Upon its independence in 1992, Kyrgyzstan took command over the former Soviet Republic's directorate of the
KGB's Central Asian Border Troops District, which was part of the wider
Soviet Border Troops that numbered at about 2,000 mostly
Russian troops. However, in late 1992, Russia established a joint Kyrgyzstani-Russian Border Troop Command, which effectively brought the border protection responsibilities under Russian command again. The borders of Kyrgyzstan with
post-Soviet states were thus mostly unguarded as the Russian Border Troops mostly concentrated on guarding the borders facing countries such as Afghanistan and China. In August 1999, the duties of border protection was finally transferred from the
Border Guard Service of Russia to the Kyrgyzstani government, which would eventually set the basis for the future State Border Guard Service and the tightening of its borders with the neighbouring countries. On 31 August 2002, the State Border Guard Service of the Kyrgyz Republic was officially established from a merger of the Main Border Guard Directorate of the
Ministry of Defense and the Main Directorate of Border Control of the
National Security Service, so as to have a more centralised system. Over the subsequent few years, the border guard service would be transferred to and removed from the command of the National Security Service for several times by presidential decree till on 4 September 2012, it was permanently established as an independent Public Service department within the government of the Kyrgyz Republic. Despite the similarities in the scope of work covered, the service is not under the command of the
Ministry of Interior Affairs of the republic, neither is it part of the
military of Kyrgyzstan. In 2020, President
Sadyr Japarov put it under the State Committee for National Security. Since the independence of the republic, it has had many disagreements and even confrontations with the border services of neighbouring countries, including those of
Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan. Several land border crossings with neighbouring countries have also not been consistently opened as a result. The border guard service has also because of the disagreements, taken steps to train and upgrade itself. For example in 2013, the border service took part in a joint military drill with
China on the two countries' borders. Additionally it has also requested and received training and equipment from China and Turkey. In December 2021, the border services received
Bayraktar TB2 UAV from Turkey. == Commanders ==