Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Competent Diplomacy

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Competent Diplomacy

    COMPETENT DIPLOMACY

    Russia Profile
    http://www.russiaprofile.org/page.php?page id=International&articleid=a1208272859
    April 15 2008
    Russia

    The Leaders of Moldova and Transdnestr Hold Their First Meeting in
    Seven Years

    While Russia is extensively criticized in the West for its unyielding
    stance against Kosovo's independence, being accused of fomenting
    separatism in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Moscow is showing creative
    and effective peace diplomacy in another breakaway region of the
    former Soviet Union - the self-proclaimed Transdnestr republic.

    Last week, the leaders of Moldova and Transdnestr gathered in the town
    of Benderi, currently under Trasndestr's control. It was their first
    face-to-face meeting in the last seven years. The meeting launched the
    latest round of serious diplomacy aimed at settling the 16-year-old
    conflict. It would not have happened without Russia's skillful and
    pragmatic involvement.

    Far from promoting instability in this troubled part of the world,
    Russia is seeking to bring closure to a war that separated Moldova
    and Transdnestr for so many years, and to reach a settlement, not
    imposed by foreign powers, that would be accepted by both sides.

    Contrary to the precedent set by Western support and encouragement
    for Kosovo's independence, Russia has worked to cajole Moldova and
    Transdnestr into an arrangement that would preserve the sovereignty and
    territorial integrity of Moldova, while maintaining the self-government
    that the people of Transdnestr have enjoyed all these years.

    As things stand now, the deal is likely to be built around Moldova's
    pledge to grant Transdnestr the greatest autonomy possible, including
    the right to elect its own parliament and government, and to maintain
    its own security and police forces. In return, Transdnestr would not
    seek formal independence, and would delegate foreign and external
    defense policy to Kishinev.

    The parties are to convene a meeting of working groups this week,
    to thrash out the details of the settlement and then present it to a
    meeting of the "five plus two" -- the internationally mandated forum
    involving outside powers - Russia, Ukraine, and the OSCE as guarantors
    of the settlement, and the United States and the EU as observers.

    It is not yet a "done deal," but something tells me that this
    time around it will not unravel at the last moment, the way it did
    disastrously in the fall of 2003. At that time, Moscow sought to
    capitalize on the election of a pro-Russian President in Moldova -
    Communist Party leader Vladimir Voronin, who had just won an election.

    The contours of the deal called the "Kozak Plan," named after the
    Kremlin's chief negotiator at the time, Deputy Head of the Presidential
    Administration Dmitry Kozak, resembled the ones of today-territorial
    integrity for Moldova, broad autonomy for Transdnestr. However,
    some elements of the package in 2003 hinted at effectively turning
    Moldova into a confederate state, like Bosnia, while Russia would
    retain a substantial military presence in Transdnestr.

    President Putin himself was about to fly to Kishinev to inaugurate
    the breakthrough, but was forced to cancel the trip, as Moldova's
    president Voronin balked at signing at the last moment.

    Moscow blamed the collapse of the Kozak plan on Washington's
    maneuvering aimed at preventing Russia from a diplomatic triumph
    (and indeed, Washington and Brussels counseled Kishinev heavily in
    favor of rejecting the deal), but Moscow's own overbearing manner of
    conducting diplomacy also played a role.

    In fact Kozak, and his boss at the time, Presidential Chief of
    Staff Alexander Voloshin, sought to impose a solution on Molodva's
    Voronin that was too hard to swallow, and made a mockery of Moldova's
    sovereignty. It is interesting that the entire negotiating process
    was run from the Kremlin, bypassing the Foreign Ministry.

    More importantly, it was evident to Voronin that his rule would become
    symbolic, and that he and his family clan stood to lose control of
    the key economic assets, were the Russian plan to become reality. The
    pressure from Washington and Brussels provided timely political
    cover for Voronin to wriggle out of the deal that went against his
    personal interests.

    This time around Moscow proved quite capable of learning the hard
    lessons, and is flexible enough to allow the parties to adjust to the
    new realities. It also proved itself quite capable of shaping those
    realities to make the parties more eager to negotiate.

    First, Voronin's chutzpah of 2003 was not left without consequences.

    Russia turned substantial heat on Voronin and his government by
    banning imports of Moldovan wine and other agricultural exports
    (its principal source of hard currency revenue) and blocked money
    transfers from Moldovan guest workers in Russia. Moscow made little
    secret of working to unseat Voronin by supporting his principal
    political opponents during the parliamentary election in 2005.

    That did not happen, but the effort got Voronin's attention.

    By 2007, Voronin toned down his anti-Russian rhetoric and sought to
    improve relations with Moscow. He was also spooked by Romania's open
    claims on Moldova, when Romanian leaders openly talked about Moldova
    joining the EU as part of Romania.

    This was not part of Voronin's plans - he had no intention of ceding
    power and dissolving the Molodvan state. Romanian claims on Moldova
    played a crucial role in Voronin's decision to renounce aspirations
    for NATO membership. Voronin also supported Moscow's position opposing
    the independence of Kosovo.

    Russia put pressure on Transdnestr's leadership by making it clear
    that the former does not support the latter's independence (although
    Moscow was openly sympathetic to the independence referendum in
    Transdnestr in 2006, it was merely part of the campaign to put
    pressure on Voronin's government in Moldova). The Kremlin pushed the
    republic's recalcitrant leader Igor Smirnov to accept wide autonomy
    within Moldova under international guarantees. There were also ways
    to pressure other individual members of Transdnestr's leadership,
    by squeezing their business interests in Russia.

    Moscow clearly distinguished the case of Transdnestr from the frozen
    conflicts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. While the latter two breakaway
    states are believed to be unlikely ever to agree to wide autonomy
    within the Georgian state, Transdnestr was delegated more to the
    category of Nagorno-Karabakh, meaning that partition was unfeasible
    and indefensible. Unlike Abkhazia or South Ossetia, Transdnestr does
    not share a border with Russia, and recognizing its independence or,
    worse still, allowing it to join Russia, as some hot heads demanded,
    was downright crazy, and the Kremlin never seriously considered it
    as an option.

    Moscow worked painstakingly for several years to craft a situation
    in which both sides in the conflict would see it to be in their
    interests to seek a compromise, and would agree to forego at least
    part of their demands. And this time around Russia also worked to
    keep the other intermediaries in the settlement process, like the
    United States and the OSCE, informed about what it was doing to bring
    Moldova and Transdnestr to the negotiating table.

    Of course, we will make the final judgment when we see the deal get
    signed, but it is heartening to know that Russia could be an effective
    force for good in the world when it chooses to do so.
Working...
X