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CIS Summit: Decorative, Yet Acrimonious

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  • CIS Summit: Decorative, Yet Acrimonious

    The Jamestown Foundation
    Thursday, May 12, 2005 -- Volume 2, Issue 93
    Eurasia Daily Monitor

    CIS SUMMIT: DECORATIVE, YET ACRIMONIOUS

    by Vladimir Socor

    Russian President Vladimir Putin and the presidents of nine other CIS member
    countries attended an informal CIS summit on May 8 in Moscow, as part of
    Russia's anniversary celebrations of victory in the Second World War.
    Presidents Mikheil Saakashvili of Georgia and Ilham Aliev of Azerbaijan
    stayed away from the summit: Saakashvili did so because of Russian
    stonewalling on an agreement (or presidential joint declaration) on the
    withdrawal of Russian forces from Georgia. Aliev stayed away because the CIS
    summit's date coincided with that of the 1993 capture of the Azeri-inhabited
    town of Shusha in Karabakh by Armenian forces.

    In an inauspicious curtain-raiser for the summit, Russian Security Council
    Secretary Igor Ivanov publicly described the recent political changes in
    Ukraine, Georgia, and Kyrgyzstan as "coups" (perevoroty), whereby power
    changed hands in "unconstitutional" ways, with "violations of basic
    democratic principles" (Strategiya Rossii, May 2005, cited by Interfax, May
    5). Belarusan president Alexander Lukashenka, who is on record as sharing
    that assessment, remarked sarcastically that this CIS summit, "the first
    since those notorious events, will acquaint us with somebody or other " --
    i.e., the new presidents of Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan. As regards the absent
    Georgian president, Lukashenka termed him "too immature to understand the
    essence" of the Moscow anniversary (Interfax, May 8).

    Responding to Ivanov, a statement by Ukraine's Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    pointed out that Ukraine's Constitutional Court and Parliament had
    invalidated the fraudulent returns of the presidential election runoff and
    ordered a repeat runoff, the conduct and result of which was validated by
    democratic countries and international organizations (Interfax-Ukraine, May
    7). Kyiv's statement stopped short of mentioning that the Russian-led CIS
    election monitoring mission had blessed the fraudulent returns and disputed
    the internationally-validated ones.

    Commenting on this CIS summit -- the first he attended as president of
    Ukraine -- Viktor Yushchenko pointed out that the organization was "of
    little use" to anyone (AP, May 9) and that the "CIS is history." The
    organization, he observed, lacked a project that could become the basis for
    economic cooperation. Summing up Ukraine's familiar position, Yushchenko
    noted that only a Free Trade Zone, devoid of political connotations, can
    begin to lay the foundation for cooperation within the CIS (Ukrainian TV
    Channel Five, May 8).

    Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin termed the CIS in its present form a
    mere "discussion club." Moldova, he told Russian state radio, has
    irreversibly chosen the European orientation as its top priority. The
    country values its "historically constituted" relations with Russia, but the
    relations are adversely affected by Russia's support for the Tiraspol
    secessionist regime, Voronin pointed out. He referred to the GUAM summit,
    recently held in Chisinau, as an indicator of the common European
    orientation of that group's participant countries (Radio Mayak, May 8, cited
    by Moldpres, May 9).

    Armenia's Ambassador to Russia, Armen Smbatian, described the CIS in the
    run-up to the summit as "a transitional organization, gradually descending
    into history, making room for direct bilateral relations among member
    states" (PanArmenian News, April 30). His statement reflects Armenia's
    traditional policy (predating the CIS' eclipse) of shunning multilateral CIS
    undertakings and emphasizing instead its purely bilateral ties with Russia.

    Turkmen President Saparmurad Niyazov, who very rarely attends CIS summits,
    made an exception in this case to honor the memory of his father, who was
    killed in the Second World War. While in Moscow, Niyazov joined Yushchenko
    to finalize a Ukrainian-Turkmen proposal regarding a tripartite consortium
    with Russia on the transport of Turkmen natural gas. Putin took delivery of
    the document during the summit for early consideration (Interfax, May 8).

    Kyrgyz Acting President Kurmanbek Bakyiev used the occasion to solicit
    Russian assistance in overhauling Soviet-era industrial enterprises, idle
    for more than a decade in Kyrgyzstan. Bakyiev proposed transferring such
    enterprises to Russian ownership in lieu of repayment of Kyrgyz debts to
    Russia. Putin seemed open to the proposal, citing the 2002 Russia-Armenia
    agreements on debt-for-property swaps as a model for to be followed in
    Kyrgyzstan's case (Interfax, May 8).

    It was Uzbek President Islam Karimov who publicly offered the most scathing
    assessment, both retrospective and current, of the CIS: "cooperation in name
    only," "shallow ideas," "all sorts of cooperation organizations that have
    been set up during more than 10 years, these ill-thought games that have
    today brought a major crisis to the CIS. ... This time, too, the [Moscow]
    meeting is likely to fail to resolve any serious issues" (Uzbek Television
    Channel One, May 8).

    Indeed the only result of this summit turned out to be a declaration of
    intent to "consider the possibility" of adopting an agreement on
    humanitarian cooperation at a follow-up CIS summit (Interfax, May 8).

    --Vladimir Socor
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