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OSCE "Reform" -- Or A New Lease On Life?

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  • OSCE "Reform" -- Or A New Lease On Life?

    OSCE "REFORM" -- OR A NEW LEASE ON LIFE?

    Documents of the OSCE's 2004 year-end ministerial conference, Vienna and Sofia,
    December 1-8; Interfax, RIA-Novosti, December 9-12

    By Vladimir Socor

    With two weeks remaining from the OSCE's 2004 budgetary authorization,
    Moscow threatens to block adoption of the 2005 budget unless the
    organization introduces Russian-proposed "reforms." Those proposals
    seek to: boost the OSCE's role in the military-political and security
    sphere, where Russia can and does manipulate the organization;
    emasculate the OSCE in the democracy sphere, where the organization
    can and does operate independently of Russia; and curtail overall
    Western influence in the OSCE by restricting extra-budgetary funding
    of the organization.

    Russia's Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov, Deputy Minister
    Vladimir Chizhov, and other officials pushed those proposals forcefully
    at the OSCE's year-end conference in Sofia on December 6-7, and
    continue to do so afterwards. Moscow argues that OSCE activities are
    doubly imbalanced: functionally, by focusing selectively on democracy
    issues while neglecting all-European military-security issues; and
    geographically, by focusing on political developments in post-Soviet
    countries while ignoring what Moscow describes as flawed elections
    and human-rights violations in Western countries and their new allies.

    The "reform" proposals target three OSCE institutions and processes:
    the Warsaw-based Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
    (ODIHR), which specializes in monitoring elections throughout the OSCE
    area; the organization's field missions; and its budget-formation
    procedures. Russian officials continually refer to reform proposals
    advanced by the presidents of eight CIS countries in their July 3 and
    September 15 collective statements to the OSCE. At the Sofia year-end
    meeting, however, only Belarus acted as a convinced supporter of
    those reform proposals.

    The joint Russia-Belarus proposal calls for tasking ODIHR to: take into
    account the work done in the CIS on developing election standards; use
    those standards, alongside Western ones, in working out a "common,
    uniform set of criteria" for OSCE-CIS appraisals of elections;
    increase the proportion of CIS countries' representatives in ODIHR
    election observation missions; finance election observation through
    the OSCE's unified budget only [i.e., disallowing Western countries'
    contributions; these do not require Russian approval, whereas the
    unified budget does].

    Russia and Belarus gave the OSCE until June 30, 2005, to introduce
    these changes, and the organization's Permanent Council to adopt
    new political guidelines for OSCE/ODIHR election monitoring in line
    with those changes. In a similar vein, the statement by CIS Executive
    Committee Chairman and Executive Secretary Vladimir Rushailo called for
    "coordination" of OSCE/ODIHR and CIS election observation missions,
    with a view to issuing "joint assessments" of elections. As is often
    the case, Russia spoke on the collective behalf of the CIS without
    reflecting a consensus among those 12 countries. In the end-game
    negotiations on the draft final declaration, Armenia proposed inserting
    a positive reference to developing a common OSCE-CIS set of election
    standards. Armenia had similarly lined up behind Russia and Belarus
    in accepting the fraudulent election of Viktor Yanukovych as president
    of Ukraine.

    Had such "reforms" been in place, OSCE/ODIHR could not have ascertained
    the electoral fraud in Ukraine, would have joined the Rushailo-led CIS
    monitoring mission in blessing the fraudulent returns, and would have
    been prevented from deciding -- as it did at Sofia -- to send and fund
    observers to the repeat runoff in Ukraine. To "reform" the OSCE's field
    missions, Russia proposes to: restrict the missions' extra-budgetary
    funding, which mostly consists of above-board contributions by
    Western countries to local pro-democracy activities; confine the
    scope of missions' activities to socioeconomic projects requested by
    host countries' authorities; limit the missions' mandate to one-year
    renewable terms, subject to the host government's agreement each time;
    and increase the proportion of representatives of certain CIS member
    countries in OSCE field missions. The organization's German-led Minsk
    Office was "reformed" already in 2003 along these lines.

    The proposed budgetary "reform" would entail: revising the scales of
    OSCE member countries' contributions "according to their ability to
    pay" [i.e., reducing CIS countries' contributions]; ending or curbing
    the practice of extra-budgetary funding of the OSCE in general
    [thus cutting the organization's overall financial resources];
    and establishing budget formation procedures that would, in their
    practical effect, severely restrict the OSCE's ability to function
    without Russia's or its supporters' approval.

    Russia gave the OSCE until December 31 to commit itself to proceeding
    down this road. "In the absence of firm obligations on this score, we
    cannot vote the 2005 budget," Lavrov and Chizhov both warned. Their
    statements and those of other Russian officials before, during, and
    after the Sofia meeting strongly suggested that Russia can either
    keep the OSCE in business or push it toward demise ("throw it on the
    sidelines of history," in Lavrov's unreferenced paraphrase of Trotsky),
    depending on the extent to which it cooperates with Russian policies.
    Such warnings exploit the OSCE's structural vulnerabilities, fear
    of demise through irrelevance, awareness of its rapidly diminishing
    raisons d'etre -- save election-monitoring, which Moscow now wants to
    rein in -- and its disposition to give in to Russia year after year in
    the military-security sphere as a price of remaining a player in that
    sphere. Anxious about institutional survival, and damaged by Russia
    perhaps irreparably at the 2002 Porto and 2003 Maastricht year-end
    meetings over a wide range of security and democracy issues, the OSCE
    hides its weaknesses and failures from public view. It prefers to
    paper over the problems, instead of debating them openly and exposing
    Russia's tactics.

    At the Sofia meeting, Secretary of State Colin Powell stated that the
    United States "categorically disagreed" with Russian proposals to shift
    OSCE's focus away from democracy building in post-Soviet countries. The
    European Union spoke out in a similar vein. Dutch Minister of
    Foreign Affairs Bernard Bot, speaking for the EU's presidency on
    behalf of all member countries, as well as the External Relations
    and European Neighborhood Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner, both
    ruled out any reduction of OSCE democracy-building activities, or a
    "rebalancing" of security and pro-democracy goals at the expense
    of the latter. Whether this stance, taken in the year-end meeting's
    media limelight, can hold in the non-transparent give-and-take with
    Russia. The OSCE's incoming Slovenian Chairmanship for 2005 sounds
    anxious. According to that country's Minister of Foreign Affairs, OSCE
    Chairman-in-Office-designate Dimitrji Rupel, in his closing statement
    at Sofia, "Foremost among these challenges . . . is the fissure in
    relations [between] East and West. As a stark reflection of this
    regrettable reality . . . the more we talk of no new dividing lines
    in Europe, the more we are confronted with them. I therefore read
    carefully the Moscow declaration and Astana address of Presidents
    of CIS states . . . a resounding expression of dissatisfaction at
    the highest level, which has to be taken into account. I intend to
    work relentlessly to address this situation." Pointing to the urgent
    need to adopt the 2005 budget before the end of 2004, Rupel stated,
    "Without this, the very functioning of the organization would be
    in jeopardy . . . . My biggest concern at the moment is to avert a
    political stalemate in the organization."

    If that concern is overriding -- and Russian tactics are indeed
    designed to make it the overriding concern for the OSCE -- then the
    temptation may well persist to ensure the organization's survival
    through continuing concessions to Russia regarding the "frozen
    conflicts," CFE Treaty and Istanbul Commitment implementation, border
    monitoring, and other security issues, as well as using the OSCE to
    reopen ethnic issues in Estonia and Latvia at Russian insistence.
    That approach would only deepen the OSCE's crisis.

    Russian duress and for the third consecutive year, the OSCE at Sofia
    was unable even to cite its own earlier resolutions; let alone call,
    if only symbolically, for their implementation. The organization lost
    the final vestiges of its credibility in the security sphere at the
    Sofia meeting.

    That repeat failure, however, points the OSCE's way out of
    crisis. Election monitoring, promotion of good governance, and
    democratic institution building in post-Soviet countries are compelling
    raisons d'etre for the organization. It is in the democracy sphere
    that the OSCE can bring its comparative advantages to bear. This,
    not Russian-prescribed "reforms," can provide the OSCE with a new
    lease on life.
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