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Eurasian Economic Union: Dead on Arrival?

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  • Eurasian Economic Union: Dead on Arrival?

    The Diplomat
    Jan 5 2015


    Eurasian Economic Union: Dead on Arrival?

    The new bloc officially formed on January 1, to remarkably little fanfare.

    By Casey Michel for The Diplomat
    January 05, 2015


    If you missed the official unveiling of the Eurasian Economic Union
    (EEU) on January 1, you weren't alone. Instead of the pomp and
    circumstance requisite for the new "epoch" that Russian President
    Vladimir Putin claims we've just entered, the EEU came into being with
    thundering silence. And instead of heralding the dawn of a new
    "giant," as Kremlin state media claimed, the EEU entered into force in
    a near-stillborn state.

    The reasons for the resounding disappointment surrounding the Eurasian
    Union's unveiling are myriad, and have already been covered in stark
    detail within the Crossroads Asia vertical. The Eurasian Union was
    largely a non-starter as soon as Ukraine pulled out from the project,
    but its struggles have continued unabated. Belarus and Russia have yet
    to resolve their customs disputes - effectively nullifying the primary
    purpose of the customs union as a whole - and, in the days leading up
    to the EEU's formalization, called Russia's barring of certain
    Belarusian products "stupid and brainless." Meanwhile, while customs
    struggles continue to separate Minsk and Moscow, it seems there will
    be no customs checkpoints between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh -
    despite the wishes of Kazakhstan, which had previously called out
    Yerevan for not securing its customs borders. That is to say, within
    the Eurasian Union, customs debacles continue between two of the
    founding members, but have been removed between one of the member
    states and an unrecognized statelet within a nation outside the EEU's
    auspices. Not exactly the best way to build confidence in the
    organization's efficacy.

    This comes on top of the continuing contagion Russia's blinkered
    economic policies have set upon the post-Soviet space. Trade between
    Kazakhstan and the Russia-Belarus tandem already dropped by nearly
    one-fifth during 2014. For Astana, there seems little likelihood 2015
    will bring any reprieve. According to Eduard Edokov, the head of
    Kazakhstan's Independent Automobile Union, Kazakhstan's auto market -
    already battered by depressed demand and a collapsed ruble - shows no
    signs of optimism for the coming year. "In terms of sales, I think,
    next year will be worse than this one," Edokov said. "The market will
    either be in stagnation or see a decrease in sales."

    Astana, meanwhile, seems to be counting the weeks until it experiences
    its second devaluation in as many years. After 2014's shock 19-percent
    devaluation of the Kazakhstani tenge, the country looks set for
    another imminent drop. The scale, according to analysts, could run
    from either 10 percent to 35 percent within the first quarter -
    retaining a bit of business that's slipped toward Russia, but eating
    that much further into citizens' savings.

    This, then, is the state of the Eurasian Union as it comes to be -
    nations beset by pointed rhetoric, frightened of Moscow's irredentism,
    surrounding a sinking Russia whose fortunes stand between a vice of
    continued sanctions and declining oil prices. As Nate Schenkkan wrote
    in Foreign Affairs, "The Eurasian Economic Union is dead in all but
    name. It will survive as another hollow post-Soviet multilateral
    institution celebrated with presidential summits but producing no
    progress toward its stated goals. The EEU's crumbling is proof that
    Russia's capacity for influence is weakening."

    If you need any further proof, look again to the celebratory vacuum
    that greeted the Eurasian Union - not among observers, but among the
    member-states participating. Armenia's president didn't share a single
    mention of the Eurasian Union in his New Year address. And for the
    first time, Belarus opted not to carry Putin's New Year greeting on
    its airwaves. So much for the welcoming of a new geopolitical pole. A
    new epoch may be among us, but no one seemed to notice.

    http://thediplomat.com/2015/01/eurasian-economic-union-dead-on-arrival/

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