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Russia Piles Pressure On Former Soviet Satellites To Drop EU Aspirat

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  • Russia Piles Pressure On Former Soviet Satellites To Drop EU Aspirat

    RUSSIA PILES PRESSURE ON FORMER SOVIET SATELLITES TO DROP EU ASPIRATIONS

    The Sofia Globe, Bulgaria
    Sept 5 2013

    Written by Alex Bivol

    As the Vilnius summit of EU's Eastern Partnership draws nearer, at
    which several former Soviet states are expected to sign association
    agreements with the EU, Russia appears to have stepped up efforts to
    pull those same former Soviet states closer and into its own Customs
    Union, with mixed results.

    On the surface, it appears to be a simple choice between which free
    trade agreement would offer those countries a better economic incentive
    - but where the EU can wield the carrot of foreign aid, Russia leans
    on the stick of threatening to withhold energy resources (and, unlike
    the EU, could not care less about asking for lasting reforms).

    In the long run, Russian president Vladimir Putin sees the Customs
    Union as the building block of the Eurasian Economic Union - outlining
    its key institutions in an article he penned for Russia's newspaper
    of record, Izvestia, in October 2011.

    Despite pointing out in that piece that that the new entity was not
    meant to hijack the EU aspirations of former Soviet republics, it has
    become clear that at the very least the Eurasian Union is meant as
    a counterweight to the EU, but also a way to bring the former Soviet
    states closer into Russia's orbit in a way that the Commonwealth of
    Independent States (which former out of the ashes of the Soviet Union
    in December 1991) never quite managed.

    One of the four countries expected to initial an association and
    free trade agreement with the EU at the Eastern Partnership summit
    in Vilnius in November, Armenia, has now given in to Russian wooing,
    announcing that it would join the Moscow-led Customs Union.

    Given the government change in Georgia, which has lead to the thawing
    of relations with Russia, Tbilisi could be expected to follow suit.

    Indeed, pro-Russian prime minister Bidzina Ivanishvili said on
    September 4 that his government was "studying" the customs union issue,
    although that statement was later clarified to mean that membership
    was not an option, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reported.

    But in Moldova, Russia's efforts have been unsuccessful so far,
    prompting a deputy Russian prime minister to make not-so-subtle threats
    that the country could find itself freezing come winter. And the big
    prize, Ukraine, appears also out of the Kremlin's grasp.

    Abrupt announcement

    Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan's announcement on September 3,
    following talks with Putin in Moscow, appeared to take the EU by
    surprise.

    "We look forward to understanding better from Armenia what their
    intentions are and how they wish to ensure compatibility between these
    and the commitments undertaken through the Association Agreement and
    the Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area," the European Commission
    said in a statement. "Once this consultation has been completed,
    we will draw our conclusions on the way forward."

    The bafflement was best summed up by Swedish foreign minister Carl
    Bildt, a frequent visitor to Eastern Partnership countries in recent
    years, who tweeted: "Armenia negotiated 4 years to get Association
    Agreement with EU. Now President prefers Kremlin to Brussels."

    It appears security concerns - Armenia still has an unsolved dispute
    over Nagorno-Karabakh with Azerbaijan - might have played the decisive
    role in Sargsyan's decision, according interpretations by some EU
    politicians, like British MEP Charles Tannock, who told the BBC
    on September 5 that concern about Russian arms sales to Azerbaijan
    appeared to have influenced Sargsyan more than any other issue.

    Sargsyan's own statement at the joint news conference with Putin could
    certainly be interpreted to lend credence to such claims. "Twenty
    years ago, Armenia in cooperation with Russia and other CIS countries
    established its military security structure in the format of the
    Collective Security Treaty Organization. Through these decades,
    the structure proved its viability and efficiency," he said.

    "Currently, our CSTO partners are forming a new platform for economic
    cooperation. I have said on many occasions that participating in one
    military security structure makes it unfeasible and inefficient to
    stay away from the relevant geo-economic area."

    Under pressure

    Moldova is home to the other major "frozen conflict" dating back
    to the immediate aftermath of the Soviet Union's dissolution, with
    the de-facto independent (albeit unrecognised by the international
    community) breakaway region of Transnistria, or Pridnestrovie, as
    its Moscow-backed government calls it.

    Over the past two decades, Moscow has opposed any efforts to remove
    its troops in the region and replace them with international
    peacekeepers. Russia has also rebuffed any plans to settle the
    conflict, other than its own plan to form a federation, on equal
    footing, between Moldova and Transnistria.

    Moscow has also given the breakaway region hundreds of millions of
    roubles in financial aid, but, curiously, insists that the bill for
    all the gas shipped to Transnistria - where consumption outweighs
    that in the rest of Moldova - be footed by authorities in Chisinau.

    Moldova is entirely dependent on Russian gas supply. On September 3,
    Russian deputy prime minister Dmitry Rogozin, who is also the Russian
    envoy to the region, said during a visit to Chisinau that "energy
    is important, especially to stop the cold; I hope you won't freeze
    in winter."

    At the same time, a senior official at Russia's consumer watchdog
    Rospotrebnadzor, Kremlin's weapon of choice in blocking foreign
    imports (such as Moldovan wine in 2006, or anything from Georgia until
    recenty), raised the prospect of a new ban on Moldovan products -
    prompting Bildt to tweet "Threatening a small nation to cut off gas
    and to block exports - is this Europe 2013?"

    Trade war

    Most recently, Rospotrebnadzor banned, in August, all confectionery
    made by Ukrainian firm Roshen, claiming it contained carcinogens.

    Similar checks carried out in several other countries reportedly
    found no problems.

    Chocolate is not the only Ukrainian products not welcome on the
    Russian market - Russia recently scrapped the quota for Ukrainian
    steel pipes. Furthermore, some Ukrainian companies have complained
    in recent weeks about harassment by Russian customs officials.

    Most recently, Russian authorities plan to bill Ukraine for all the
    taxes Ukraine has collected from goods delivered to Russia's Black
    Sea fleet, stationed under a long-term lease on Ukrainian territory,
    Russian daily Nezavisimaya Gazeta reported on September 4. Russia
    estimates the figure at an annual $10 million to $15 million.

    (A dispute there could end costing Russia more than Ukraine, since
    Moscow pays only $98 million a year to lease the fleet's base, built
    during the Soviet times - Ukrainian opposition parties have long
    been demanding a review of the leasing agreement, which currently
    runs until 2042.)

    Separately, Moscow is demanding $7 billion from Ukraine under the
    terms of the long-term gas contract Kyiv has with Gazprom, claiming
    that Ukraine has failed to buy the amounts stipulated under the
    "take-or-pay" clause of the contract - as part of its efforts to
    convince Ukraine to turn over its gas grid to Gazprom.

    Negotiations with Russia on a "bilateral consortium" to manage the gas
    grid - relinquishing control to Gazprom in all but name - reportedly
    came close to being finalised earlier this year, but the legislative
    amendments that would have allowed the privatisation to go ahead were
    never tabled. Since then, Moscow has stepped up its rhetoric against
    Kyiv, hinting at a possible repeat of gas disruptions like the ones
    in 2006 and 2009.

    Ukraine is one of the two largest former Soviet republics - Kazakhstan
    has long been on board with Moscow's initiatives and is a founding
    member of the Customs Union - and would represent a coup for the
    Kremlin both politically and economically, especially given that
    Ukraine trades as much with the EU as it does with Russia.

    Ironically, the presidency of Viktor Yanukovich, elected on the ticket
    of the pro-Russian Party of Regions, has not brought quite the results
    that Moscow expected when he took office in 2010.

    http://sofiaglobe.com/2013/09/05/russia-piles-pressure-on-former-soviet-satellites-to-drop-eu-aspirations/

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