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Putin Reveals Plan For 'New Soviet Union'

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  • Putin Reveals Plan For 'New Soviet Union'

    PUTIN REVEALS PLAN FOR 'NEW SOVIET UNION'
    by Tony Halpin

    The Times
    Oct 4 2011
    UK

    Vladimir Putin revealed his grand vision today of creating a new
    superpower out of the countries of the former Soviet Union when he
    returns to the Kremlin.

    The Russian Prime Minister said that he wanted to form a "Eurasian
    Union" in his first major announcement since declaring that he would
    resume the presidency of Russia next year for up to 12 more years. The
    body, which would inevitably be dominated by Moscow, would gather
    the former Soviet republics into a "full-fledged economic union"
    capable of rivalling the European Union and China.

    He presented the goal as a way to lift the region out of the global
    economic crisis, but it will stir alarm in the West that Mr Putin aims
    to snuff out the independence of neighbouring states and rebuild the
    Soviet Union. He once described the Soviet collapse in 1991 as the
    "greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century".

    Mr Putin set out his "new integration project" in an article in
    Izvestia, calling it "the future that is being born today". It would
    build upon a Customs Union established by Russia and the former
    Soviet republics of Kazakhstan and Belarus that will turn into a
    single market in trade, capital and labour in January.

    "We are not going to stop there and are setting ourselves an ambitious
    goal: to move to the next, even higher level of integration - to a
    Eurasian Union," wrote Mr Putin. The customs union already planned
    to expand to the Central Asian republics of Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.

    Mr Putin insisted that the project was not "about recreating the
    USSR". He went on: "It would be naive to try to reconstruct or copy
    something that is already in the past, but close integration based
    on new political and economic values is the imperative of our time.

    "We are proposing a model of a powerful supranational association
    that is capable of becoming one of the poles of the modern world and,
    within that, to play an effective linking role between Europe and
    the dynamic Asia-Pacific region.

    "This means that there is a need to switch to closer coordination in
    economic and currency policies and to create a full-fledged economic
    union."

    Mr Putin formed the customs union with Belarus and Kazakhstan from
    his current position as Prime Minister. He has put intense pressure
    on Ukraine to join, but President Yanukovych is resisting on the
    grounds that it would harm the republic's goal of EU membership.

    Mr Putin insisted that this was a false choice, arguing that the
    Eurasian Union would grow to become a partner for the EU under the
    "unified values of freedom, democracy and market rules".

    "Membership in the Eurasian Union, apart from direct economic benefits,
    will enable its members to integrate into Europe faster and from a
    much stronger position," Mr Putin said.

    Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan have suffered civil unrest and economic
    hardship since the Soviet collapse and have sought financial aid
    from the Kremlin. Armenia is also highly dependent on Moscow after
    selling key elements of its economy to Russian companies and would
    find it hard to resist a call to join the new union.

    Moscow may pressure oil-rich Azerbaijan through its unresolved conflict
    with Armenia over the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, both rich in minerals and energy reserves,
    are also likely to face attempts to pull them into the Eurasian Union
    and away from China.

    Only Georgia, under the pro-West President Saakashvili, is likely
    to reject any offer outright, having fought a war with Russia in
    2008 over its breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The
    Baltic republics of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, which regained
    their independence during the Soviet collapse, are now EU members.

    Mr Putin intends to replace Dmitri Medvedev as President in
    elections next March that are already a foregone conclusion. With
    two presidential terms that would allow him to rule until 2024,
    he will have plenty of time to bring his project to fruition.

    He wrote that the global economic crisis had exposed "imbalances"
    that required greater regional integration through bodies such as
    the EU, the North America Free Trade Agreement and the Asia-Pacific
    Economic Cooperation.

    "From such building blocks can be formed a more stable world economy,"
    he said. "I am convinced that the creation of the Eurasian Union...is
    the way to allow its members to occupy a worthy place in the complex
    world of the 21st Century. Only together can our countries enter the
    ranks of leaders in global development and civilisational progress,
    to attain success and prosperity."

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