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Europe Must Not Lose Sight of the Frozen Conflicts

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  • Europe Must Not Lose Sight of the Frozen Conflicts

    Europe Must Not Lose Sight of the Frozen Conflicts
    by VLADIMIR SOCOR

    June 3-5, 2005

    THE WALL STREET JOURNAL EUROPE

    The European Union's Common Foreign and Security Policy is one of the
    major casualties of the voter backlash against the EU's constitutional
    treaty. To be sure, some of the constitutional treaty's leading
    advocates -- such as French President Jacques Chirac and German
    Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder -- had themselves weakened the CFSP for
    years by blocking key initiatives or working at cross purposes with
    the policy and absurdly trying to distance the EU from NATO. But, in
    the final analysis, it is up to the European Council and Commission to
    offer voters an inspiring strategic vision on EU policy. This should
    pursue together with NATO the common economic and security interests
    in the new Euro-Atlantic neighborhood to the east.

    At this stage, those interests converge on the greater Black Sea
    region. From Ukraine, Romania, and Bulgaria to Georgia and on
    to Azerbaijan on the Caspian Sea, this region functions as a vital
    two-way corrridor of strategic access: For allied anti-terror forces
    to operations areas in Central Asia, Afghanistan and the Middle East,
    and for Caspian oil and gas to consumer countries in Europe. Thus, some
    of the EU's most pressing challenges and requirements -- anti-terrorism
    efforts, energy supply, institutional consolidation and enlargement --
    are to be met in the Black Sea region.

    Strategically for Europe, this area must be recognized as the new
    pivot of history.

    This region's countries are Western-friendly. The European idea and
    the EU itself continue to exert their magnetic force here. However,
    the region suffers from Soviet-legacy problems, the most painful of
    which are the unresolved separatist conflicts: Transnistria, a Russian
    military exclave in Moldova and a thorn in the side to both Ukraine and
    Romania; Abkhazia and South Ossetia, both carved out of Georgia; and
    Karabakh at the heart of the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    Commonly referred to as "the frozen conflicts," they are actually
    smoldering, maintained in that form by Russia's military presence and
    its divide-and-rule policy. What is frozen is the political processes
    and diplomatic formats that Moscow designed more than a decade ago
    so as to maintain influence on all sides involved in these conflicts
    and complicate the security situation of neighboring countries as well.

    Broadly speaking, Western interests and those of the states and
    peoples in the Black Sea region are facets of one and the same
    set of interests: security, democratic development, Euro-Atlantic
    integration as the path to prosperity. Settling the unresolved
    conflicts in accordance with that set of interests must become the
    starting premise of European and U.S. diplomacy in the region.

    Along with establishing that premise, it is urgently necessary to
    bring the entire region under the purview of international law. Ever
    since the 1991 Soviet collapse, Russian policy has practically
    abolished international law in parts of this region. Moscow and
    its local proteges have shifted or erased borders, or erected new
    borders de facto, in conflict areas; created unlawful armed forces;
    turned hundreds of thousands of local residents into Russian citizens
    so as to assert rights of protection over them; underwritten ethnic
    cleansing and thwarted repatriation proposals; and kept Russian troops
    and bases in the region, with or without host-country consent. Thus,
    political settlement of the conflicts must begin with a recommitment
    to upholding international law throughout the region.

    Democracy is a sine qua non to conflict resolution, and there must be
    no exemption tailored for Soviet-legacy authorities in secessionist
    areas. Most of these have over the years become mini-scale
    reproductions of a Russian model of governance, characterized
    by a fusion of shadowy business networks with the administrative
    apparatus and security services under authoritarian political leaders
    appointed from Moscow. The ultimate status of these areas must not
    be predetermined by negotiations with the incumbent secessionist
    leaderships. This approach can lead to antidemocratic solutions and
    a continuing "freeze." Political settlements have to be preceded by a
    transitional period of democratization and civil society building in
    the secessionist enclaves, enabling the populations to make an informed
    choice for a European future, instead of post-Soviet stagnation.

    The secessionist enclaves are over-militarized. They host Russian and
    local military forces and internal security troops, "peacekeping"
    contingents without international mandates, and large arsenals of
    arms and ammunition (notably, unaccounted-for heavy weaponry that
    should have been eliminated under the Treaty on Conventional Forces in
    Europe). These are out of bounds to international inspection. Before
    a viable political settlement can be reached, these regions must
    be demilitarized. Peacekeeping -- a Russian monopoly for more than
    a decade in this region -- should be internationalized and largely
    civilianized. In 2003, the EU briefly considered an international
    peacekeeping operation for Transnistria, involving predominantly
    civilian components, with a small military element.

    Now is the time to return to that proposal.

    The existing formats for conflict-settlement negotiations are stacked
    to ensure Moscow's control over the process and minimize or exclude
    a Western say on the region's security. Those negotiating formats
    date back to the early 1990s, a truly distant past from today's
    perspective. Hardly anyone then would have predicted the EU's and
    NATO's enlargement, the high importance of Caspian energy resources
    to Europe, or the antiterrorism operations requiring direct access
    from Europe eastward. By now, therefore, Euro-Atlantic interests
    in this region have far outgrown those old negotiating formats. The
    EU can take the lead in bypassing those discredited formats, using
    its political appeal in the region, the incentive of post-conflict
    reconstruction aid, and CFSP instruments for conflict-resolution and
    regional stabilization.

    Russia has acted in most cases as an initiator of, a participant in,
    and at the same time as official mediator in these conflicts, openly
    favoring the secessionist side. In sum, Russia is the problem, not
    the solution, in most of these cases. To be sure, Moscow's interests
    should be taken into account insofar as they are consistent with
    European democratic values. Russia must have a voice in the debate;
    but should not have a veto on the outcome, let alone a double veto
    through its local satraps.

    Western interests in the region require stable, secure, reform-capable
    partner states, free to exercise their Euro-Atlantic choice and to
    focus on meeting the integration standards. Resolution of frozen
    conflicts, and regional security generally from the Black Sea to the
    Caspian, must be based on the vision of a Euro-Atlantic future, not
    on bureaucratically-driven accomodation with the sequels and relics
    of the Soviet past. Here is the EU' s chance to validate the CFSP and
    demonstrate strategic vision to increasingly disaffected publics in
    the EU's core countries.

    Mr. Socor is a senior fellow of the Washington-based Jamestown
    Foundation, publishers of the Eurasia Daily Monitor.
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