EU PROPOSES 'EASTERN PARTNERSHIP' TO SIX FORMER SOVIET REPUBLICS
Paul Goble
WINDOW ON EURASIA
December 08, 2008
Tallinn, December 8 - Even as NATO has decided to proceed more slowly
in extending membership in the alliance to Ukraine and Georgia,
the European Union has offered an "eastern partnership" not only to
those two post-Soviet states but also to Armenia and Azerbaijan in
the Caucasus and Belarus and Moldova in the former Soviet West.
Under the terms of the new program which is intended to support
democracy and market reforms, the EU will offer the six some 350
million euros (450 million US dollars). The money is to be used in the
first instance to strengthen borders, promote trade, and distribute
energy supplies.
The European Union has been discussing this kind of a program for
some time, but the August conflict between Russia and Georgia led
its members to decide to move more quickly toward talks with these
six on these programs and also on the simplification and ultimate
elimination of the visa regimes among them.
The new initiative, if realized, could promote the further demontage
of the former Soviet space that Moscow has sought to maintain a
monopoly position on. According to one Azerbaijani commentator, the
new initiative will "reduce Russia's chances" of keeping this region
as "a common economic space or of making the CIS something more than
it now is.
Given that and given that integration into the EU requires even more
greater societal and political transformations than membership in the
Western military alliance, one might expect that Moscow's reaction to
this program would have been both immediate and strongly negative. But
so far, Russian officials have been restrained in their comments.
Vladimir Chizhov, who serves as Russia's permanent representative to
the EU, said that the new program obviously strengthens the position
of the European Union on the post-Soviet space but as to whether this
program is "against Russian interests or not" is something only time
will tell.
Meanwhile, Lidiya Kosikova, a researcher at the Moscow Institute
of International Economics and Politics, suggested that the EU move
was primarily about lessening European dependence on Russian oil and
gas but also about "interfering" with the integration of Russia and
"the former Soviet republics."
Moscow is thus likely to react but perhaps not in the ways that some of
the countries involved might expect. Instead of simply getting angry,
Moscow has typically demanded and received from the EU as from NATO
agreements and understandings in exchange for moving the borders of
these Western institutions eastward.
One of those in this case might be a fast track to visa-free travel
for Russian Federation citizens to EU countries, something Moscow very
much wants but that had been on hold since the Russian invasion of
Georgia last summer. And another might be the declaration of Russian
as an "official" language of the EU.
Russian is the largest language community in the EU that does not
have that status, and Moscow would like to see it acknowledged in this
way not only for status purposes but also to put pressure on Estonia,
Latvia and Ukraine to give Russian official status and a greater role,
however much those countries two of which are EU members already
might oppose it.
But this latest EU action could entail another consequence, one that
few appear to be thinking about now. In the early 1990s, the United
States took the lead in pushing the idea that EU membership for East
European countries could serve as either a surrogate or a stepping
stone to NATO membership.
If that idea should resurface, and some of its authors will be
returning to office with the incoming Obama Administration in
Washington, it would change both the EU and NATO and equally would
change how Moscow would deal with Brussels, thus introducing yet
another complication in East-West relations.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Paul Goble
WINDOW ON EURASIA
December 08, 2008
Tallinn, December 8 - Even as NATO has decided to proceed more slowly
in extending membership in the alliance to Ukraine and Georgia,
the European Union has offered an "eastern partnership" not only to
those two post-Soviet states but also to Armenia and Azerbaijan in
the Caucasus and Belarus and Moldova in the former Soviet West.
Under the terms of the new program which is intended to support
democracy and market reforms, the EU will offer the six some 350
million euros (450 million US dollars). The money is to be used in the
first instance to strengthen borders, promote trade, and distribute
energy supplies.
The European Union has been discussing this kind of a program for
some time, but the August conflict between Russia and Georgia led
its members to decide to move more quickly toward talks with these
six on these programs and also on the simplification and ultimate
elimination of the visa regimes among them.
The new initiative, if realized, could promote the further demontage
of the former Soviet space that Moscow has sought to maintain a
monopoly position on. According to one Azerbaijani commentator, the
new initiative will "reduce Russia's chances" of keeping this region
as "a common economic space or of making the CIS something more than
it now is.
Given that and given that integration into the EU requires even more
greater societal and political transformations than membership in the
Western military alliance, one might expect that Moscow's reaction to
this program would have been both immediate and strongly negative. But
so far, Russian officials have been restrained in their comments.
Vladimir Chizhov, who serves as Russia's permanent representative to
the EU, said that the new program obviously strengthens the position
of the European Union on the post-Soviet space but as to whether this
program is "against Russian interests or not" is something only time
will tell.
Meanwhile, Lidiya Kosikova, a researcher at the Moscow Institute
of International Economics and Politics, suggested that the EU move
was primarily about lessening European dependence on Russian oil and
gas but also about "interfering" with the integration of Russia and
"the former Soviet republics."
Moscow is thus likely to react but perhaps not in the ways that some of
the countries involved might expect. Instead of simply getting angry,
Moscow has typically demanded and received from the EU as from NATO
agreements and understandings in exchange for moving the borders of
these Western institutions eastward.
One of those in this case might be a fast track to visa-free travel
for Russian Federation citizens to EU countries, something Moscow very
much wants but that had been on hold since the Russian invasion of
Georgia last summer. And another might be the declaration of Russian
as an "official" language of the EU.
Russian is the largest language community in the EU that does not
have that status, and Moscow would like to see it acknowledged in this
way not only for status purposes but also to put pressure on Estonia,
Latvia and Ukraine to give Russian official status and a greater role,
however much those countries two of which are EU members already
might oppose it.
But this latest EU action could entail another consequence, one that
few appear to be thinking about now. In the early 1990s, the United
States took the lead in pushing the idea that EU membership for East
European countries could serve as either a surrogate or a stepping
stone to NATO membership.
If that idea should resurface, and some of its authors will be
returning to office with the incoming Obama Administration in
Washington, it would change both the EU and NATO and equally would
change how Moscow would deal with Brussels, thus introducing yet
another complication in East-West relations.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress