Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Frozen Conflicts Start To Thaw

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Frozen Conflicts Start To Thaw

    THE FROZEN CONFLICTS START TO THAW
    Simon Tisdall

    guardian.co.uk
    Wednesday 29 April 2009 17.15 BST

    Under pressure from Brussels, Europe's 'wild east' is coming in from
    the cold - but plenty of obstacles still remain

    The EU's invitation to Belarus to attend a special summit in Prague
    next week is the latest sign a spring thaw may be taking hold along
    the ragged, fraught frontiers of Europe's "wild east". The so-called
    frozen conflicts that have disfigured the region since the end of
    the cold war are beginning to melt at the edges. Under pressure from
    Brussels, the ice is starting to shift.

    Most significant in strategic and economic terms is the burgeoning
    rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia, which last week unveiled
    a joint road map to normalise relations after almost a century of
    hostility. The plan includes re-opening the border closed by Turkey
    in 1993 in protest at Armenian support for separatists contesting
    Azerbaijan's control of the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Despite effectively placing its membership bid on hold, the EU is happy
    to piggyback on Turkey's considerable influence in the Caucasus and
    the Black Sea and Caspian Sea regions for its own purposes. These
    include the advancing of common trade, development, security and
    human rights agendas and most importantly, perhaps, the securing of
    non-Russian controlled energy supply routes from central Asia.

    The kiss-and-make-up scenario now de veloping between Ankara and
    Yerevan has thus been warmly welcomed in Brussels, and in the
    US. Prospectively it makes it easier to draw relatively isolated
    Armenia, which has long lived in Moscow's shadow, closer towards
    the western fold. And that in turn dovetails nicely with developing
    western ties other post-Soviet republics such as Georgia and Ukraine.

    A parallel thaw is underway between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which have
    begun talks on de-icing Nagorno-Karabakh. Oil-producing Azerbaijan,
    on the shores of the Caspian, is a crucial player in terms of future
    European energy supply and transit. It pays to keep it happy. Once
    again the EU, along with Turkey, has been active in promoting the
    nascent peace process. And the EU's Prague summit will host the next
    encounter of the two countries' presidents.

    It's possible to read too much into another EU-facilitated meeting
    of old enemies, held last week between Georgian officials and
    representatives of Russia and South Ossetia, the tiny separatist region
    that sparked last summer's Caucasus war. The talks took place in a
    tent and afterwards, the Georgians complained the Russians had set
    up a "hotline" telephone link but failed to give them the number. All
    the same, it was the first such meeting in the conflict zone and the
    parties agreed to meet again. That's progress of sorts.

    Recent political upheavals in Moldova, one of the more complex frozen
    conflicts, have presented Brus sels with an additional opportunity
    to advance its agenda and interests. And this opening coincides in
    turn with the EU's controversial invitation to ostracised Belarus to
    attend the Prague summit.

    Once condemned as "Europe's last dictatorship", President Alexander
    Lukashenko's regime has a dismal record of misrule and was previously
    blacklisted by Brussels. But by bringing Belarus in from the cold,
    the EU is again signalling that engagement, based on enlightened
    self-interest, trumps confrontation. Responding positively so far,
    Lukashenko has taken to describing his country as a "bridge" between
    east and west.

    The 27 EU heads-of-government will bestow their blessing on this 21st
    century brand of Ostpolitik in Prague when they formally launch a new
    "eastern partnership" with six former Soviet bloc states - Belarus,
    Georgia, Ukraine, Moldova, Azerbaijan and Armenia. But for all the
    positive signs, plenty of large and small obstacles remain with
    potential to derail the whole enterprise.

    Azerbaijan, for example, opposes any Turkey-Armenia rapprochement
    while the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute is unresolved. This tension, plus
    the opposition of ultra-nationalists in all three countries, could
    scupper both sets of negotiations. Then there is the wider issue of
    how much is just talk and how much the EU can actually deliver, in
    terms of financial and developmental aid, security, peace-building
    and political reform to countries whose needs are enor mous and
    growing. Goodwill may quickly dissipate once the six realise the new
    partnership is not a path to EU membership but a substitute for it.

    But the biggest unknown remains the attitude of Russia, which already
    feels threatened by current trends and retains formidable wrecking
    power should it choose to wield it. Whether the issue is South
    Ossetia's "Passport to Pimlico" separatists, Ukraine's gas pipelines,
    Nato exercises in Georgia, the future of Moldova's Transdniestria
    region or Azerbaijan's and Armenia's geopolitical orientation, Russia
    will continue to have a major say in a region it still regards as
    within its sphere of influence.

    In fact, Russia still seems to think it has a veto. Right now, the
    EU is trying to demonstrate that is not the case.
Working...
X