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Putin's Grand Design To Destroy The EU's Eastern Partnership And Rep

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  • Putin's Grand Design To Destroy The EU's Eastern Partnership And Rep

    PUTIN'S GRAND DESIGN TO DESTROY THE EU'S EASTERN PARTNERSHIP AND REPLACE IT WITH A DISASTROUS NEIGHBOURHOOD POLICY OF HIS OWN

    12:05, September 18, 2013

    Michael Emerson and Hrant Kostanyan

    17 September 2013

    In a surprising volte face at his meeting in Moscow with President
    Putin on September 3rd, President Serzh Sargsyan of Armenia agreed to
    join the Russian-dominated customs union with Kazakhstan and Belarus.

    Thus, in one short meeting, he scrapped the draft Association Agreement
    with the EU, which included a 'Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade
    Agreement' (DCFTA), whose negotiation over the past three years had
    advanced to the point that its initialling was firmly scheduled for
    the Eastern Partnership summit in Vilnius in November. And, at the
    same time, the Armenian President chose to deprive his country of the
    possibility to enter into free trade area agreements with other states,
    which any economy is free to do unless it is part of a customs union,
    in which case it becomes bound to a common external tariff.

    This latter deprivation is particularly serious in Armenia's case,
    since Russia's external tariff is on average rather highly protective.

    In the process, Sargsyan has also precluded Armenia from pursuing
    the only plausible strategy to become an open, highly-skilled, small
    economy, following for example the model of Israel, with which it
    shares several features in common. More broadly, it is worth noting
    that most of the world's top-ten economies by GDP per capita, from
    Luxembourg to Singapore, are small but completely open countries. The
    economic case against joining the Russian customs union is all the
    greater because nothing in the DCFTA with the EU would have prevented
    Armenia from entering into a 'high-quality', free trade agreement1
    with the Russian-led customs union.

    Armenia is already party to the matrix of CIS free trade agreements,
    but many of these do not function well. Rather than join the Belarus,
    Kazakhstan and Russia customs union, why should Armenia not simply
    negotiate a high-quality free trade agreement with it? President
    Sargsyan has offered two main explanations for his baffling behaviour:
    Armenia depends on Russia to guarantee its security and its large
    diaspora in Russia make it natural for the two countries to have a
    close economic relationship. One might challenge the first explanation
    by noting that no other collective security arrangement, e.g. NATO,
    requires its member states to join a customs union led by the
    principal nation.

    Read more

    Michael Emerson is Associate Senior Research Fellow at CEPS. Hrant
    Kostanyan is an Associate Research Fellow at CEPS and a BOF (Special
    Research Fund) Research Fellow at the Centre for EU Studies (CEUS)
    in the Department of Political Science at Ghent University.

    http://hetq.am/eng/news/29409/putin%E2%80%99s-grand-design-to-destroy-the-eu%E2%80%99s-eastern-partnership-and-replace-it-with-adisastrous-neighbourhood-policy-of-his-own.html



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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