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Putin Urges Ex-Soviet Bloc to Preserve CIS

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  • Putin Urges Ex-Soviet Bloc to Preserve CIS

    Putin Urges Ex-Soviet Bloc to Preserve CIS

    AP Online;
    May 09, 2005

    HENRY MEYER


    Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday urged other leaders in a
    12-nation ex-Soviet bloc to preserve the troubled Commonwealth of
    Independent States, as Ukraine's president said there was little use
    for the organization without major reform.

    At a summit held the day before commemorations of the 60th anniversary
    of the defeat of Nazi Germany, Putin said the grouping of 12 out of
    the 15 former Soviet republics had a key role in combatting the spread
    of terrorism, extremism and xenophobia and fostering peace.

    "For all of us it is obvious that Nazism, extremism and terrorism are
    threats feeding on a single ideological source, a terrible threat,
    against which we are obliged to defend our unique and peaceful
    commonwealth," Putin said.

    "The new generation of our citizens should know the truth about the
    events of those days. To know that truth means having an internal
    immunity to the propaganda of extremism and xenophobia, national and
    religious incitement," he said, adding that the CIS could help with
    such work.

    The meeting convened amid growing questions about the viability of the
    CIS, which brings reformist leaders together with entrenched
    Soviet-era autocrats following the popular uprisings against regimes
    in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan.

    Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko said after the summit there was
    "little use" at present for the CIS but its members still needed an
    organization that would focus on economic integration and avoid
    interfering in the politics of its members.

    Yushchenko said he raised his concerns with other CIS leaders and
    although he insisted that Ukraine was not leaving the CIS, he warned
    that his patience for reform was not infinite.

    "If you forcibly damage interests of any country, it could easily
    reject this (CIS) project," he told The Associated Press.

    Putin himself in March questioned the body's usefulness, saying it had
    been created for a "civilized divorce" of Soviet republics, unlike the
    European Union, which worked to pull its members closer together.

    But on Sunday he said that six decades after the end of what Russia
    terms the Great Patriotic War, the fraternity the peoples of the
    Soviet Union felt as they fought in World War II was still palpable
    today. Maintaining "historical unity" was a good basis for stable
    development of the countries, he said.

    In a reflection of the disputes between the member countries, two of
    the leaders, Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili and Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliev, did not attend.

    Saakashvili was staying away from Sunday's meeting, as well as
    Monday's Victory in Europe Day celebration in Moscow, because Georgia
    failed to win agreement last week on the removal of Russian bases it
    regards as a legacy of Moscow's imperial domination.

    Aliev was boycotting because of the attendance of Armenian President
    Robert Kocharian, 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.

    The CIS was born in the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, and its
    advocates hoped it would foster closer integration between the newly
    independent countries. Many of its initiatives have foundered,
    however, including plans to remove trade barriers that have dominated
    the CIS agenda since its creation _ and it has long been criticized
    for being little more than a talking shop.

    The group's attempts to prove otherwise 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 _
    have consistently given high marks to blatantly fraudulent ballots.

    Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova, where the government is also looking
    West, are aiming for membership in the EU and NATO, and they have
    forged close ties within a rival organization that does not include
    Russia as they seek to throw off Moscow's influence.
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