Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Estonian Expert: DCFTA May Strengthen Armenia's Multi-Vector Foreign

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

  • Estonian Expert: DCFTA May Strengthen Armenia's Multi-Vector Foreign

    ESTONIAN EXPERT: DCFTA MAY STRENGTHEN ARMENIA'S MULTI-VECTOR FOREIGN POLICY

    14:20 28/08/2013 " COMMENTS

    Panorama.am presents an interview with Dr. Andrey Makarychev -
    Professor at the Institute of Government and Politics, University
    of Tartu (Estonia); he is also a member of PONARS (Program on New
    Approaches to Russian Security), where he regularly writes on the
    issues of Eurasia and the Russia-EU neighborhood. We have talked to
    Dr. Makarychev about the possibilities and challenges of the European
    integration in the post-Soviet space.

    - Dr. Makarychev, you write a lot about the EU-Russia relations
    and their "competition" in the post-Soviet space. How would you
    characterize the present stage of these relations? To what extent
    do you think the current EU expansion challenges (and is likely to
    challenge) the Russian interests in the post-soviet countries?

    - Relations are in a state of decline. Even having much in common
    economically and financially, the two parties can't communicate with
    each other due to deep normative gaps. EU-Russia summit are mostly
    ceremonial events; the Partnership for Modernization is more dead
    than alive; Russia in fact has withdrawn its previous commitments to
    jointly solve the Transnistrian conflict within what used to be the
    Meseberg Initiative, etc. At all these accounts Russia acts very
    irrationally: keeping 40 per cent of its reserve funds in Euro,
    the Kremlin nevertheless tries to draw a political line between a
    "proudly conservative Russia" and "liberal Europe".

    The EU enlargement may run against interests of the ruling elite,
    yet only if the latter is serious about restoring an imperial model
    of Russian foreign policy with top-down subordination of neighboring
    countries. But seen from a wider socio-political perspective, EU
    enlargement offers more chances for Russia (in terms of business
    opportunities, professional contacts, developing multilateral models
    of diplomacy) than threats that are mostly artificially constructed.

    - In this context how would you interpret the signing of the Deep and
    Comprehensive Free Trade Area (DCFTA) between the EU and the Republic
    of Armenia?

    - It will signal about Armenia's readiness to move towards European
    normative order and accept both political standards and economic
    procedures that the EU projects eastward. Politically, this agreement
    may strengthen the principle of multi-vector foreign policy and
    testify to Armenia's unwillingness to submit itself to the Russian
    sphere of influence.

    - The message from the EU has so far been that it is impossible to
    sign the DCFTA and at the same time to be in the Russian-initiated
    Customs Union; what exactly makes this impossible? Is there any room
    for maneuver in this regard?

    - Economically speaking, there is almost no room for maneuver - you
    can't keep free trade relations with different - moreover competing -
    economic blocs. Some compromises can be achieved only if Customs Union
    and the EU strike a deal among themselves and form a wider economic
    space "from Lisbon to Vladivostok", to quote Putin's illusory idea.

    Yet taking into account multiple economic conflicts between Moscow and
    Brussels (European Commission's trial against Gazprom, EU's complains
    about Russia's non-compliance with WTO regulations, procrastinations
    with visa facilitation talks, etc.), this scenario looks unfeasible
    for the time being.

    - How would you characterize the EU's response to the extradition of
    Azerbaijani murderer Ramil Safarov?

    - To the best of my knowledge, there was no official response from
    Brussels. The EU prefers to portray as a Hungary-specific case,
    in fact ignoring that it happened in one of member states.

    - How would you explain the behavior of Turkey in failing to sign
    the Armenian-Turkish protocols and opening the border?

    - Turkey's position, in my view, depends on two factors - its relations
    with the EU as seen from the (fading away) membership perspective,
    and identity-based relations with Azerbaijan. Sometimes these two
    aspects can hardly be reconciled, which partly explains controversies
    in Turkish policies.

    - The President of Armenia has recently raised the question of
    the closed Armenian-Turkish border being a significant obstacle for
    Armenia on her way to benefiting from the DCFTA. How would you evaluate
    the prospects of border opening once Armenia signs the Association
    Agreement with the EU? Can the EU play a greater role in this case
    by pressuring Turkey to open the border?

    - Theoretically yes, but Turkey becomes increasingly a self-minded
    and EU-skeptic country. It could be that reaction from Baku will
    be assessed in Ankara as more important than the position taken by
    Brussels. Should Russia move politically closer to Azerbaijan in a
    reaction to the DCFTA to be signed by Armenia, it certainly won't stay
    unnoticed in Turkey and may be regarded as a background for creating a
    denser set of relations between the two countries (Azerbaijan-Turkey)
    each having their own claims to the EU.

    Conducted by Nvard Chalikyan

    Source: Panorama.am

Working...
X