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  • CIS Split At Ministerial Conference

    CIS SPLIT AT MINISTERIAL CONFERENCE
    By Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    April 25 2006

    The meeting of ministers of foreign affairs of the Commonwealth of
    Independent States member countries, held on April 21 in Moscow,
    exposed a profound split in the organization. Ukraine, Moldova,
    Georgia, and Azerbaijan formed a common front on issues of shared
    concern, opposing Russian policies directed against their interests.

    The four countries are members of the GUAM group, though they did
    not act in that capacity at the conference.

    The Ukrainian delegation, led by Minister of Foreign Affairs Borys
    Tarasyuk, led this group of independent-minded countries in the debate
    on most economic and political issues of concern to them.

    Russia, with the support of loyalist or neutralist countries
    whose interests are not involved in those issues, rejected the four
    countries' initiatives with a high-handedness that can only exacerbate
    the differences at upcoming high-level CIS meetings.

    Georgia and Moldova submitted separately prepared statements about
    Russia's ban on imports of their wines and other agricultural
    products on the Russian market. Describing the ban as politically
    motivated, abusive, and unwarranted, the statements underscored the
    "massive economic damage" inflicted on the two countries. Georgia
    and Moldova regard the ban as an "unfriendly action" by the Russian
    government, are asking the Russian government for explanations, and
    are challenging the Russian agencies involved -- mainly the Consumer
    Protection Inspectorate -- to show cause for this action. The Ukrainian
    delegation lodged its own complaint about recent Russian restrictions
    on the import of a wide range of Ukrainian agricultural products on
    the Russian market.

    Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov handled those
    grievances at the concluding press briefing with a dismissive reference
    to "some kind of declarations" made during the conference.

    He warned by Georgia and Moldova against "politicizing" the issue,
    as this "will not facilitate a solution." Russia takes the position
    that the issue should be discussed at the level of technical agencies.

    Thus, Moscow seeks to evade political responsibility for a measure
    undoubtedly ordered by high political authorities. Georgia, Moldova,
    and Ukraine intend to raise the issue again at the upcoming CIS
    meetings of prime ministers (May 25) and of the heads of state
    shortly thereafter.

    The Russian side also blocked Ukraine's proposal to discuss the
    creation of a CIS Free Trade Zone at the conference. The proposal,
    nominally endorsed by Russia as well, is almost a decade old and
    no member country seriously expects Russia to actually implement
    it. In Ukraine, however, the proposal has become topical again
    in connection with the Russia-planned Single Economic Space
    (Russia-Belarus-Kazakhstan, with Ukraine invited to become a member).

    Some groups in Ukraine (not only within the Party of Regions) want the
    country to join the Single Economic Space in one form or another -- a
    move that would compromise Ukraine's European aspirations. On the other
    hand, Ukrainian proponents of integration with the European Union cite
    the proposal for a CIS Free Trade Zone as potentially advantageous to
    Ukraine as well as compatible with the country's progress toward the
    EU. However, Ukrainian attempts to discuss the free-trade proposal
    with Moscow shatter against the resistance of Russian protectionist
    interests. Thus, the Moscow conference strengthened the view that the
    CIS is, at best, useless to member countries generally and, at worst,
    actually detrimental to their interests.

    A proposal to discuss the "frozen conflicts" at the conference was
    also blocked by the Russian side. Ukraine took the lead in submitting
    this proposal with the support of Moldova, Georgia, and Azerbaijan.

    The obstruction by Moscow and its allies will strengthen the case for
    internationalization of the existing "peacekeeping" and negotiating
    frameworks on Transnistria, Abkhazia, and South Ossetia, as well as
    underscoring the value of American efforts to settle the Karabakh
    conflict.

    Ukraine asked the conference to prepare a proposal for the upcoming
    CIS summit to express its attitude to the 1930-33 famine and genocide
    in Ukraine (the Holodomor). However, the Russian side orchestrated
    a procedural move that eliminated the proposal from the agenda.

    Belarus, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan voted with Russia
    against the proposal. Armenia, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan
    abstained. Moldova, Georgia, and Azerbaijan voted with Ukraine.

    According to Lavrov at the concluding briefing, discussion of the
    Holodomor would have "politicized" a historical issue. Lavrov argued
    -- as Russian Ambassador Viktor Chernomyrdin also did in Kyiv -- that
    Russians and other Soviet citizens suffered equally in Soviet times
    and it would therefore be inappropriate to single out any people in
    this regard.

    This argument is heard regularly from Moscow about the Baltic
    states as well: "It was a common pain in the Soviet Union." Such an
    argument constitutes the ultimate expression of a social culture
    of collectivism. It also overlooks, first, the fact that Moscow
    organized the famine and deportations in Ukraine, the Baltic states and
    elsewhere; and, second, that the Kremlin today is actively discouraging
    the attempts to come to terms with Soviet Russia's own totalitarian
    recent history. While refusing to assess the actions of the Soviet
    regime, Russia at the same time claims prerogatives as the legal
    successor of the USSR.

    The Moscow conference was to have discussed a CIS Executive Committee
    report on implementing decisions on CIS reform, adopted by the
    heads of state at the August 2005 summit in Astana. A corresponding
    Russian proposal envisaged setting up a high-level group on "measures
    to enhance the effectiveness of the CIS." Neither initiative was
    mentioned after the conference. In his conclusions, Tarasyuk was
    scathing about the CIS: "not a normal international organization,"
    "unresponsive to situations that are most sensitive to member states,"
    "useless," and "has no future."

    (Interfax, Itar-Tass, Moldpres, Imedi TV, April 21, 22)
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