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Russian Paper Views GUAM As Peacekeeping Rival

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  • Russian Paper Views GUAM As Peacekeeping Rival

    RUSSIAN PAPER VIEWS GUAM AS PEACEKEEPING RIVAL

    Nezavisimaya Gazeta, Moscow
    1 Jun 06

    The formation of a GUAM peacekeeping unit, which was announced
    at the Baku meeting of CIS defence ministers, will put an end to
    Russian peacekeeping operations in the CIS, a Russian newspaper has
    predicted. The following is the text of the article by Sokhbet Mamedov
    and Svetlana Gamova: "Hot Spots for Sale. Ukraine Suggests Setting Up
    a CIS Peacekeeping Force As an Alternative to Russian Peacekeepers"
    published by Russian newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta on 1 June:

    Russia will have to prove the effectiveness of its peacekeeping
    contingent in the immediate future: Serious rivals have appeared in
    the post-Soviet area. This became obvious at the latest 50th session
    of the CIS Defence Ministers Council. On the eve of the session,
    Ukrainian Defence Minister Anatoliy Hrytsenko met with his Azeri
    counterpart Safar Abiyev and expressed the need to set up a separate
    peacekeeping unit within GUAM.

    The Ukrainian minister's statement caused a sensation. Moreover,
    it was clearly aimed at weakening the positions of Russia, which
    remains the main peacekeeping force in the CIS. It is the Russian
    "blue helmets" who have been on peacekeeping missions in Abkhazia,
    South Ossetia, and the Dniester region since the early 1990s. The
    point is that the same morning Azeri Defence Minister Safar Abiyev
    directly linked the viability of the CIS to the organization's ability
    to settle internal conflicts in the member states. The Ukrainian and
    Azeri defence ministers' statements became a kind of death sentence
    on Russia's peacekeeping missions and the entire CIS as a structure
    performing mediator functions in the peaceful settlement of conflicts.

    Moreover, all the indications are that the concept of setting up
    GUAM's peacekeeping force has already been prepared very thoroughly.

    At any rate the Ukrainian minister mentioned in Baku the date for
    the appearance of the new "blue helmets" in the post Soviet area:
    around mid-June this year. According to Hrytsenko, the deputy chiefs of
    the General Staffs of Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Moldova should gather
    in Kiev around that time specifically to discuss the creation of a
    joint peacekeeping subunit, its goals, and structures. It is easy to
    guess under whose auspices it will be formed: Hrytsenko proposed to
    his Azerbaijani counterpart that these issues be discussed in detail
    in Brussels where, as we know, the NATO Headquarters is situated. All
    organizational issues will be finally resolved in the fall during the
    meeting of the GUAM member states' defence ministers. The Ukrainian
    minister said that the venue and date for the meeting will be set
    during the course of work. According to Anatoliy Hrytsenko, the
    GUAM peacekeeping force will fulfil its mission based on a UN or
    OSCE mandate.

    The Georgian and Moldovan defence ministers' opinions on the plans
    articulated by Anatoliy Hrytsenko are not known yet, for they did
    not take part in the Baku session of the CIS Defence Ministers Council.

    Meanwhile, Azeri Defence Minister Safar Abiyev expressed his attitude
    to the Ukrainian minister's statements very cautiously. According to
    him, discussions on setting up the GUAM peacekeeping force have been
    held for a long time now, but this issue is still in the development
    phase. "When we arrive at the unanimous decision we will submit it
    for the state leaders' consideration following the defence ministers'
    meeting," Safar Abiyev pointed out. At the same time, he did not rule
    out that should the peacekeeping subunit be formed, it could also be
    deployed in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone.

    Safar Abiyev also pointed out that the Azerbaijani people will never
    put up with the occupation of their land and that "Azerbaijan will
    use all its rights guaranteed by international norms to restore its
    territorial integrity." "It is time we took a categorical objective
    stance: declared Armenia an aggressor and demanded that it observe
    international norms and leave the occupied Azeri territory," the
    minister said.

    We would point out that a peacekeeping force within GUAM set up at
    Ukraine's initiative would allow the states comprising the organization
    (unsettled conflicts smoulder in three of them) to jointly cope with
    the existing territorial problems. This will mean that Russia will be
    automatically excluded from the peacekeeping effort in the former USSR.

    Awareness of the consequences of the Ukrainian minister's statement
    urged Russian Federation Defence Minister Sergey Ivanov to respond.

    He launched an attack and stated in Baku that Russian peacekeepers will
    stay in the Dniester region until the Chisinau-Tiraspol conflict has
    been resolved. "We are going to protect the artillery depots in the
    Dniester region village of Kolbasna until a political solution to the
    Dniester problem has been found," Ivanov said at the press conference
    following the CIS defence ministers' meeting. According to Ivanov,
    Russia cannot allow a situation where ammunition would fall into
    terrorists' hands. In addition to this, the defence minister pointed
    out that peacekeeping subunits might be deployed in Nagorno-Karabakh
    in the immediate future, because its problems are not being solved
    in any way. Admittedly, the Russian minister did not specify whose
    peacekeepers would be stationed in the Armenian-Azeri confrontation
    zone.

    As regards the GUAM peacekeeping force's prospects, the countries
    comprising the organization have the experience of international
    peacekeeping operations in Kosovo, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Liberia.

    Georgia is particularly experienced in this field: Its soldiers
    serve in peacekeeping units in a number of hot spots and in the
    Georgian-Ossetian conflict zone.
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