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By utilizing utilities, Russia retains power

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  • By utilizing utilities, Russia retains power

    Washington Times, DC
    April 25 2004

    By utilizing utilities, Russia retains power


    By Steve Gutterman
    ASSOCIATED PRESS


    TBILISI, Georgia - Several miles from the stately palace where the
    czar's envoy once governed Georgia is a nondescript office building
    in a grimy industrial district.
    Drab it may be, but for some Georgians, it symbolizes new Russian
    power in their country, a land that spent nearly two centuries under
    Moscow's rule before becoming independent with the collapse of the
    Soviet Union in 1991.

    The building is the headquarters of Telasi, a Russian-owned
    company that provides this city of 1.3 million people with
    electricity - a precious commodity in a country where blackouts are a
    part of daily life.
    It's just one of the tendrils of Russian economic influence that
    reach across Georgia and the rest of the former Soviet Union.
    Using pipelines and power lines instead of tanks and troops,
    President Vladimir Putin's Russia is seeking to strengthen its
    influence over former Soviet republics at a time when the United
    States and European Union are extending their presence eastward to
    places that until recently were Moscow's domain.
    That change is highlighted by the entry of the three formerly
    Soviet Baltic states into NATO and the European Union.
    "Russia did not want, does not want and never will want to lose
    its influence in the post-Soviet space," said Ramaz Sakvarelidze, a
    political analyst in Georgia, where Moscow has promised to close two
    Soviet-era military bases.
    "And now that its economy has not only gotten on its feet, but is
    able to act outside its borders, Russia is replacing its military
    levers of influence with economic structures."
    Telasi is a case in point, he said.
    Russia's state electricity monopoly, Unified Energy Systems
    (UES), bought a controlling stake in the Tbilisi utility last year
    from the U.S. power company AES.
    Georgian politicians protested the deal would give Russia a
    powerful political lever over their country. Russia already
    controlled nearly all natural-gas supplies to Georgia, where steam
    heating delivered to entire city neighborhoods is only a memory and
    many people rely on gas-fired heaters to warm homes in winter.
    Georgia hopes a U.S.-supported natural-gas pipeline from the
    Caspian Sea to Turkey will ease its dependence on Russia, but it's
    not expected to be built before 2006.
    UES chief Anatoly Chubais flew to Georgia last August and sought
    to reassure authorities over the Telasi purchase, saying the company
    had no political goals and Georgia's electricity supplies would be
    secure.
    But critics questioned the company's motives for buying a utility
    whose chances of making a profit are diminished by decrepit
    equipment, corruption, poverty and what U.S. Ambassador Richard Miles
    called "an innate dislike on the part of Georgians to pay for
    energy."
    Mr. Miles said the American company decided to sell because it
    couldn't afford "the hemorrhaging of money." But he said the issue of
    why UES bought Telasi was "a good question."
    UES is clearly trying to expand its presence in former Soviet
    republics, a campaign Mr. Miles said may be motivated by the simple
    desire to grow and by the hope of future profits. "What other
    political motives there might be, I don't know. You'd have to ask Mr.
    Putin and Mr. Chubais about that," he said.
    Yevgeny Volk, head of the Moscow office of the Heritage
    Foundation, said there is no secret to UES's activities abroad.
    "It's practically part of the state apparatus, and naturally, the
    policy it pursues is state policy - and that is to strengthen
    Russia's position in the zone traditionally considered its sphere of
    interest," he said.
    UES, which exports power to countries from Norway to China, says
    its foreign business is coordinated with the government and conducted
    in the interests of its shareholders, the largest of which is the
    state. It says company experts even advise the Foreign Ministry on
    policy.
    Mr. Volk said UES and other Russian companies with close ties to
    the government are trying to acquire property in former Soviet
    republics "and then use that property as a political lever to
    influence the situation in those countries to Russia's benefit."
    Mr. Sakvarelidze and other analysts said that will allow Moscow
    to influence personnel and policy decisions in those countries,
    shaping their future in line with its own interests.
    In February, Russia's state-connected Gazprom briefly halted
    natural-gas supplies to Belarus during a dispute over Russian efforts
    to gain control of Belarusian industrial enterprises, including the
    pipeline company that relays Russian gas to Europe.
    In December, the Russian state-owned oil pipeline monopoly,
    Transneft, stopped deliveries to the Baltic Sea port of Ventspils,
    Latvia. Latvian officials said Moscow was arm-twisting as part of an
    effort to buy the Latvian government's stake in the company that
    loads oil onto ships bound for the West.
    Also last year, Armenia ceded control over its only nuclear-power
    plant to UES in a bid to escape debts to Russian energy suppliers.
    Mr. Volk said Russia's activity is a reaction to increasing U.S.
    and European influence in the region.
    "There's no question of returning these countries to Russia or to
    some sort of Soviet Union. Everyone understands that's impossible
    politically," he said. "But to bind them more closely to Russia and
    provide Russia with advantages in this economic space ... this is a
    completely realistic policy."
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