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Economy Overshadows Ex-Soviet Meeting

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  • Economy Overshadows Ex-Soviet Meeting

    ECONOMY OVERSHADOWS EX-SOVIET MEETING

    AFP
    October 8, 2008 - 3:36PM

    Leaders of a Moscow-dominated group of post-Soviet states are in
    Kyrgyzstan for talks overshadowed by worldwide financial turmoil and
    Russia's recent march into Georgia.

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev heads the list at the Commonwealth of
    Independent States (CIS) meeting. Many of the 10 or so attendees are
    torn between Russia and the West and the meeting agenda will focus on
    "harmonic" economic cooperation, according to the Kyrgyz hosts.

    Sceptics say that meetings of the CIS, a group created in 1991 on the
    ashes of the Soviet Union, have long been staid affairs characterised
    by perfunctory handshakes for the media and producing little of
    concrete significance.

    However they have also been a forum for talks on anything from Caspian
    energy to growing Western influence and a simmering conflict between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan - with differences sometimes springing into
    the open.

    "CIS summits were the only place for the leaders of Russia, Ukraine and
    Georgia to peacefully discuss their differences," said Kazakhstan-based
    analyst Eduard Poletayev, adding that Central Asian leaders were
    likely to approach Russia with special caution after August's war
    between Russia and Georgia.

    A factor limiting the potential for sparks to fly will be the absence
    of Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, who announced before a
    crowd on August 12: "We have taken a decision: Georgia is quitting
    the CIS.... Soviet Union, goodbye forever!"

    With that announcement, CIS membership dropped from 12 to 11 ex-Soviet
    republics.

    A question mark remained over the attendance of Saakashvili's
    pro-Western ally President Viktor Yushchenko of Ukraine, after the
    Georgian president urged other CIS states to follow his lead.

    The run-up to the summit has seen a flurry of US diplomatic visits
    to energy-rich southern neighbours of Russia, with US Secretary of
    State Condoleezza Rice urging Kazakhstan's leader on Sunday to help
    regeneration of war-torn Afghanistan, where Moscow long ago ceded
    the lead role to Washington.

    The host, Kyrgyzstan, exemplifies the tensions at play, as it is home
    to both Russian and US military bases, the US presence having come
    in for periodic Russian criticism.

    Poletayev, who edits the regional affairs journal Mir v Azii, said
    he saw little chance of a wave of leaders following Russia's lead
    and coming out to recognise the independence of two Georgian rebel
    regions that Moscow recognised as independent after the August war.

    Belarus, which has a "union state" agreement with Russia, has come
    under particular pressure but has deferred the issue until the opening
    of a new parliament session later this month.

    The war in Georgia, in which Russia presented its intervention as
    defending Russian citizens, "made Central Asian leaders understand
    (Russia's) revival continues and they must express their love and
    friendship", said Poletayev, adding however he doubted this meant a
    real loss of Western influence.

    For Yevgeny Volk, head of the Moscow office of the US Heritage
    Foundation, this week's free-fall on the Russian stock market is
    further proof that Moscow's bark is worse than its bite, something
    he says neighbours will understand.

    "On the surface we see there's a great degree of warmth and friendship
    but the deep interests of these nations differ greatly from Russia's,"
    said Volk.

    "The economic crisis we're now facing certainly has delivered a very
    serious blow to the myth of Russian strength," he said.

    Medvedev is due in the Kyrgyz capital Bishkek on Thursday.
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