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Belarusian President Boycotts Moscow's CSTO Summit

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  • Belarusian President Boycotts Moscow's CSTO Summit

    BELARUSIAN PRESIDENT BOYCOTTS MOSCOW'S CSTO SUMMIT
    Vladimir Socor

    Jamestown Foundation
    June 15 2009

    Photo: Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, center, walks with other
    leaders of nations belonging to the Organization of the Collective
    Security Treaty, or CSTO, to their meeting in the Moscow Kremlin,
    Sunday, June 14, 2009, during a summit of the CSTO.

    Belarus refused to attend the Collective Security Treaty Organization
    (CSTO) summit in Moscow on June 14. The summit made decisions to
    enlarge the size of collective rapid deployment forces, the scope of
    their missions, and the legal basis of their operations.

    President Alyaksandr Lukashenka cancelled the participation of
    Belarus at the last moment before the summit; and his government is
    now contesting the validity of the summit's decisions made in the
    absence of Belarus. The Uzbek president, Islam Karimov, signed the
    summit's documents with reservations attached, limiting Uzbekistan's
    participation in future CSTO activities. Armenia's position is
    not immediately clear: Moscow's official reports do not mention an
    Armenian signature on the framework agreement regarding CSTO's rapid
    deployment forces (Interfax, ITAR-TASS, RIA Novosti, June 14).

    At the concluding press conference, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
    asked "the states" that have not inked the summit documents to
    reconsider and sign them later. Belarus was scheduled to take over the
    chairmanship of CSTO's Council of Heads of State from Armenia at this
    summit, in accordance with the annual rotation in Russian alphabetical
    order. With Belarus boycotting the summit, however, Russia took over
    the CSTO's chairmanship "for the period of Belarus' absence."

    Adding insult to injury, Lukashenka did not personally notify the
    Kremlin about his refusal to attend. Lukashenka's office informed
    Medvedev's office and the Belarusian ministry of foreign affairs
    informed the CSTO secretariat on the shortest possible notice.

    Moscow takes the position that Belarus' non-participation in the
    summit does not invalidate the summit's decisions. Under the CSTO's
    rules of procedure, a collective decision can be blocked by an
    "official objection" from a member country. Belarus had participated
    in negotiations on the documents prior to the summit without
    registering official objections, according to unverified claims by
    Russian officials. Nevertheless, the Belarus foreign ministry note
    did clearly warn that Belarus' non-participation "means a lack of
    approval from Belarus of the decisions that are to be considered" at
    the summit, as well as disavowal of decisions made at the pre-summit,
    ministerial-level meetings, which "consequently means a lack of
    consensus [by Belarus] on these decisions" (RIA Novosti, June 14).

    Officially, Minsk explains its step as a response to Moscow's
    restrictive commercial measures against Belarus and abusive practices
    in the energy sector. Tacitly, the Belarusian authorities from
    Lukashenka on down are loath to become involved in Russia's conflict
    undertakings, whether ongoing or looming ones in the South Caucasus
    or Central Asia.

    The foreign ministry note complained of "overt economic discrimination
    by a CSTO member country against Belarus. Such actions undermine
    economic security, which is a foundation for stability and a pillar of
    comprehensive security... [Belarus' participation in the summit] would
    mock common sense against the backdrop of trade wars waged by some
    CSTO members against others. In this situation, Belarus has no choice
    but to cancel its participation in the CSTO summit in Moscow. Belarus
    will sign the package of documents on the rapid reaction force only
    when comprehensive security will have been restored within the CSTO"
    (RIA Novosti, ITAR-TASS, June 14).

    Last month, Russia suspended the allocation of a promised $500 million
    stabilization loan to Belarus. Lukashenka publicly complained that
    Moscow was retaliating for his refusal to recognize the "independence"
    of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The Kremlin had pressured Lukashenka
    on this issue for several months, but he has all along insisted that
    the loan and the recognition issue must not be linked.

    In recent weeks, Lukashenka and other officials criticized Russia
    publicly for closing its markets for Belarus-made tractors, sugar,
    and dairy and meat products. On the day of the Moscow summit, Belarus
    state television read out an indictment of Russian economic policies
    toward Belarus, retroactive and current: "They [Moscow] turned off gas
    supplies in winter; they suddenly introduced crude oil export duties;
    they practically introduced customs control on the border," depicting
    the recent restrictions on tractors, sugar, and dairy and meat products
    as parts of a consistent pattern (Belarus TV Channel One, June 14).

    On June 13 Lukashenka asked the government to consider the possibility
    of reintroducing border controls on the Belarus-Russia border. On
    the following day the State Border Protection Committee chief,
    Ivan Bandarenka, announced that his committee and the State Customs
    Committee are discussing the possible reestablishment of border and
    customs checkpoints, in response to Russia's unilateral reintroduction
    of 15 such checkpoints (Interfax, June 13, 14).

    Lukashenka has clashed with Moscow over economic issues during
    most of his tenure as president. This time, however, he reinforces
    his arguments in that debate by refusing to cooperate with a
    Kremlin-cherished project on international security. Moreover,
    the familiar clashes over economic issues are now unfolding in an
    entirely new context: that of Lukashenka's efforts to institute a
    balanced foreign policy for Belarus between Russia and the West.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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