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Russia must protect its interests in the post-soviet zone

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  • Russia must protect its interests in the post-soviet zone

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say. Part B (Russia)
    May 27, 2005, Friday

    ANDREI ISHCHUK: RUSSIA MUST PROTECT ITS INTERESTS IN THE POST-SOVIET
    ZONE

    SOURCE: Vremya Novostei, May 27, 2005, p. 5

    by Sergei Sokolov

    The first sector of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline went into
    operation on May 25. The capacity of the pipeline is 50 million tons
    of oil. The new facility greatly changes the geopolitical arrangement
    of forces in the vast region spanning Central Asia, the Caucasus, and
    the Caspian Sea. Russia could easily transport all this oil. Why
    haven't things worked out that way? What problems in relations with
    our neighbors have our leaders failed to solve so far? Here is an
    interview with Andrei Ishchuk, deputy chairman of the Federation
    Council CIS affairs committee.

    Andrei Ishchuk: America has skillfully promoted its own interests
    again. Russia does not need the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline. It
    isn't hard to guess that redistribution of oil flows will weaken
    Russian influence.

    It may be added that the territory where Moscow's influence is
    weakening is extremely unstable. Relations between Azerbaijan and
    Armenia leave much to be desired. Georgia is constantly trying to
    play a more active role in regional affairs. In fact, Kazakhstan
    alone stands to benefit from all this. Its leaders expertly promote a
    resolute but non-confrontational policy with regard to
    neighbor-states.

    The decision to build the pipeline was made in 1994, and Russian
    leaders had ample time to channel the developments in the direction
    they needed. They failed. As a result, we end with total American
    control along a substantial part of Russia's state borders. This
    control will inevitably evolve into interference in the internal
    affairs of oil exporters and transit countries, including Georgia.

    No wonder the problem of Russian bases in Georgia is the talk of the
    day now. America intends to deploy its own military contingents where
    the Russian military is stationed nowadays. The US Administration is
    prepared to spend $100 million on defense of the Caspian zone.

    Question: Would you say that Russian-Georgian relations have entered
    a impasse?

    Andrei Ishchuk: We've been neighbors and friends for too long. The
    things we have in common outweigh our differences. It would be the
    height of folly to sever long-established commercial, transport, and
    cultural relations. That would primarily hurt Georgia itself.

    Question: How and when the problem of withdrawal of the bases will be
    solved?

    Andrei Ishchuk: Official Moscow made it plain more than once that the
    withdrawal was not going to follow the Georgian or American scenario.
    Everything is to be settled at talks. A lot of details have to be
    sorted out - financial, organizational, political. I don't think that
    the Georgian people does not have problems more pressing than
    withdrawal of Russian bases. It has, and the problems are pressing
    indeed. Unemployment, for example. I doubt that Tbilisi's partners
    across the ocean are eager to create jobs for Georgians.

    Question: Is Russia eager to do so?

    Andrei Ishchuk: Georgia has enough means of attracting Russian
    investors, including corporations. Georgia lacks raw materials. It
    lacks electricity generating capacities. Its transport capacities are
    extremely limited and technically obsolete. I don't doubt that
    Russian energy companies, railroads, and industrialists in general
    have much to offer Tbilisi.

    Question: How do you think our relations with the Baltic states will
    develop?

    Andrei Ishchuk: I'm convinced that no matter how hard some Baltic
    politicians strive to sever all contacts with Russia, they are doomed
    to fail. The territorial claims which the Baltic states produce every
    now and then are absolutely groundless. Escalating these issues could
    destabilize the situation. We have not forgotten about ancestral
    Russian lands and territories, but we respect international law. That
    is something I cannot say about the leaders of Latvia. They demand
    recognition of "occupation" as applied to a substantial part of their
    history; they are prepared to write off the past of a whole
    generation. The next instant, however, they come up with territorial
    claims. That's a policy of double standards, pure and simple. Russia
    should respond to it appropriately. Fortunately, we have ample means
    and resources for that.

    Question: But the West has ample resources as well.

    Andrei Ishchuk: It is time we recognized that Russia's geostrategic
    interests differ from the West's. That's normal. No matter what
    politicians from across the Atlantic might be saying, splitting
    Russia from Europe is their number one objective and priority. They
    seek to take over raw materials, resources, pipelines, and transport
    systems. Over there, they do not want a united Europe, let alone a
    Europe in partnership with Russia. All this has to be remembered and
    taken into consideration. Russia must protect its interests in the
    post-Soviet zone and do everything possible to promote them. Among
    other things, it needs a more expansive and energetic policy in the
    matter of oil markets. Oil production is great, but marketing,
    technologies, logistics should not be ignored either. Thinking in
    terms of progress is what is needed. Unfortunately, we've only been
    responding to the situation instead of trying to shape it to our
    satisfaction.

    Question: Do you think we should expect more color revolutions?

    Andrei Ishchuk: The chances of color revolutions being exported are
    indeed high. The policy of the West in Eastern Europe is restricted
    to containment or even isolation of Russia. We should face that, and
    take it in our stride, while always remembering that this policy is
    unacceptable to us. Isolation of Russia would be an effective means
    of making the Russian authorities predictable, of taking over. We
    need a firm but consistent policy to respond to this strategy, not a
    policy of confrontation.

    We are not entirely without leverages, you know. I'm talking about
    joint parliamentary commissions, establishment of Russian education
    centers in post-Soviet countries, propaganda of the Russian language.
    If we want a stable and predictable world, we should do something to
    help it come into being. Whoever possesses strategic thinking always
    gets the upper hand, nowadays. I repeat again, we need a policy of
    expansion into world oil markets. Let us be active instead of sitting
    tight and calculating losses.

    In the meantime, we should always remember that the countries
    surrounding Russia are sovereign states. Their peoples themselves
    choose their own way of life. It is an entirely different matter if
    what is actually chosen is indeed the people's own choice.
    Thoughtless attempt to rock the boat, particularly in Central Asia,
    may lead to escalation of international conflicts, and that is
    something nobody - even the United States and Europe - needs.

    Question: And yet, what happened in Ukraine and Georgia sets an
    example for others. Nearby Belarus, for example.

    Andrei Ishchuk: I believe that the people of Belarus are wise enough
    to tell cause from effect. America's interest in Belarus is entirely
    understandable. This is the last territory between Russia and Western
    Europe which the US Administration does not control yet. It would be
    quite naive to think that Western investment will follow color
    revolutions to Belarus. Investment will come sooner - it's already
    coming in, actually - from Russia. That goes for oil and gas transit
    as well.

    As for Ukraine, I dare say that the revolutionary euphoria there is
    about to fade away. Life goes on. The government of Ukraine has to
    start thinking about how to make life in the country acceptable and
    not about how to lure the people into the streets. So far, it has not
    been very successful. Prices soar, inflation is getting out of hand.
    Official Kiev doesn't even have a clear foreign policy - other than
    being willing and eager to make friends with the United States. Well,
    the Ukrainians can be friends with whomever they want, but it won't
    do to forget that Ukraine shares a border with Russia. Along the
    Black Sea, too. Russia will not permit the Black Sea to be used in
    the interests of the West alone.

    Translated by A. Ignatkin
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