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New EU-Russia treaty to deepen security and energy ties

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  • New EU-Russia treaty to deepen security and energy ties

    New EU-Russia treaty to deepen security and energy ties
    10.03.2006 - 17:40 CET | By Andrew Rettman

    EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - A new EU-Russia treaty in 2007 is set to
    bestrong on joint crisis management, with EU reliance on Russian
    energy to grow.

    "We might be actually acting side by side in far away places, like
    Sudan, under UN auspices," Russian ambassador to the EU, Vladimir
    Chizhov, said in an interview with EUobserver on Thursday (9 March).

    "Whether one likes it or not, in the mid-term perspective, that is in
    the next 15 to 30 years, the percentage of EU demand covered by
    supplies from Russia will grow," he indicated.

    Mr Chizhov dubbed the new legal pact a "Strategic Partnership Treaty
    (SPT)" envisaging a slim framework document backed up by
    action-oriented instruments.

    "The issue at stake is not a new energy treaty...but a new treaty that
    would summarise Russia-EU relations and this can replace the existing
    Partnership and Cooperation Agreement [PCA]."

    The PCA was drafted in the 1980s between the then European Community
    and Soviet Union; it came into force in 1997 and will expire in
    December 2007.

    European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso will fly to Moscow
    on 17 March to kick-start the treaty talks with negotiations beginning
    "in earnest" in autumn.

    "The commission doesn't have a mandate to negotiate a new
    agreement. We understand that the intention is to draft such a mandate
    and present it to [member states] before the summer break," Mr Chizhov
    said.

    Ukraine gas crisis boosts pipeline plans

    The Ukraine gas crisis in January reinforced Russia's plans to build a
    Baltic Sea gas pipeline to Germany as well as Austria's push to build
    the Nabucco gas pipeline to the Caspian basin, the ambassador
    indicated.

    "The silver lining behind this Ukrainian hiccup is that today nobody
    questions the need for additional pipelines, including the North
    European gas pipeline."

    Poland still hates the Baltic pipeline, he explained "but today they
    are the only ones. There are countries that initially hated the idea
    but now they hate the idea of being left out of it."

    Western diplomats believe Nabucco will give the EU leverage in gas
    talks with Russia, yielding a new supply route out of Gazprom's hands.

    But "at least some" of the gas flowing through Nabucco will be
    Russian, Mr Chizhov predicted, adding "If one wants to play one
    country against another in terms of gas supplies that does not
    increase stability, that does not increase energy security."

    "It [the EU] is free to choose cheap energy from Russia or more
    expensive energy from elsewhere," he said.

    Joint missions in Nagorno-Karabakh

    EU and Russian soldiers could also do peacekeeping work in the
    breakaway Azerbaijan region of Nagorno-Karabakh in line with the new
    crisis management agenda, Mr Chizhov indicated.

    "It could only be a solution providing post-solution peacekeeping, not
    classic peacekeeping. Because neither the EU nor Russia want to get
    involved until there is an agreement on the ground."

    Russia has already sent a few policemen to join the EU police mission
    in Bosnia and Herzegovina and offered helicopters to help put out
    French forest fires in 2005.

    But it would be difficult for Russia to work with the EU on the
    Bosnian model, with Russia as a "junior partner," in post-Soviet
    countries, Mr Chizhov said.

    EU-Russian crisis work has also been frustrated by Brussels red tape
    in the past.

    The Bosnian police agreement took one year to write and the last two
    months were spent in "endless discussions" on whether it should be in
    English only or English and Russian.

    "Our partners on the EU side of the table said, since Russian is not
    an official language of the EU, you can't have it. This is stupid."

    Russian helicopters were ready to take off in 24 hours to help France
    but it took seven days to get overflight clearance from EU transit
    states.

    "In the meantime all the forests burned down," the ambassador
    indicated. "Today the EU lacks a coordinated system of civilian
    emergency response."

    EU brightness versus Russian darkness

    Some aspects of EU diplomacy are unhelpful in managing relations
    between the two powers in the post-Soviet region, Mr Chizhov remarked.

    "There are people unfortunately here [in Brussels] who want to pose
    artificial dilemmas facing these countries," he said. "The dilemma
    being - it's either forward to the bright future with the EU or
    backwards into the darkness with Russia."

    "We are being pragmatic, we understand that whatever any of these
    countries wishes is not going to happen today or tomorrow or in the
    foreseeable future," the diplomat stated.

    "But they are free to express their wishes, to dream about their
    future EU membership."

    © EUobserver.com 2006
    Printed from EUobserver.com 11.03.2006
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