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  • Carpe Diem

    CARPE DIEM
    by Sergei Markedonov

    Russia Profile
    http://www.russiaprofile.org/page.php?page id=International&articleid=a1228929186
    Dec 10 2008
    Russia

    The Backlog in Accepting Ukraine and Georgia into NATO Gives Moscow
    Grounds for Normal and Pragmatic Cooperation with the Alliance's
    Member States

    Ukraine and Georgia have so far been unable to boost their status
    in NATO. This is probably one of the most significant events of the
    passing year. These countries will now have to either wait for a
    more favorable political environment, or to essentially adjust their
    approaches to foreign policy and national security. But although
    the delay in processing Ukraine's and Georgia's NATO applications
    can hardly be seen as a triumph of Russia's diplomacy, it gives
    Russia enough time to come up with the mechanisms needed to halt the
    alliance's eastward expansion altogether.

    During a summing of NATO Foreign Ministers in Brussels, which took
    place on December 2 and 3 and summed up, to a certain extent, the year
    2008, the two former republics of the Soviet Union did not receive
    a Membership Action Plan (MAP). Other issues became the focus of
    attention in the capital of Belgium. "Albania and Croatia have already
    completed important reforms. Our goal is to welcome two new members to
    the alliance during our next summit," the communiqué summarizing the
    results of the summit claimed. Thus, by the Alliance's 60th birthday
    (NATO turns 60 in 2009) the two Balkan republics will become its full
    members. However, this will be the limit of yet another "eastward
    expansion," at least for the time being. Even Macedonia has not yet
    received a "final invitation" to the alliance, due to the problems
    connected with its name.

    Different positions and opinions are available today with regard to the
    delay of Georgia's and Ukraine's North Atlantic integration. Russia's
    President Dmitry Medvedev expressed his satisfaction with the process
    of halting NATO's expansion eastward, emphasizing that "reason has
    prevailed." According to Russia's representative in NATO, Dmitry
    Rogozin, the alliance's position means a political defeat for the
    "orange leaders." However, official Kiev and Tbilisi have a different
    opinion of the problem. Just a few days ago, the head of Ukraine's
    Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MID), Vladimir Ogryzko, declared
    that "Ukraine will take a different path into NATO." According to
    Ogryzko, this is largely due to the fact that the path has become
    "too politicized." The minister believes that in reality, Ukraine has
    been fulfilling all requirements specified in the Membership Action
    Plan for over two years now. And this is why, from the point of view
    of the head of Ukraine's MID, a formal offering of a MAP is something
    that should not be overrated.

    Similar judgments can be heard from the representatives of Georgia's
    authority. "I think that our chances of joining NATO are high, and I
    think that at this stage the so-called Membership Action Plan for the
    alliance is no longer relevant. This was interesting back in April,
    but today it is not relevant anymore. Evidently, new mechanisms for
    these processes are about to be developed, and we will definitely
    become a member of NATO," said Temuri Yakobashvili, Georgia's Minister
    for Reintegration. But the minister did not explain what these new
    mechanisms are, what their essence is, and, most importantly, why
    the MAP that only yesterday was so much hoped for is suddenly "not
    relevant." But it would have been difficult to expect such explanations
    from him. Just a few days ago, he tried to explain that the Dagomys
    Agreement and the Joint Control Commission were not "relevant" and
    proposed to "unfreeze" the process of conflict regulation.

    As of today, Georgia has lost not only part of the former South
    Ossetian autonomy, but also the Akhalgori district, precisely as a
    result of the search for a "relevant unfreezing."

    For the sake of being objective, however, we should note that both
    in Georgia and in Ukraine influential politicians and experts,
    representing the reigning authorities and the opposition, are
    trying to analyze their own failures and mistakes. Ukraine's former
    Minister of Foreign Affairs and now the Head of the Verkhovna Rada's
    Foreign Affairs Committee Boris Tarasyuk (who has the reputation of
    a fervent supporter of NATO integration), claims that, to a large
    extent, "we are to blame," and in particular the "internal political
    instability" and constant clashes between the "orange coalition"
    teammates. Another former political leader, the ex-speaker of Georgia's
    national parliament and a living symbol of the "Revolution of Roses"
    Nino Burjanadze believes that "because of some inadequate actions of
    its authorities, Georgia has lost the prospects of growing closer to
    NATO. NATO did not give a MAP to Georgia's authorities, not to the
    whole nation or its people." However, it is impossible not to see a
    fair share of slyness in this thesis. NATO gives a MAP (or refuses
    to provide one) not to nations or people, but to states.

    Be that as it may, Russia's politicians and political analysts now
    have to register some interim results of the "expansion" process,
    which will most probably not stop for good this winter. After all,
    Georgia and Ukraine did not receive MAPs, but the whole issue of
    North Atlantic integration has not been taken off the agenda. And the
    United States, along with Great Britain, the Baltic States and Poland,
    continue to actively lobby the NATO aspirations of these two former
    Soviet republics.

    The decision to put the applications from Kiev and Tbilisi on the
    backburner is extremely important for the internal political situation
    in Russia. It will, at least for a period of time, silence the voices
    of irreconcilable "hawks," the advocates of the conspiracy theory about
    NATO that is trying to surround Russia. Once again, this demonstrates
    that NATO is far from being the same as the Soviet Union Communist
    Party's Central Committee of Comrade Leonid Brezhnev's era, which was
    dominated by the concept of "unanimous support." Nowadays even such
    a superpower as the United States cannot "impose" a decision without
    the support of other members of the alliance. And if Germany, France,
    Spain and the Netherlands are not ready to see Georgia and Ukraine
    in NATO, then this position (in line with the national interests of
    these countries) will be taken into consideration. The same is true
    for Greece, which is willing to go to great lengths to prevent the
    ex-Yugoslavian republic with the questionable (from Athens' point of
    view) name from getting recognized. There is no total unity in NATO,
    and many members set the factor of cooperation with Russia above the
    dubious, from the point of view of efficiency, "accelerated" expansion.

    This fact was also proven by the latest session of the NATO
    Parliamentary Assembly in Valencia. The resolution on the necessity of
    reestablishing a military and political partnership and cooperation
    with Russia was passed at the plenary session of the Assembly on
    November 18. Russia's cooperation with the Assembly was practically
    scrapped after the "five-day war," precisely as a consequence of
    the events of the "hot August" of 2008. The text of the resolution
    clearly states the need for reestablishing cooperation in the field
    of security, because there are many "security concerns shared by NATO
    and Russia, including the terrorist threat, continuing instability
    in Afghanistan and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction,
    including Iran's nuclear and missile programs." The President of the
    NATO Parliamentary Assembly, Jose Lello of Portugal, also emphasized
    the fact that "we must reestablish our relations with Russia to the
    fullest extent." In the two weeks that passed between the session
    in Valencia and the summit in Brussels, many representatives of the
    Alliance confirmed the need to go back to the "spirit of 2001."

    This means that a field for normal and pragmatic cooperation with the
    member states of the alliance is now opened for Moscow. After all, thus
    far nobody has really been able to explain to us why it is dangerous
    for Ukraine to join NATO. They either point at the urban madmen with
    gonfalons, or keep talking about Slavic solidarity (as if Poland, the
    Czech Republic, Slovakia and Slovenia are no longer members of NATO),
    or better yet wage a war on the spirit of Ivan Mazepa. But this has
    nothing to do with Mazepa or Slavic spirituality. The problem is that
    Ukraine's military industrial complex is extremely tightly integrated
    with that of Russia. If Ukraine moves under the flags of NATO, it
    will cancel multimillion contracts for Russia's "defense complex"
    (although, the process won't be painless for Ukraine's defense
    industry, either). This is the pragmatic point of view that should be
    used to deal with Ukraine, and our allies in this effort should be the
    generals of Ukrainian military industry, not the marginal politicians
    we see on our television screens. We should have realized long ago
    that Russia's interests in the world should be fought for not by the
    supposedly "pro-Russian forces" in the CIS republics, but by serious
    business, media and intellectual resources in the West (we can get
    them to fight for us by creating a maximally favorable environment
    for them in the areas where our pragmatic interests intersect).

    Secondly, one of the other lessons we can learn from Brussels is
    that the decision on Georgia and Ukraine did not become a triumph for
    Russian diplomacy. It's just that the spirit of pragmatism turned out
    to be above the interests of the "democracy commissars." It would
    probably be wrong to shrug off Russia's firm position during the
    "five-day war," too, along with the stirring up of the situation in
    the Southern Caucasus (the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict regulation,
    the signing of the Moscow Declaration on Karabakh).

    All of this, however, had only an indirect influence on the decision
    made by the NATO states. Even during the April summit of the alliance
    in Bucharest, the representatives of the "old Europe" (especially
    Germany) were rather skeptical about the potential "draftees" from
    Georgia and Ukraine. Thereby, in the future it will be enough for
    Moscow to simply use the existing disagreements between the United
    States and "old Europe," between the ex-communist republics (whose
    ambitions grow not because of their economic power, but because of
    their scandalous behavior connected to Soviet history and political
    advisability) and the European democracies.

    Thirdly, it's too early to celebrate, because the process of NATO's
    expansion will not stop completely. The problem here is not limited
    to the "pro-Russian" positions of Germany and France. Georgia and
    Ukraine (or at least its current president) are appealing to join the
    alliance on their own, without any support from "old Europe." Other
    states, whose status in the bloc today is lower than that of the two
    above-mentioned countries, also see some prospects for themselves
    in NATO. This is a reference primarily to Azerbaijan. The countries
    of Central Asia are also taking a closer look at NATO. Thus the
    problem is not even limited to the United States with its strategy of
    "acceleration" in relation to the former fraternal republics of the
    "unbreakable Union."

    Here is the main problem: escaping from Soviet history (and escaping
    from post-Soviet realities) is becoming the main trend on a sixth
    of our planet's dry land. Russia could offer its strategy of being a
    good neighbor, an alternative at least to the "Eastern partnership"
    which is being so actively promoted today by the European Union. This
    strategy would be adequate to the geography, history and current
    realities. However, such a strategy is not yet apparent, whereas Moscow
    could have presented many of its actions during the post-Soviet period
    in a much more positive light than the actions of NATO in Kosovo or
    in Afghanistan.

    However, this cannot be done without employing the democratic language
    adopted in the West, without modernization tasks and other similar
    things. Nobody nowadays is warmed by the feelings of nostalgia for the
    Soviet Union, the "Slavic brotherhood" and the "Eurasian values." All
    of this ideological baggage should be checked into storage, otherwise
    it will work (and is objectively already working) against our interest
    and in the interests of "accelerated expansion." Russia could have
    become not an anti-Europe and anti-West, but an alter-West and an
    alternative Europe. Though this is something that is not possible
    without internal changes.

    In December of 2008 Russia received a certain backlog of time. The
    "expansion" process did not finish in Brussels, it simply slowed
    down. Perhaps it will become more sensible; however, it would now
    be premature to say that Russia has the resources, institutions
    and mechanisms to stop such a process. Therefore, they should be
    created. We still have a few years ahead, although we should have
    started a few days ago.

    Sergey Markedonov, PhD, is the head of the Interethnic Relations
    Department at Moscow's Institute of Political and Military Analysis.

    --Boundary_(ID_t5VLlRUo6L4esujZufcacg)- -

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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