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ANKARA: Russia Pushes For Eurasian Integration Across Former Soviet

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  • ANKARA: Russia Pushes For Eurasian Integration Across Former Soviet

    RUSSIA PUSHES FOR EURASIAN INTEGRATION ACROSS FORMER SOVIET STATES

    Cihan News Agency (CNA)
    July 25, 2012 Wednesday
    Turkey

    ISTANBUL (CIHAN)- Vladimir Putin's "return" to the Russian presidency
    has been accompanied by a worldwide debate about Russia's foreign
    policy priorities, and in particular the Eurasian Union.

    One of Putin's first moves was to sign an "Executive Order On Measures
    to Implement the Russian Federation Foreign Policy," which stresses
    the importance of the so-called Eurasian Union. In this respect, many
    have been wondering about the reactions of post-Soviet countries to
    this initiative and what tools Russia will deploy to put pressure on
    those governments.

    However, with regard to the implementation of the Eurasian Union idea,
    debates started at the end of 2011 across the post-Soviet region,
    where it quickly became that the initiative enjoyed greater popularity
    in Central Asia, especially in Kazakhstan, where President Nursultan
    Nazarbayev had even championed a similar idea before Putin. However,
    the idea appealed less to the countries of the South Caucasus.

    This brand of economic integration is less attractive in the
    South Caucasus, where Russia's political and cultural hold is
    getting weaker: ethnic Russians make up less than 2 percent of the
    population in each regional country; Russian education is increasingly
    less attractive with both Azerbaijan and Georgia implementing state
    education programs to support overseas education in the US and European
    universities. Russian as the "lingua franca" is weaker than in Central
    Asia. This reminds Russia that a new generation of thinkers in this
    region is increasingly westernized in terms of cultural and educational
    affiliation, and this could be the "long goodbye" in the sense of
    Russia's influence in the region. In political terms, Georgia sees the
    Eurasian Union as a reunion of the Soviet Union, and due the political
    stalemate, official Tbilisi's refusal to participate is understandable.

    This can be observed in Azerbaijan more openly, but while the political
    and social elite have little confidence in this initiative, it is
    still the case that no one wants to anger Moscow. In Azerbaijan, the
    official discourse is balanced; the authorities have said clearly
    they are currently not interested in a customs union or the notion
    of a Eurasian Union, not seeing any benefits for their country. At
    the same time, they also want to avoid taking any action that might
    damage bilateral relations with Russia -- a case in which diplomatic
    strategies require careful scrutiny.

    Armenia is heavily dependent on Russia in economic and military
    terms and sometimes even politically. However, there is no eagerness
    to respond at this stage. Broadly speaking, there are two camps:
    the political elite, who want less dependence on Moscow and more
    integration with Europe and who oppose the idea, and the ruling elite,
    who acknowledge their dependence on Russia but don't want to lose their
    financial aid from the European Union and who are moderately against
    the proposal. In general, the Armenian reading of Moscow's integration
    projects remains centered on the geopolitical issues (the resolution
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, relations with the EU), rather than
    on the need for any kind of supranational Eurasian integration.

    >From Russia's standpoint, Azerbaijan and Armenia are crucial for the
    Eurasian integration project. Moscow is applying different types
    of pressure in each country, and visits by high-ranking Russian
    officials to Azerbaijan and Armenia in mid-July indicate that Moscow
    is taking advantage of the international focus on the Middle East,
    and has started diplomatic maneuvers.

    In Armenia, Russian Federation Council Chairwoman Valentina Matviyenko
    met on July 11 with the chairman of the National Assembly of Armenia,
    Ovik Abramyan, and urged Yerevan to join the free trade agreement,
    which, according to Matviyenko, "creates conditions for invigorated
    trade and economic cooperation." But even the Armenian leadership
    has said that Yerevan has no plans to join a customs union with
    Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan. However, in the run-up to the 2013
    presidential elections, Russian-backed politicians in Yerevan are
    supporting Putin's idea, which poses a challenge to the current
    government. The Prosperous Armenia Party welcomed the initiative, and
    Tigran Urikhanyan, party spokesman, argued that Armenia is already
    part of the Collective Security Treaty Organization, and has close
    economic ties with other ex-Soviet states that can serve as a basis
    for Armenian membership of the union.

    In the case of Azerbaijan, Russia's attitude is slightly different. A
    few weeks in advance of the visit by Speaker of the State Duma Sergey
    Narishkin to Azerbaijan on July 8-9, the Federal National-Cultural
    Autonomy of Lezgins held its first conference at Moscow's President
    Hotel. The political importance of this event was reflected in
    the hotel's ownership; it belongs to the Russian presidential
    administration and several Russian officials attended the meeting.

    This suggests that Russia has renewed interest in provoking separatism
    among ethnic minorities. The Lezgin ethnic group lives near the
    Azerbaijan-Russia border. Back in 1990s and early 2000s, the Lezgin
    separatist movement Sadval, responsible for a number of terrorist
    strikes in Azerbaijan, had unofficial support from some forces in
    Russia. Regardless, to this day Armenia has played a leading role in
    keeping the "ethnic minorities in Azerbaijan" issue alive by financing
    and hosting conferences and other initiatives with participation of
    representatives of similar separatist organizations. In this context,
    if an event that legitimizes nationalist movements is hosted in
    Moscow, in a hotel owned by the Presidential Office and attended
    by high-ranking officials, this is more than a conference. It's a
    message and a form of pressure directed at Azerbaijan.

    At this juncture, the countries in favor of the Eurasian Union seem
    to hold such positions mainly because the current political and
    economic deadlock gives them no other choice. Other countries have
    challenged this integrative strategy not because of Moscow's lack of
    legitimate capacity to generate an integrationist dynamic, but rather
    because there are questions over its ability to do so. The low level
    of trust in the Kremlin's role and capabilities is a key element of
    the prevailing skepticism about Moscow's integration project in the
    South Caucasus.

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