UN Secretary-General António Guterres returned to Central Asia this weekend, joining President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev in Astana to inaugurate a new UN Regional Center for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), with a scope covering Central Asia and Afghanistan. The initiative is meant to support regional economies, ease migration pressures, and introduce a framework for incremental political stabilization in Afghanistan. After Astana, Guterres is expected in Awaza, Turkmenistan, where he will address a UN conference focused on the challenges facing landlocked developing countries (LLDCs), notably trade, infrastructure, and regional resilience.
It is Guterres’s first visit to the region since July 2024, when he visited all five Central Asian republics. This time, the context has shifted. Long considered a peripheral space, or merely a corridor between larger powers, Central Asia has now become integral to multilateral thinking. The SDG Center in Almaty and the LLDC forum in Ashgabat reflect that change. Institutions are catching up to geography.
Kazakhstan’s role is pivotal. Under Tokayev’s presidency, it has moved steadily into a position of structural convenor. That position rests on four broad dynamics: the diplomatic adjustments in the region following Russia’s war in Ukraine; the emergence of the Middle Corridor; Afghanistan’s reentry into regional frameworks via development; and the UN’s own internal recalibrations.
The first is strategic drift away from Moscow. Since 2022, Kazakhstan has maintained a working relationship with Russia while expanding cooperation with China, the EU, and the Gulf. The tone has been restrained, but the implications are more consequential. This is a definitive move that has allowed the country to present itself as a non-aligned anchor for multilateral initiatives.
The second is logistical. The Trans-Caspian International Trade Route (TITR, Middle Corridor) connects China to Europe across Kazakhstan, the South Caucasus, and Turkey. Its significance has grown as Russian routes become riskier. Almaty’s selection as the SDG Center’s home is no coincidence: it manifests the marriage of infrastructure with diplomacy.
The third dynamic centers on Afghanistan. Direct diplomacy remains difficult here, but the need to address such issue-areas as humanitarian need, border tension, and migration does not go away. The SDG Center’s inclusion of Afghanistan in its mandate offers a different path: containment through technical coordination. That model works only where the host is both stable and neutral and Kazakhstan, under Tokayev’s reforms, fits that bill.
Fourth is the institutional side. Since 2020, Guterres has promoted what he calls “networked multilateralism,” which seeks to shift in how the UN extends itself into contested spaces. The idea is to move from template-based programming drawn up in central bureaucratic offices to regionally adapted coordination centers. The Almaty SDG Center fits that mold. It is not a field office but a mechanism for structured interdependence in a space that resists more direct approaches.
On August 3, Guterres and Tokayev signed the host-country agreement. The legal formalities were expected, but the clear signal given is that the UN is willing to treat Central Asia not simply as a collection of national teams, but as a zone where development and diplomacy must be integrated. The inclusion of Afghanistan in the center’s remit underlines the shift.
Guterres, in his remarks, praised Kazakhstan under Tokayev’s leadership as “a symbol of peace, dialogue, a bridge builder, and an honest broker.” He added that Kazakhstan, once defined by its landlockedness, now acts as a crossroads, citing its fiber-optic and transport corridors. The convergence of neutrality and infrastructure is not new, but the changing international environment together with Tokayev’s established reputation has now permitted the country to command a degree of institutional trust.
Tokayev’s foreign policy has emphasized institutionalism over flair. It is a style rooted in his professional diplomatic background. As a former senior diplomat in the UN system, he brings fluency in the mechanics of multilateralism. Kazakhstan hosts but does not direct. It anchors, but it avoids center stage.
The current positioning builds on earlier strategies and institutional participation including the Astana International Forum, OSCE summits, active SCO participation, and others. Tokayev has not replaced these structures but he has adjusted their operating tempo. It is the search by global actors for dependable platforms, especially outside crisis zones, that has made Kazakhstan’s predictability a form of leverage for the country.
Guterres’s visit is not isolated; it belongs to a broader sequence. In June, Astana hosted the third China–Central Asia Summit, with a focus on corridors and digital connectivity. In April, the EU pledged over €13 billion in Central Asian infrastructure investment at a summit in Samarkand. The message is consistent: the region is being treated as a coherent strategic zone.
The UN’s deepened presence falls into this pattern. Even if its focus remains developmental, the choice to embed a regional coordination node in Almaty is a structural decision, not just a programmatic one.
Guterres’s address at the Ashgabat LLDC conference included all the expected messaging about trade, climate, digital equity. Turkmenistan’s hosting was ceremonial, and deliberately so. It maintains a symbolic profile without deepening operational ties. Kazakhstan, by contrast, has made itself functionally available.
The SDG Center will not resolve such long-standing regional challenges as water management, labor migration, and structural governance issues; nor will it prevent geopolitical rivalry. But it offers a space where technical cooperation and development planning can proceed steadily amid regional volatility. This is neither glamorous nor headline-worthy, and that is probably one reason why it works.
If Kazakhstan is now recognized as a regional platform, that recognition owes much to Tokayev’s personal imprint. His diplomatic background gave him credibility with the UN. But, even more key, his disciplined, deliberate, and institutionally fluent style of leadership has suited the moment.
He has not tried to convert Kazakhstan’s strategic location into unilateral leverage. Instead, he has worked to make the country available to multilateral needs. Tokayev’s model goes against the current fashion that mistakenly equates visibility with influence. This restraint, combined with political capacity and his formidable reputation, has given Kazakhstan a different kind of presence in the region: one that is not dominant or reactive, but central.