Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

THE CSTO & NATO: Allies or enemies?

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

  • THE CSTO & NATO: Allies or enemies?

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    July 29, 2005, Friday

    THE CSTO AND NATO: ALLIES OR ENEMIES?

    SOURCE: Voenno-Promyshlennyi Kurier, No. 27, July 2005, p. 2
    by Gennady Pulin


    A year ago, a document on the main areas of cooperation between the
    CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) and NATO was
    adopted at a meeting of the CSTO collective security council in
    Astana. That document outlined directions and mechanisms for
    cooperation between the two organizations in regional and
    international security. For example, it spoke about taking joint
    measures in combating terrorism, drug trafficking and WMD
    proliferation.

    Recently Nikolai Bordyuzha announced, "They (NATO) have simply
    ignored us (CSTO)." The General Secretary of CSTO added, "I am
    convinced that this has been a deliberate step and it is not
    beneficial for them to cooperate in the format "organization with
    organization."

    Bordyuzha also stressed that the CSTO frequently proposed cooperation
    to NATO but did not receive a response to its proposals. According to
    him, NATO recently announced its interests in Central Asia and in the
    East. He also said, "In such format it is easier for them to
    counteract to certain integration in the framework of the CSTO."

    We see that the General Secretary of the CSTO takes NATO as a rival
    on one geopolitical field. What do the leaders of NATO think about a
    possibility of military and military political cooperation with the
    CSTO?

    In June 2005, NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer met with
    Vladimir Putin in Moscow and announced that the parties agreed to
    strengthen interaction including interaction of NATO and CSTO.
    Military attache of France in Tajikistan Stefan Samaran considers the
    opposition of NATO to the CSTO wrong from the very start. According
    to him, "It is not necessary to take NATO as an enemy of the member
    states of the CSTO." The French diplomat believes that these notions
    are relics of the past inherited since the time of the "cold war."

    At any rate, these are mere words. What about the deeds? Alexander
    Nikitin, Director of the Russian Center for Political and
    International Studies, says that in the near future it is impossible
    to expect that NATO will make a political "package" decision on
    cooperation with the CSTO. Nonetheless, the expert believes that the
    fact that NATO does not try to demonstrate its alienation from the
    CSTO too obviously is positive.

    Nikitin said, "This is confirmed by the agreement of the headquarters
    of NATO to organize a presentation briefing of the CSTO in Moscow for
    100 senior NATO officers from 26 countries in June."

    He added, "Although there is no decision of Brussels 'to make
    friends' with the CSTO, the policy of involvement of NATO into the
    practical projects joint with the CSTO like visiting of the exercises
    and coordination of the border issues regarding the Tajik-Afghan
    border where the zones of responsibility of both organizations touch
    each other is a correct way."

    Nobody doubts that this is a correct way. However, Russia and CSTO
    believe that certain deeds and results are also important for them in
    friendship with NATO and there are no such deeds and results. For
    four years the numerous coalition forces of NATO have been trying to
    enforce order and "sow" democracy in Afghanistan: the government has
    been elected and parliamentary elections are upcoming. It would seem
    that peace is enforced there with assistance of NATO but along with
    this the drug flow from Afghanistan to the CIS countries and Europe
    has grown tremendously. There are facts showing that
    terrorists-citizens of Afghanistan have participated in the events in
    Adnizhan.

    The CSTO proposed NATO to control and to cooperate in combating of
    drug trafficking but received silence in response. Meanwhile, NATO
    plans to increase its military contingent in Afghanistan to 10,000
    servicemen to ensure security of elections in the country. What about
    terrorists and drug trafficking? Who will do this?

    Meanwhile, US and NATO officials do not hide their plans regarding
    Central Asia. On his visit to Kabul, General Richard Mayers from the
    US Joint Chiefs of Staff, announced that decision of the US to deploy
    full-sized bases in Afghanistan "is partially caused by the wish to
    hinder Iran and to monitor its military forces." It was also
    partially caused by the intention to create as many military objects
    as possible in the vicinity of the Middle East being very important
    for the US because of the huge oil reserves of the region. The US and
    NATO have similar goals in the Central Asian republics of the CIS.

    Thus, probably it is not worth while for the CSTO to try to make
    friends with NATO but it is necessary to build its own security
    system proceeding from interests of the countries-allies of Russia?

    Answering this question, Colonel-General Leonid Ivashov, Vice
    President of the Geopolitical Academy and former chief of the main
    international military cooperation department of the Defense
    Ministry, said that it is necessary to maintain contacts with NATO.
    He added, "Cooperation between the organizations is quite possible.
    But this should not be cooperation for the sake of cooperation. There
    should be cooperation for the sake of achievement of some goals in
    the issues of security and protection of our interests." Ivashov also
    points out how the CSTO should act to strengthen its positions in the
    CIS and around the world.

    Ivashov proposed, "It seems to me that first of all it is necessary
    to organize interaction with the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.
    It is necessary to build zones of collective security, for example,
    with Iran in the South Caucasus or in the Caucasus-Caspian region
    (CSTO-Iran). Now the CSTO can establish contacts with Turkey and this
    will be more productive than interaction with such large organization
    as NATO which will never have consensus towards the CSTO. On the
    contrary, in such bilateral or multilateral form it is possible. "

    According to Ivashov, "It is necessary to declare our certain goals
    pursued by the organization and to avoid this empty rhetoric imposed
    on us by the West. It imposed on us combating of terrorism,
    migration, drug trafficking and WMD non-proliferation. This is not
    what is needed because the organization is not capable of this. Let
    the relevant structures do this."

    Incidentally, the CSTO itself outlined these very tasks in the
    document adopted a year ago. Probably it is really necessary to
    revise the integration goals and tasks outlined there? How? Ivashov
    answers this question too, "The main thing is that it is necessary to
    announce that in accordance with article 4 of the treaty of May 15,
    1992, the main task of the CSTO is joint collective defense of our
    countries from aggression of other countries, protection of our
    political space from outside interference and so on. It is necessary
    to state this clearly and harshly to make them understand for what
    our organization is striving. In this case direction of possible
    cooperation will be determined."

    Many military experts agree with the opinion of Leonid Ivashov. Along
    with this, they also say that there is no need to create a problem
    because NATO is not going to maintain active contacts with the CSTO.
    Colonel Vladimir Popov from the Military Sciences Academy said,
    "Russia is the leader in the post-Soviet zone. That is why it should
    determine its long-term strategy with regard to interaction not with
    NATO but primarily with the allies in the CIS. Policy should be clear
    and understandable at this point. How can we counteract to challenges
    and threats in cooperation? Which joint forces we need to have there?
    - These questions should be the main issues for us."

    Lieutenant General Yury Netkachev, veteran of the "hot spots" of the
    CIS, commented, "Joint military capacities of the CSTO are only just
    being created. In the South it is represented by the military group
    in Armenia, in the West by the united defense space of Russia and
    Belarus and collective rapid response forces operate in Central Asia.
    If all this potential is compared on the scale of the Eurasian
    continent with the potential of NATO, the inferiority is obvious.
    NATO has almost three times as many tanks, armored personnel carriers
    and artillery than CSTO member states, and about twice as many
    airplanes and helicopters. However, this is no reason to crawl to
    NATO. Russia together with allies maintains operational and strategic
    superiority over NATO in all vitally important regions of the
    post-Soviet space. The task is to build up these groups and to do our
    best to prevent similar attempts by NATO. Then the interests of
    Russia and the CSTO will be protected."

    Thus, it is becoming quite obvious that cooperation between the CSTO
    and NATO is not a priority for Russia and its allies. Along with
    this, creation of collective defense in the CIS requires much effort
    and resources. In any case, CSTO member states will need to undertake
    the spending required to ensure security and to counter possible
    threats (overt and covert), including those emanating from NATO.

    Translated by Pavel Pushkin
Working...
X