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  • To be or not to be: Former Soviet republics question commonwealth'sn

    To be or not to be: Former Soviet republics question commonwealth's need for existence
    By JUDITH INGRAM

    AP Worldstream
    May 07, 2005

    Dictators and democrats will rub elbows this weekend at a Moscow
    meeting of the Commonwealth of Independent States, where the most
    pressing question may well be whether the Russian-led organization
    shouldn't just be shut down for good.

    The loose grouping of 12 former Soviet republics has long been rent
    by disputes _ between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh
    enclave, between Georgia and Russia over mutual accusations of support
    for separatists and terrorists.

    But it has never appeared so untenable as it does today, following
    the uprisings against the entrenched leaderships of Georgia, Ukraine
    and Kyrgyzstan. The CIS puts democratically elected leaders such
    as Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili and Ukrainian President
    Viktor Yushchenko in the same club as Belarusian President Alexander
    Lukashenko _ whom the United States has branded the last dictator
    in Europe _ and the Turkmen autocrat, President Saparmurat Niyazov,
    best known abroad for the cult of adoration he's built to himself
    and his family.

    "The CIS is a pointless organization for today. It brings together
    absolutely different countries with diametrically opposed interests,"
    said Levan Ramishvili, an analyst at Georgia's independent Freedom
    Institute.

    Sunday's meeting comes amid a spiraling diplomatic spat between Ukraine
    and Belarus, where five Ukrainians have been jailed for taking part
    in a protest.

    And it comes less than a month since Georgian President Mikhail
    Saakashvili, Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin, Ukrainian President
    Viktor Yushchenko and the leaders of other former Soviet republics
    joined their voices in challenging Russia to make good on its
    six-year-old pledge to withdraw troops and weaponry from Georgia
    and Moldova.

    The CIS clearly has more quarrels than shared vision among its members.

    Saakashvili is staying away from Sunday's meeting, as well as Monday's
    Victory in Europe day celebration in Moscow, because Georgia failed
    to win agreement on the withdrawal of Russian bases. Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliev is staying away because of the attendance of
    the Armenian leader, and because Sunday is a day of mourning, marking
    a key battle during the six-year war between Armenia and Azerbaijan
    over the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "If the CIS is going to survive, then it will be merely as a
    consultative council of heads of state, which doesn't obligate
    anyone to anything," said Stanislav Shushkevich, the Soviet-era
    parliamentary speaker in Belarus who together with Russia's Boris
    Yeltsin and Ukraine's Leonid Kravchuk signed the 1991 document that
    dissolved the Soviet Union.

    "There's only one problem: Does the leader of a democratic state
    really want to confer with dictators?"

    The most vocal recent criticism of the CIS has come from countries
    such as Ukraine and Georgia, where pro-Western leaders have come to
    power and hopes of shedding Russian influence are high.

    But even President Vladimir Putin has thrown doubt on the future of
    the CIS, telling reporters in the Armenian capital Yerevan earlier
    this year that the forum had been created for the "civilized divorce"
    of the former Soviet republics, in contrast to the European Union,
    which was built to foster real cooperation.

    Other officials have been no more sanguine.

    "There is no good in the CIS as it is now _ ineffectual and unable
    to function," said Ilyas Omarov, the spokesman for the Kazakh Foreign
    Ministry.

    The group's attempts to be more than a talk shop have often
    only fostered more discord. Its peacekeepers have been accused
    of destabilizing conflict zones in the former Soviet Union, and
    its election monitors _ deployed to provide a counterbalance to
    Western-dominated observer missions from such groups as the Council of
    Europe and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe _
    have consistently given high marks to blatantly fraudulent ballots.

    Pavel Borodin, the secretary of the Russia-Belarus union, said the
    CIS would have to radically change its focus to survive _ but survive
    it would.

    "The CIS will be reborn as a purely economic organization," he
    said. "This is a market of 300 million consumers. There's nowhere
    else to turn."

    Putin made much the same point to German journalists this week,
    singling out the shared energy system, transport network and other
    infrastructure dating back to Soviet times as strong incentives to
    deepen economic cooperation.

    "These are all natural advantages that the past has give us," Putin
    said. "Not to use this, I think, would be simply stupid."

    Yet the plans to remove trade barriers between member states that have
    dominated the CIS agenda since its creation have never gotten off the
    ground. Attempts at forging closer economic ties have been hampered
    by the stark differences between the sizes of the member economies and
    their levels of development, as well as fears of Russian domination.

    "The CIS is a system that has completed all of its set tasks, and
    there is no hope for its development," Ukrainian Economic Minister
    Sergei Teryokhin said.
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