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  • EUCOM leaders meet with Black Sea officials

    EUCOM leaders meet with Black Sea officials

    Stars and Stripes (European edition)
    Sunday, April 18, 2004

    By Ward Sanderson

    Officials from several Black Sea nations met with military leaders at
    U.S. European Command headquarters Friday as part of an annual defense
    brain trust tour.

    They discussed their region, America's role there and the weave of
    treaties and security agreements the United States maintains with
    countries whose coasts are lapped by the Black Sea.

    The program - sponsored by Harvard University and paid for by the
    Carnegie Foundation and the Defense Department - brought together some
    30 generals,
    diplomats, intelligence experts and scholars from Armenia, Azerbaijan,
    Bulgaria, Georgia, Greece, Moldova, Romania, Turkey and Ukraine.

    Despite tensions in the region, participants in the annual Black Sea
    Security Program typically don't hash out their differences right then
    and there, though officials admit regional conflicts do tweak
    perspectives. Nonetheless, the sessions tend to be more an academic
    series of briefings than debates.

    "This isn't the forum where anyone is going to air any dirty laundry,"
    said Air Force Capt. Sarah Kerwin, spokeswoman for the U.S. headquarters
    in Stuttgart, Germany.

    The program visited the headquarters for the first time last year.

    "Obviously it went well, because they're here again," Kerwin said.

    According to Harvard, the group visited Bulgaria's capital of Sofia
    earlier in the week and was to fly to Washington, D.C., on Saturday.
    There, they will speak with security specialists from the Pentagon,
    Congress and the National Security Council.

    In Stuttgart, the entourage listened to briefings on just what the
    European Command is and does. Some tend toward astonishment at the sorts
    of programs in which the United States is engaged in their countries,
    such as humanitarian demining.

    "They are not necessarily the same individuals we have regular contact
    with," said Army Lt. Col. Rosemarie Warner, the headquarters' branch
    chief for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia. "Oftentimes, the programs even
    come as a surprise to them."

    Relations between the Black Sea players and the United States have been
    boosted by a heavy American effort to develop and modernize the
    militaries there since the Berlin Wall fell.

    "We have a good relationship with all of these countries," Warner said,
    "and I think they see EUCOM as a major player in the region and a
    representative of the United States."

    The tweedy university feel of the program doesn't preclude politics
    entirely.

    "We try to be very clear about the types of activities that we do in the
    region and in our overall focus we have a couple of things that are
    primary, and one of them is the war on terror," Warner said. "We're
    trying to get everyone in the region together to have the same focus."

    The other big issue is the broad topic of security cooperation among the
    Black Sea neighbors and the United States. The American headquarters
    would prefer that all the players plug into the same sort of security
    cooperation framework. The Harvard visit could help, U.S. officials hope.

    "It encourages open dialog where they can talk to one another," said
    Navy Cmdr. Denise Newell, EUCOM's Russia desk officer.

    Cooperation can take work in the ancient neighborhood: Armenia and
    Azerbaijan still are trying to stitch the wounds of an ethnically
    charged territorial war during the 1990s. Moldova grapples with
    separatists in Transnistria. The new Georgian government faces tension
    with Russia over semi-autonomous regions with strong ties to Moscow.
    Turkey and Greece long have stared at one another across the Aegean,
    both distrustful of the other over the final status of disputed Cyprus.

    Warner said these broilers affect participants' views but are largely
    shelved for the sake of exchange.

    "For the most part, it's a very jovial, congenial group of folks."
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