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Armenia Chooses Russian Trade Deal Over EU

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  • Armenia Chooses Russian Trade Deal Over EU

    ARMENIA CHOOSES RUSSIAN TRADE DEAL OVER EU

    Russia Today
    Sept 4 2013

    Published time: September 04, 2013 12:48

    Armenia has decided to hang its hat with its former Soviet ally Russia
    instead of joining a European free-trade agreement, President Serzh
    Sarksyan announced after meeting with Vladimir Putin.

    Armenia said it would join Russia in the Customs Union, as well as
    engage in the Eurasian integration process instead of negotiating
    a free trade agreement with the EU. The move is seen as a political
    victory for Putin, who has been rounding up former Soviet states to
    rival the EU, promising lower gas prices and other trade perks.

    "Russia supports the decision by Armenia to enter the customs union
    ... We will fully work for this to happen," Putin said at the bilateral
    talk at his countryside house outside of Moscow .

    Russia is Armenia's largest trading partner and the largest foreign
    investor in the small, landlocked Caucasus country. Trade in 2012
    reached $1.2 billion and Russian capital investment was over $3
    billion, or nearly half of Armenia's foreign investment, Putin said.

    In July Armenia engaged in technical talks on a 'deep and comprehensive
    free-trade agreement' (DCFTA) with the EU, and observers largely
    expected the country to initiate a free trade agreement with the EU at
    the Vilnius summit in late November. The EU has stated both publicly
    and privately membership of the Russia's Eurasian Customs Union is
    "incompatible" with DCFTA.

    The three-member customs union of Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus was
    founded in 2010 as a counterweight to the EU. Putin hopes to expand it
    into a 'Eurasian Union'- a political and economic union of post-Soviet
    states like Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, and Tajikistan.

    While President Putin said earlier the Eurasian Union would be built
    upon the 'best values of the Soviet Union', critics claim that the
    drive towards integration aims to restore the 'Soviet Empire'.

    It has been suggested the Eurasian Union could also include other
    countries that have been historically or culturally close, such as
    Finland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Vietnam, Mongolia,
    Cuba and Venezuela. This is expected to incorporate the countries
    into a common body where Russian would be the common language of
    communication and economic cooperation.

    Russia has so far failed to lure Ukraine away from an EU trading
    alliance and relations with Belarus have soured after they detained
    and jailed the CEO of Russia's largest potash producer, Uralkali.

    http://rt.com/business/russia-armenia-customs-eu-391/

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