA was signed with little fanfare. At present, there are just over 13,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan as part of Resolute Support, the NATO follow-on mission. In March, U.S. President Barack Obamaannounced that the U.S. would maintain 9,800 troops in the country through a least the end of 2015.
Also, whereas Karzai had an increasingly acrimonious relationship with Pakistan, the country’s new presidenthas made strides in repairing the relationship between Afghanistan and Pakistan. The Af-Pak border isn’t likely to be closed again any time soon. In 2012 Pakistan and the U.S. signed an MOU to that effect, keeping the route open to NATO through 2015.
The closure of the NDN certainly marks, as the Moscow Times says, “the end of an era in Russia’s relations with NATO and the United States.” It is, however, more of an optical jab than an actual punch that will have operational weight. The Pakistan route had always been cheaper, anyway.
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