Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russian FM: CIS countries themselves need to decide on integration

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Russian FM: CIS countries themselves need to decide on integration

    Gateway 2 Russia, Russia
    March 29 2005


    Russian minister says CIS countries themselves need to decide on
    integration

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said that the countries of
    the post-Soviet space should decide on their desire for integration.
    "We do not want to drag anyone into anything, we want to understand
    their interests. If they are interested, let us work," Lavrov said at
    the presentation of the Russian Academy of Sciences' International
    Economic and Political Studies Institute's Integration Problems
    Centre in Moscow on Monday [28 March].
    "I think we will be stronger if we are together," Lavrov said. "But
    we will be stronger not as a Russia that boasts its strength, but as
    respected states with respect for each other," Lavrov said.
    "I would include GUUAM [Georgia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan,
    Moldova] in the essence of these processes," he said. Lavrov said
    that those who think integration will begin after all the minor
    issues between CIS countries are resolved are wrong. "Integration
    will begin only if each of us decides whether we need it," Lavrov
    said.
    He said there is a mistaken opinion in CIS countries that only Russia
    is interested in the integration process. "Maybe some aspects of
    flirting with the West are connected to this," Lavrov said.
    He noted that when President Vladimir Putin recently called the CIS a
    mechanism for "civilized divorce", "he did not mean that this was its
    only purpose and there were not any others". "He was simply comparing
    the reasons for setting up the CIS and the EU and a 'civilized
    divorce' certainly does not rule out integration but makes it
    possible to intensify it," Lavrov said.
    He said the countries of the post-Soviet space should "respect each
    other and work on equitable terms and on conditions of market
    relations". "I think there will be mutual benefit," Lavrov said.
    Talking about Russian-Ukrainian relations, Lavrov noted that several
    issues related to the Black Sea fleet's stay in the Crimea remain,
    regardless of the fact that a base agreement on this has been signed.
    "There is a base agreement, but there is no definite agreement that
    states we can replace our ships there," Lavrov said.
    Lavrov also noted that Moscow deems unilateral concessions by Russia
    as unacceptable in the process of integration. "I think that
    integration is not only in the interest of peoples but also of
    states," the minister said.
    "Individually or by joining organizations that have been set up
    before us we will not achieve a respected place in the new world,"
    Lavrov thought.
    In his view, the establishment of the Union State of Russia and
    Belarus, the functioning of the EAEC [Eurasian Economic Community]
    and the CSTO [Collective Security Treaty Organization comprising
    Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, and
    Kyrgyzstan],"speaks of the necessity of integration".
Working...
X