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  • Soviet-era rule splits GOP

    Soviet-era rule splits GOP

    The Hill (Washington, DC)
    January 12, 2005

    By Peter Savodnik ([email protected], 202-628-8507)

    Leading Republicans on Capitol Hill are at odds on whether Congress
    should repeal a Cold War trade measure that barred the Soviet Union
    from gaining most favored nation (MFN) status - and, critics say,
    continues to stymie economic growth and strain relations between
    Washington and Moscow.

    The Jackson-Vanik amendment to the 1974 trade act targeted the Soviets
    for sharply limiting Jewish emigration. Given that all countries
    belonging to the World Trade Organization (WTO) must grant each other
    MFN status, the trade measure also has made it difficult for Russia,
    Ukraine and other ex-communist states to join the WTO.

    Foreign-policy mavens such as Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.), chairman of
    the Foreign Relations Committee, and Rep. Henry Hyde (R-Ill.),
    chairman of the International Relations Committee, argue that
    Jackson-Vanik has outlived its usefulness.

    In their eyes, and those of the U.S.-Russia Business Council and
    authorities in Russia and Ukraine, Jackson-Vanik is a snub to
    ex-communist states that, most everyone agrees, have greatly improved
    their human-rights records since the Soviet Union's collapse in
    1991. The United States has acknowledged as much, routinely giving the
    formerly communist countries yearly waivers for Jackson-Vanik.

    But some senators and House members are reluctant to move quickly on
    Jackson-Vanik for fear of forfeiting a bargaining chip. That is
    particularly true at the Senate Finance and House Ways and Means
    committees, which have jurisdiction on Jackson-Vanik.

    The `trade linkage' camp, as one Republican source put it, views
    Jackson-Vanik as a useful tool when it comes to ensuring that
    U.S. corporations are treated favorably in Russia or for protecting
    the rights of religious minorities.

    `There's definitely a split [on Capitol Hill], and I don't think it's
    ideologically Republican or Democrat,' a Senate aide
    explained. `There's a split between the people who view Jackson-Vanik
    as an insulting relic of the Soviet era. ... But on the other hand
    there are folks who believe that if you don't have that Jackson-Vanik
    vote every year to get that MFN status you really are giving something
    up. You give away some leverage.'

    Officials from the affected countries - including the new, pro-Western
    president of Ukraine, Viktor Yushenko - want the measure to be
    expunged, or, at least, they want their countries to be `graduated'
    from the restrictions, as has been the case for the ex-Soviet
    republics of Georgia, Armenia, Kyrgyzstan and the Baltic states:
    Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia.

    One Republican source said that when Yushenko meets with President
    Bush, which could happen next month in Europe, three issues will
    likely top Yushenko's list: gaining entry to the WTO, securing
    market-economy status from the Commerce Department and eliminating
    Jackson-Vanik.

    `The age of Jackson-Vanik has long since ended, and the Jackson-Vanik
    restrictions should be lifted on what was the Soviet Union,' said
    Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.), who led a six-member delegation to
    Kiev last month to oversee the presidential election in
    Ukraine. `Nobody claims that we live in the Soviet era, where Jews are
    no longer permitted to immigrate. ... The fact that we haven't taken
    [Jackson-Vanik] off - it either reflects incompetence or malice.'

    Rohrabacher, a member of the International Relations Committee, said
    he would seek to force a debate in the 109th Congress on repealing
    Jackson-Vanik. Andy Fisher, a spokesman for Lugar, said the senator
    would back a bill similar to the one he sponsored in the last Congress
    calling for Russia's graduation; that bill was co-sponsored by GOP
    Sens. Lincoln Chafee (R.I.), Chuck Hagel (Neb.), Jon Kyl (Ariz.) and
    Trent Lott (Miss.).

    A Republican House aide said Hyde is `strongly in favor' of repealing
    Jackson-Vanik for Russia and Ukraine. And a Senate aide suggested that
    Ukraine's recent democratic `orange revolution' had led to a
    reassessment of U.S.-Ukrainian relations. `I expect that there will be
    a hard look at the various ways the U.S. can help Ukraine consolidate
    its democratic gains, and this will probably include looking at the
    repeal of [Jackson-Vanik],' the aide said.

    Sen. Joe Biden's (D-Del.) experience with Russian chicken bans
    illustrates the benefits, some say, of holding onto Jackson-Vanik. The
    ranking Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, who had supported
    repealing the trade measure for Russia, changed his mind after Russia
    imposed a ban in 2002 on U.S. chicken imports. Chicken is big
    business in Delaware. Soon after Biden and other senators complained,
    Russia lifted the ban.

    Mark Levin, executive director of the NCSJ (formerly known as the
    National Conference of Soviet Jewry), an advocacy group for Jews in
    the former Soviet Union, added that Ukraine has yet to return communal
    property such as synagogues and schools to Jewish communities in Kiev,
    Lviv, Dniprepetrovsk and other cities.

    Referring to Ukraine's speaker of the parliament, or Rada, Vladimir
    Lytvyn, Levin said: `Lytvyn made a commitment to an NCSJ [delegation]
    that he would introduce legislation on returning communal property,
    and nothing has happened.'

    Sergei Korsunsky, deputy chief of mission at the Ukrainian Embassy in
    Washington, countered that a `Jewish renaissance' is taking place
    today in his country, encompassing 230 communities with 500 Jewish
    organizations and 40 Jewish newspapers. He added that 50 synagogues
    have been returned to Jews in Ukraine.

    `Of course,' Korsunsky said, `we have sometimes, somewhere, separate
    cases of anti-Semitism, but this does not compare to what is going on
    in Europe.'


    http://www.thehill.com/thehill/export/TheHill/News/Frontpage/011205/ukraine.html
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