Contemporary international relations have marked Central Asia as a region rediscovering and opening up to the outside world, and above all against the backdrop of long hopes for peace and stability in the long-suffering Afghan land. Afghanistan's undiscovered and promising opportunities have sufficient potential to overcome years of infighting, political deadlock, and socio-economic devastation, move away from radicalism, and move towards building a full-fledged State. Today, some attempts to build its own policy can be observed, and this process will be proportionally intensified as the position of states throughout the region strengthens.
Ulugbeck A. Khasanov (Sun,) studied this question.
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