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Viktor Yushchenko will return to his own veterans

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  • Viktor Yushchenko will return to his own veterans

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say. Part B (Russia)
    March 28, 2005, Monday

    VIKTOR YUSHCHENKO WILL RETURN TO HIS OWN VETERANS

    SOURCE: Kommersant, March 28, 2005, p. 10

    by Boris Volkhonskii


    President Viktor Yushchenko of Ukraine has finally given an answer to
    the question of his attendance at celebrations of the 60th
    anniversary of victory in World War II in Moscow on May 9: he'll
    attend the CIS summit of May 8, but will celebrate Victory Day at
    Kreshchatik in Kyiv, together with Ukrainian World War II veterans.
    Thus, the president of Ukraine has been added to the ranks of CIS
    presidents who have refused to take part in festivities in Moscow,
    and this event won't have the propaganda effect Russian leaders have
    counted on.

    "I wouldn't feel comfortable knowing that our own veterans are
    celebrating the great Victory here, in Kyiv, while I'm in Moscow,"
    the Ukrainian president stated on March 26. However, Yushchenko
    promised he'd attend the CIS summit of May 8, and expressed the hope
    that "Mr. President Vladimir Putin and other colleagues" would
    understand his decision.

    In any case, the Ukrainian president has been added to the ranks of
    CIS presidents who have refused to take part in festivities in
    Moscow. In March, the presidents of Lithuania and Estonia, Valdas
    Adamkus and Arnold Ruutel, declined invitations to come to Moscow in
    May. The issue remained unsettled in other capitals so far; according
    to our sources, the number of "refusers" may reach half of the
    presidents of CIS countries.

    Each leader has his/her own reasons for refusal. Leaders of the
    Baltic states account for it with the fact that for their nations the
    World War II ended not in 1945, but at the start of the 1990s, when
    the "occupational" troops were withdrawn. The fact that the
    presidents of Lithuania and Estonia missed the opportunity to meet
    with a multitude of global leaders hasn't influenced their decisions.
    A simple solution was found: U.S. President George Bush arrives in
    Moscow en route to Riga on May 6; this is where the U.S.-Baltia
    summit takes place.

    President Mikhail Saakashvili of Georgia (the latest reports from
    Tbilisi indicate he has no intention to attend Moscow either) refers
    to the fact that he need to make preparations for George Bush's visit
    to Tbilisi on May 10-12, after the celebrations end in Moscow.

    According to signals received from Baku, Azerbaijani President Ilham
    Aliyev may also refuse to attend the CIS summit and celebrations of
    Victory Day. His problems is different: Moscow hoped to avail itself
    of this plea to have the Azerbaijani president seated to the table of
    negotiations with his Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharyan on the
    Nagorno-Karabakh problem. However, Baku has been more skeptical of
    late with regard to the settlement of this problem and doesn't seem
    to be ready for summit talks.

    As a result, the propaganda impact of the upcoming event could be
    much less than Moscow might wish. The Kremlin intended to arrange the
    celebrations of the 60th anniversary of Victory Day on an even
    grander scale than the St. Petersburg tercentenary.

    At the same time, many leaders of the states who have confirmed their
    attendance in Moscow intend to add a fly in the ointment. Thus,
    President Aleksander Kwasniewski of Poland intends to raise the issue
    of censuring the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact to the Russian leaders
    (which permitted Germany's aggression against Poland and division of
    the country); he also intends to elucidate Warsaw's position with
    regard to the Yalta Accords of 1945, which divided Europe into two
    opposed camps.

    President Vaira Vike-Freiberga of Latvia, the only Baltic leader to
    arrive in Moscow, is surely not very eager to do that. On the one
    hand, this is because she wishes to improve the complicated relations
    with Moscow; on the other hand, solving all the problems within a
    couple of days of their stay in Moscow is impossible.

    Finally, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's participation in
    the Moscow festivities is also greatly in doubt. The media reported a
    couple of weeks ago that the Japanese prime minister refused to
    attend Moscow referring to the fact that by the timeframe the
    celebrations coincide with the second half of the parliamentary
    session. Apparently, this excuse seemed to be unconvincing even for
    the Japanese authorities and the Foreign Ministry of Japan
    immediately issued a refutation, in which it noted that the issue is
    not settled yet. To all appearances, it is being solved and Tokyo is
    yet unable to determine what suits its interests more - a gesture of
    goodwill or the display of firmness in the dispute over the northern
    territories.

    Translated by Andrei Ryabochkin
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