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  • Loose association of former Soviet states hasn't replaced USSR

    Edmonton Journal (Alberta)
    September 12, 2005 Monday
    Final Edition

    Loose association of former Soviet states hasn't replaced USSR: They
    can't even unite for a common cause

    by David Marples, Freelance

    Is the CIS dead? The recent summit, held in Kazan, Tatarstan, despite
    official publicity making much of an occasion that coincided with
    the 1,000th anniversary of the city, provided clear signs that the
    association has become practically defunct, and little more than
    ceremonial.

    The Commonwealth of Independent States was founded in December 1991
    by the leaders of three former Soviet republics -- Russia, Ukraine
    and Belarus -- as a means to accelerate the collapse of the Soviet
    Union and to ensure that the Soviet president, Mikhail Gorbachev,
    was deprived of any meaningful function. At that time Gorbachev had
    tried to persuade several republics to sign a document that would have
    prolonged the Soviet Union through decentralization while allowing
    Moscow to control defence and foreign policy.

    The founders of the CIS anticipated that it would be of benefit to the
    various republics (the Baltic States never participated) to continue
    to maintain close economic and security links.

    Initially the informal capital of the CIS was to be Minsk, Belarus.
    Yet, from the outset, there were some serious problems. For one thing,
    the legal basis of the new organization was never clarified. The three
    leaders who had signed the deal had no consent from their parliaments,
    and its secretive nature carried all the hallmarks of a well-laid plot.

    Ukraine never accepted formal membership, though it attended meetings
    as an observer. The first Russian president, Boris Yeltsin, never
    took the organization very seriously, other than during elections,
    when he would use the CIS as a symbol of a Russian-led entity in what
    he termed the Near Abroad.

    As the Russian 14th Army established a breakaway republic at Tiraspol
    in Moldova, several states feared that Russia intended to use the
    CIS to control its former partners and to establish a new power base.

    Other organizations developed outside and parallel to the CIS from
    1996, the most serious being the GUUAM, a partnership that received
    support from the United States and consisted of countries around
    the Black Sea region (Georgia, Uzbekistan, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and
    Moldova); the Russia-Belarus Union (Russia and Belarus); and the Common
    Economic Space Group (CES -- Russia, Belarus, Ukraine and Kazakhstan).

    Other states have maintained a preference for bilateral relations
    outside these entities.

    According to U.S.-based Russian analyst Sergei Blagov, Russian
    president Vladimir Putin has veered from supporting the idea of a
    "divorce" among CIS states, to promoting greater unity after the 60th
    anniversary of Victory Day in Moscow last May.

    However, the Kazan summit appeared to make it plain that the CIS will
    soon be dissolved. There are several reasons why.

    First, Turkmenistan declined to attend the occasion, and its president,
    Saparmurat Niyazov, declared that his state would become no more than
    an observer in the future. Second, Georgia, one of the more activist
    republics under President Mikhail Saakashvili, has initiated the
    formation of what is termed a group of "democratic states" on the
    border of Russia that would be oriented toward the United States
    and the EU in particular. Third, Ukraine under Viktor Yushchenko has
    stalled on the signing of 29 documents on the Common Economic Space,
    agreeing to only about half of them.

    The presence of Ukraine in Kazan at all was something of a surprise.
    A meeting between Yushchenko and Belarusian president Alyaksander
    Lukashenka produced few results and a proposed exchange of visits to
    each other's capitals failed to materialize.

    Other states that might have resolved longstanding issues also failed
    to do so, most notably Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed
    territory of Nagorno-Karabakh; and the Republic of Moldova and its
    separatist enclave, the Transdniester Republic.

    Though the separation of the CIS states into authoritarian and
    democratic regimes is somewhat facile, there is little doubt that
    the states that have undergone political changes in recent times
    --Ukraine, Kyrgyszstan and Georgia -- are perceived by several others
    as dangerously subversive, particularly by the virtual dictatorships of
    Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan, and the genuine dictatorship
    in Belarus.

    But such states have not found a natural home under Moscow's influence
    either.

    Russia indeed remains the most enigmatic of the CIS states, as
    Putin appears to have accepted a smaller role on the world stage and
    focused more on consolidating his own authority and removing internal
    enemies. To date, he has tried to maintain cordial relations with the
    United States while increasing his control over parliament and the
    media through his security forces. He may thus decline to take steps
    to dissuade Turkmenistan from its departure, and other republics are
    thus likely to follow.

    That still leaves scope for Russia to tighten its links with its
    closest allies, Kazakhstan and Belarus, while exerting pressure
    on its former closest partner, Ukraine, through economic pressure,
    particularly the threat to raise oil and gas prices to world levels.

    The CIS served the essential function of legitimizing the rise of
    Russia over the Soviet Union, and what was essentially an internal
    coup d'etat by former president Yeltsin. But as a loose association
    of willing partners, it has failed manifestly to replace the USSR,
    or even to unite the former republics in a common cause.

    David Marples is a professor of history at the University of Alberta
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