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  • Putin offers new paradigm of cooperation

    PUTIN OFFERS NEW PARADIGM OF COOPERATION

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    May 08, 2005

    MOSCOW, May 8 (Tatiana Stanovaya, leading expert of the Center for
    Political Technologies, specially for RIA Novosti) - The informal
    CIS summit, which took place today, preceded the official events
    devoted to the celebration of the 60th anniversary of the victory
    over fascism. This fact is far from being accidental: Russia is,
    therefore, stressing the priority of the CIS as the USSR heritage and
    this event acquires a specific meaning in the context of the jubilee
    of the Great Victory.

    The further fate of the CIS is a very acute issue, which tops today's
    agenda. For the first time since 1998-1999, the CIS is experiencing a
    crisis. The leaders of Ukraine, Georgia and now already Moldova are
    openly speaking about the CIS as a structure of the past (although
    in his today's interview with Mayak radio station President of
    Moldova Vladimir Voronin spoke about the CIS' yet incompletely used
    possibilities, he more perceived the Commonwealth as a sort of a
    discussion club).

    The issue of the expediency of keeping the CIS was already raised
    in 1999 due to the August 1998 financial crisis. The economies of
    the former Soviet republics closely linked with Russia started to
    experience all the negative consequences of the weakening of the
    Russian financial and economic system. Russian investors started
    quickly losing their positions in the markets of the CIS countries
    thinking about how to survive at least. Russia as a dominating creditor
    was getting less attractive. It was also in 1999 that the future
    of the Collective Security Treaty Organization became uncertain:
    Uzbekistan, Georgia and Azerbaijan withdrew from it (today the
    Collective Security Treaty Organization includes Russia, Belarus
    and Armenia, and also three Central Asian republics - Kazakhstan,
    Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan). It was precisely in 1999 that a new
    structure, GUUAM (the abbreviation consisting of the first letters
    of five member states: Georgia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and
    Moldova) was created as a western-oriented alternative to the CIS.

    Russia tried at that time to coordinate the efforts of the CIS
    member states not so much in the economic sphere as in the sphere of
    foreign policy to keep the Commonwealth alive. Russia attempted to
    make the CIS a sort of an umbrella to protect the CIS foreign policy
    interests amid the NATO expansion to the East. The election of new
    President of Russia Vladimir Putin in 2000 helped Russia to increase
    its geopolitical attractiveness. The period of 2000-2002 proved to be
    a period of stagnation for the CIS. This stagnation was overcome in
    2003 with the emergence of the project of the common economic space
    for four states (Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan).

    Russia's attempts to accelerate the CIS integration processes in
    2003 met with the understanding of the CIS member states: this was
    prompted by the emerging weaknesses of the ruling regimes in the
    CIS countries. The CIS as a structure for a dialog, in which Russia
    objectively played a central role, was considered as an additional
    resource for CIS ruling regimes to strengthen their internal
    political positions. In 2003, it was the CIS summit, at which the
    future President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, was presented with the
    direct support of his candidature by Russia. The same year, the CIS'
    leadership was passed over to Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma who
    initiated constitutional reform in the country in the preparation for
    the 2004 presidential elections. Russia soon secured Ukraine's refusal
    to join NATO: the relevant clause was excluded from the country's
    military doctrine (it is true, though, that this clause was restored
    after Viktor Yushchenko was elected the President of Ukraine). CIS
    observers play a key role in making elections in the CIS countries
    legitimate. Simultaneously, there is increasing rivalry between the
    CIS institutions and European organizations, in particular, the OSCE,
    in assessing the results of electoral processes. Today the CIS member
    states are actively discussing the ways of the reformation of the OSCE
    whose decisions played quite a role in recognizing "color revolutions"
    in the post-Soviet space.

    The re-orientation of Georgia, Ukraine and Moldova to the West after
    the presidential elections in those countries and the revival of
    GUUAM (Tashkent recently announced its intention to withdraw from that
    organization) as an alternative to the CIS have put the Commonwealth on
    the brink of a new crisis. The Commonwealth of Independent States as an
    organization for the settlement of conflicts and integration is facing
    strong competition from the West. The CIS political problem today
    is that the geopolitical vectors of the CIS member states are being
    polarized. Those countries, which fear color revolutions (Uzbekistan,
    Kazakhstan and Armenia) are turning towards Russia. Moldova, Georgia
    and Ukraine, on the contrary, are embodying the disintegration
    vector inside the CIS. President of Georgia Mikhail Saakashvili
    predicts a third wave of color revolutions while Ukraine also speaks,
    although to a lesser degree, about the export of revolutions to the
    CIS countries. Against this background, the support of the informal
    role of the CIS as a resource to keep the ruling regimes may prove
    to be fatal for the Commonwealth.

    That is why, the topical issue today is to look for a new CIS
    formula. This formula can be based on stronger security, the struggle
    against terrorism and better efficiency of the CIS sectoral structures,
    and also on cooperation in the humanitarian field: a respective
    declaration was adopted today at the summit, which was attended by
    all the heads of the CIS states, except the Presidents of Georgia and
    Azerbaijan. The task of countering the threats of Nazism, terrorism
    and extremism pronounced by President Vladimir Putin in his opening
    speech is becoming a new ideological basis capable of shifting the
    emphasis from confrontation to integration trends. The contours of
    a new CIS paradigm based on the principles of security and humanism
    are thus emerging.
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