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Moscow confronts the west over CFE Treaty at OSCE

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  • Moscow confronts the west over CFE Treaty at OSCE

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    May 25 2007


    MOSCOW CONFRONTS THE WEST OVER CFE TREATY AT OSCE

    By Vladimir Socor

    Friday, May 25, 2007



    Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov Russian officials
    are intensifying their warnings about scuttling the Treaty on
    Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE), unless the West brings the
    adapted but unratified treaty into force while accepting the
    continued presence of Russian troops in Georgia and Moldova. Apart
    from that goal, Moscow aims to extend the treaty's applicability to
    the three Baltic states, so as to limit possible deployments of
    Western forces there in emergencies. The Baltic states are not
    signatory to the unratified treaty, but would sign it upon its coming
    into force.

    Given multiple Russian violations of both the 1990 original and the
    1999-adapted treaty, however, the latest threats to abandon the
    treaty unless it is ratified do not sound credible, even if
    reiterated at higher decibels. Thus far, only Russia and three other
    members of the Commonwealth of Independent States (Belarus, Ukraine,
    Kazakhstan) have ratified the adapted treaty.

    Following Russian President Vladimir Putin's April 26 warning to that
    effect, Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov took the warning to
    the OSCE -- the CFE Treaty's custodian organization -- in Vienna on
    May 23, concurrently with Putin's bilateral visit to Austria, also on
    May 23, and backed up by louder warnings from First Deputy Prime
    Minister Sergei Ivanov in Moscow that same day.

    Addressing a special joint session of the OSCE's Permanent Council
    and its talk-shop Forum for Security Cooperation (FSC), Lavrov
    reiterated Putin's warnings and went on to propose the holding of a
    special international conference of state-parties to the CFE Treaty.
    Putin and Lavrov had coordinated this initiative with U.S. Secretary
    of State Condoleezza Rice during her visit to Moscow the preceding
    week. Rice mentioned the possible conference approvingly though
    cryptically in her remarks to Moscow media during the visit. It is
    not yet clear how the Russians hope to shape the agenda and
    composition of such a conference in order to obtain satisfaction from
    it.

    For his part, Ivanov warned on May 23 that Russia would suspend its
    fulfillment of the treaty's mutual obligations regarding onsite
    inspections of forces by other state-parties and pre-notification of
    military movements. Russia would comply with its side of such
    obligations only after the treaty is ratified and brought into force,
    Ivanov declared for NATO and EU countries to hear.

    For a novel argument, Moscow is sharply questioning the establishment
    of U.S. military installations in Romania and Bulgaria. Mostly
    located near the Black Sea coast, the installations are designed for
    logistical support to U.S. and allied forces en route to Asia for
    ongoing or contingency operations. Putin rhetorically criticized the
    creation of those bases in his April 26 Moscow speech and again in
    Vienna on May 23, as did Lavrov at the OSCE that day and Ivanov in
    Moscow.

    The Russians are not seriously attempting to argue that deployment of
    those U.S. forces in Romania and Bulgaria violate any CFE quotas or
    ceilings. Russian objections seem designed for political effect on
    two counts: First, to suggest one element of a deal whereby Moscow
    would desist from raising that issue if the West accepts a continuing
    Russian military presence in Moldova and Georgia. And second, to
    demonstrate that Russia wants to be consulted on basic issues of hard
    security affecting new member countries of NATO (Romania and Bulgaria
    in this case).

    In the OSCE's special meeting, Western countries properly ignored
    Moscow's polemics regarding Romania and Bulgaria while responding
    firmly on the CFE treaty-related issues. Statements by U.S.
    Ambassador Julie Finley, the European Union collectively, and NATO
    member countries collectively as state-parties to the CFE Treaty
    addressed Putin's and Lavrov's warnings. The Western statements used
    similar wording reminding Russia that the remaining Istanbul
    commitments relating to Georgia and Moldova must be fulfilled as a
    precondition to ratification of the CFE treaty. At the same time, the
    Western statements offered to overcome the differences through
    negotiation and cooperation with Russia in the OSCE, the NATO-Russia
    Council, or the newly envisaged special international conference.

    Technically, Moscow insists that ratification of the 1999-adapted CFE
    Treaty is not conditional on the withdrawal of Russian troops from
    bases in Georgia and Moldova. In fact, the linkage between
    ratification and troop withdrawal is explicit in the agreements on
    the treaty's adaptation, signed at the OSCE's 1999 Istanbul summit
    (the Istanbul Commitments). Moscow does not recognize those
    commitments as part of the CFE treaty, but is in fact withdrawing
    from its Akhalkalaki and Batumi bases and is scheduled to close them
    during 2007 and 2008, respectively, under bilateral agreements with
    Georgia. However, Russia retains the Gudauta base (in the
    Abkhaz-controlled territory of Georgia), which was to have been
    closed in 2001 in accordance with the 1999 treaty-adaptation
    agreement. The latter does not apply to the `peacekeeping' troops as
    such, however.

    Moscow apparently hopes that NATO and EU countries would tolerate the
    arsenals of heavy weaponry in the possession of unlawful forces in
    Transnistria, Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Karabakh. Designated as
    `unaccounted-for treaty-limited equipment,' it involves categories of
    weapons subjected to CFE treaty quotas or bans, but hidden from the
    state-parties to the treaty (other than Russia, which delivered those
    weapons) in those enclaves. Ratification of the adapted treaty would
    be a farcical exercise without resolving this problem.

    (Interfax, Itar-Tass, May 23; OSCE Permanent Council session
    documents, May 23)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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