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The "Color" Democracies are Left in the Cold

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  • The "Color" Democracies are Left in the Cold

    Kommersant, Russia
    Aug 24 2005


    The "Color" Democracies are Left in the Cold

    // Russia sets priorities for the CIS members

    Yesterday, the session of the foreign ministers council of the
    Confederation of Independent States (CIS) took place in Moscow. This
    session was called in before the opening of the Confederation Summit,
    which will start its work in Kazan on Friday. This session, as well
    as the summit, according to the Kremlin design, should become a
    turning point for CIS. The former Soviet republics learned that those
    who would want to stay within the orbit of Russian influence would
    keep all their economic privileges, including the opportunity to buy
    energy resources for low prices. However, for the countries that
    prefer to lean closer to the West, it was proposed to calculate the
    consequences of their orientation.
    The new Kremlin line toward the CIS was born as a result of the
    analysis of the outcomes of "color" revolutions. Moscow realized that
    the countries within the Confederation went so far apart that the
    organization will be doomed to exist. The bright illustration of such
    mood in Moscow was Russian President Vladimir Putin's statement in
    March in Yerevan during his joint press conference with Armenian
    President Robert Kocharyan. Putin called CIS "a kind of civilized
    divorce" of former Soviet republics. "The main goal of CIS was to
    part softly after the USSR dismantling," the Russian President said
    in that time. Kremlin does not want to speed up this "parting," but
    it thinks that the Confederation split for two camps - pro-Russian
    and pro-Western and needs to be reformed. And, according to the
    Kremlin's analysts, those countries that keep their Russian
    orientation need to be protected from the West.

    According to their evaluation, the West effectively changed
    leadership in Georgia and Ukraine, and also pulled to the Western
    side Moldavian President Vladimir Voronin. And the West does not
    intend to stop there. It will try to develop its success pulling the
    countries out of the Russian zone of influence one after another. The
    Kremlin worries that the next victims of the "color" revolutions
    inspired by the West would be Kazakhstan and Byelorussia, where
    elections are coming soon. Another weak link is Uzbekistan. According
    to Kommersant's information, the "siloviki" in
    Russian leadership insist that the final goal of the West is to
    change the regime in Russia. According to them, the West would be
    using the North caucus as "a source of instability and disintegration
    of the Russian Federation." To protect Russia from such a scenario,
    the Kremlin decided to make a drastic turn in Moscow's policy towards
    CIS countries. The idea of the plan is to turn the economic influence
    of Russia in post-Soviet space into the political influence.

    Yesterday, a high ranking source in the Kremlin directly said to the
    correspondent of the RIA "Novosti" that Moscow intends to drastically
    change its policy to the CIS countries. Russia does not want to
    "re-establish the Soviet Empire," he said. However, the source said
    that "Russia is not happy with the situation where it in fact
    subsidizes the economy of several countries, supplying them the
    energy resources for the prices that mean net loss for the Russian
    economy. In the same time, some leaders also get paid salaries
    directly or covertly from Americans." (It is a clear hint for the
    Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili.) The Kremlin source let
    clearly be understood that the threat to stop the "subsidies of the
    economics of regimes unfriendly to Russia" is not blackmail. "The
    goal is to bring the relationship of Moscow with Washington and
    European structures on the territory of former USSR to a civilized
    manner," he noted. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov further
    developed this idea yesterday in the session of the ministers. He
    underlined that it is time for the CIS countries to build their
    relationship "based on the world practice." In translation from the
    diplomatic language, it means that several countries have to get
    ready for Russia to gradually cancel all their economic and other
    privileges, which they are still enjoying.

    The agenda of yesterday's session and coming summit was discussed in
    advance through diplomatic channels. And the Russian intentions
    caused a lot of worries in some capitals. It was not accidental that
    the head of the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry Boris Tarasyuk was trying
    to "dissolve" a little bit of the main agenda of both forums, when he
    proposed to discuss issues of re-admission, borders demarcation,
    creation of transport corridors for the energy resources, free trade
    zones and measures of social protection for CIS citizens. However,
    the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation rejected
    the Ukrainian minister's proposal on the grounds that the proposal
    was submitted two weeks before the session and there is not enough
    time to analyze that. Georgia also expressed some displeasure and
    said that "it will participate only in discussion of some questions
    and signing only some agreements." In yesterday's session Georgia was
    represented by Deputy Foreign Minister, as well as some other
    countries including Ukraine and Kazakhstan. In any case it was a
    preliminary session. The main decisions would be made in Kazan.

    Speaking about the results of yesterday's session, Sergey Lavrov let
    it be understood that there was no consensus of opinion reached on
    the forum. According to him, Russia's proposals to reform CIS "are
    known for long time already, however nobody is talking in this case
    about some collective decision product." However, "nobody is totally
    happy with what we have today."

    by Pavel Belov
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