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Bush Has a Packed Agenda for Putin

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  • Bush Has a Packed Agenda for Putin

    Moscow Times
    Jan 14 2005

    Bush Has a Packed Agenda for Putin

    By Simon Saradzhyan
    Staff Writer

    The White House is not conducting an official review of its Russia
    policy over the Kremlin's drive to consolidate power, but President
    George W. Bush will voice his concerns over Moscow's record on
    building democracy when he meets with President Vladimir Putin at a
    summit next month, a senior U.S. State Department official said
    Thursday.

    "This is not accurate in a sense of a headline," said Elizabeth
    Jones, assistant U.S. secretary of state for Europe and Eurasia, when
    asked to comment on recent reports in the U.S. press that a Russia
    policy review is under way in the Bush administration.

    Jones -- who is leaving her post together with Secretary of State
    Colin Powell and a number of other senior officials -- also said she
    does not foresee any fundamental change in the Russia policy in the
    second Bush administration. Bush has nominated national security
    adviser Condoleezza Rice as the next secretary of state.

    Jones, speaking via a video link that connected her Washington office
    with Moscow, Rome and Bratislava, Slovakia, called the news
    conference to talk about a trip by Bush to Europe in February that
    will include NATO and European Union meetings as well as bilateral
    talks with Russian and Belgian leaders.


    Official statements from the Kremlin about the summit between Bush
    and Putin have so far largely been limited to a statement that the
    two will meet in Bratislava on Feb. 24. The Foreign Ministry has yet
    to hold a briefing on the summit.

    >From Washington's point of view, the main tracks of U.S.-Russian
    cooperation are "very clear," Jones said. The Bush administration
    will continue to count on Russia as an important partner in the
    struggle against terrorism and the proliferation of weapons of mass
    destruction and their technologies, she said. And the presidents will
    discuss ways to advance cooperation on these international security
    issues as well as Russia's bid to join the World Trade Organization.

    While determined to advance security and economic cooperation, Bush
    also plans to prod Putin over a lack of "progress in the democratic
    transformation of Russia," Jones said. "[There] doesn't seem to be as
    much progress there as it would have been expected when the two
    presidents first met in Ljubljana almost four years ago," she said.

    Asked what worries Bush most about the future of democracy in Putin's
    Russia, Jones said, "There is a deep concern on the part of many,
    including in Russia, about ... the balance between the civil society
    and the government, about increased consolidation in the government.

    "What happened to the great abundance of media in Russia? What about
    that? There are very serious concerns about the plight of NGOs in
    terms of increased state control."

    Putin explained to Bush at length his elimination of gubernatorial
    elections and plans to scrap independent State Duma races when the
    two met in Chile in November, according to a senior U.S. official's
    account of their meeting. At the time, the two agreed to discuss the
    issue further.

    The Bush administration also has questions about the rule of law in
    the Yukos saga. "What is really Russia's intention there? What is
    really under way there in the retroactive use of the tax code?" Jones
    said, referring to multibillion-dollar back-tax bills slapped on
    Yukos and confirmed by Russian courts.

    While concerned about parts of the Kremlin's domestic policy, the
    Bush administration is pleased with bilateral cooperation in the
    struggle against terror and arms proliferation. Jones commended
    Russia for "working cooperatively in connection with the situation in
    Iran."

    Iran's nuclear program, which Washington insists is designed to
    develop nuclear weapons, has been one of the thorniest issues in
    U.S.-Russian relations. Russia, which is building a nuclear power
    plant in Iran, recently put pressure on Iran to accept more
    comprehensive inspections by the UN nuclear watchdog and is now
    insisting that Tehran agrees to return all spent nuclear fuel used in
    the plant back to Russia.

    While appreciative of Moscow's toughened stance on Iran, the Bush
    administration remains worried about Russia's policy with its
    neighbors. In particular, it is concerned about Russia's failure to
    put pressure for peace settlements on the self-proclaimed republics
    of South Ossetia and Abkhazia in Georgia, Transdnestr in Moldova and
    Nagorny Karabakh, Jones said.

    She said these four regions would be discussed at the summit. "It is
    in Russia's interest for these areas -- whether it is Transdnestr,
    Abkhazia, South Ossetia or Nagorny Karabakh -- to be stable, for
    corruption to end there, for criminal secessionists who rule there to
    be removed," she said.

    Washington intends to encourage other former Soviet republics
    neighboring Russia to engage in NATO's Partnership for Peace Program
    and the EU's new Neighborhood Policy, Jones said, singling out
    Ukraine as a priority. "We are looking forward to finding ways to
    strengthen Ukraine's integration into Europe and the transatlantic
    community," she said.

    The United States and the EU threatened to slap sanctions on Ukraine
    if it upheld the results of the Nov. 21 presidential election, which
    the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and other
    international observers declared unfair and flawed.

    Jones even summoned the Russian ambassador to explain why Putin had
    congratulated pro-Russian candidate Viktor Yanukovych in the
    election. Yanukovych lost a repeat of the election in December.

    Jones on Thursday was careful not to mention Russia's role in the
    Ukrainian election or warn it against putting pressure on other
    former Soviet republics where elections will be held this year. She
    did say, however, that the parliamentary elections in Kyrgyzstan and
    Moldova need to be fair and free.

    While presenting a rather lengthy list of the issues that will be
    discussed by Bush and Putin, Jones said she was unaware of any plans
    for the two to sign any official documents. "This is a summit that is
    primarily focused on intellectual discussion. We don't need to sign
    documents to prove that we have a relationship."

    The heaviest security measures in Slovak history are planned for the
    summit, Slovak Interior Minister Vladimir Palko said Wednesday. He
    said some 5,500 Slovak policemen and 400 firefighters will be on
    duty.
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