Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Natural Drift To NATO

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

  • Natural Drift To NATO

    NATURAL DRIFT TO NATO
    by Victoria Panfilova
    Translated by A. Ignatkin

    Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, December 1, 2006, p. 3
    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    December 4, 2006 Monday

    RUSSIA'S ZONE OF INFLUENCE WITH POST-SOVIET NEIGHBORS IS SHRINKING; The
    Baltic states, Ukraine and Georgia are facing an essentially open door
    into NATO; Azerbaijan will be in the same position soon. There will
    be a cordon sanitaire around Russia, like the cordon the international
    community formed around the Bolshevik state in the early 20th century.

    Known as the Baku Corps, a crack unit of the Azeri regular army,
    is shifting to NATO standards. The news took Moscow by surprise. For
    years already Azerbaijan has promoted a well-balanced foreign policy,
    advancing relations with NATO but knowing better than unduly advertise
    them.

    Moscow needs Azerbaijan - and therefore promotes relations with it
    in all fields and spheres, including military-political contacts.

    Whether it does or not, positions of Russia in Azerbaijan - and
    throughout the region in general - seem to have weakened. Imperial
    aspect of Russian presence in the southern part of the Caucasus is
    history now. The attempts to restore influence with the region through
    economic ties proved more disappointing than successful.

    Baku appears to understand that membership of neighbor Georgia in
    NATO is practically a foregone conclusion, that it is but a matter
    of time now, and that everything will be decided by the United States
    (the prime agent of NATO's expansionist policy). Georgia's membership
    in NATO will mark the beginning of a spread of NATO's influence with
    this part of the Caucasus - and farther into the Central Asia. Once
    the process is under way, Russia may forget about restoration of its
    military-political influence.

    The step Azerbaijan has done in NATO direction is quite natural and
    reasonable from this standpoint. Once the Georgian issue is settled,
    Baku will become in the region the principal claimant for advanced
    relations with NATO and for full membership in it at some later date.

    Hence the elite unit's transition to NATO standards as an element
    of preparations for this distant future. Along with everything else,
    Azerbaijan is determined to master new types of weapons and develop
    its defense industry and army. No wonder speculations on the necessity
    of new military bases in the republic are so frequent in Azerbaijan
    nowadays.

    Moscow is not enthusiastic about this. Azerbaijan knows all too well,
    however, that the Kremlin may also grumble but cannot actually do
    anything to prevent it from happening. Sweetening the bitter pill,
    Baku never misses a chance to emphasize its readiness to advance
    and broaden economic contacts with Russia. Indeed, Russian companies
    enjoy preferential treatment in Azerbaijan. These two vectors when
    political bearing points are in the West and socioeconomic in the
    North allow for a balanced policy in general.

    It stands to reason to expect promotion of military ties with NATO and
    economic with Russia will become a strong argument in Baku's arsenals
    in the future debates over the Nagorno-Karabakh status. On the other
    hand, Armenia sees what is happening as well. It is already taking
    measures. Its military-political strategic alliance with the Kremlin
    retained, official Yerevan is advancing relations and contacts with
    Brussels - slowly but surely.

    The Baltic states, Ukraine and Georgia are facing an essentially open
    door into NATO; Azerbaijan will be in the same position soon. There
    will be a cordon sanitaire around Russia, like the cordon the
    international community formed around the Bolshevik state in the
    early 20th century.
Working...
X