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Former Satellites Stand Up To Russia

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  • Former Satellites Stand Up To Russia

    FORMER SATELLITES STAND UP TO RUSSIA

    Press of Atlantic City
    Oct 1 2013

    by Carl Gershman

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has had some success using his support
    for the Assad regime in Syria to strengthen Moscow's position in the
    Middle East. But this is much less important than Moscow's growing
    troubles in its "near abroad," as it refers to the strategically
    vital area to its immediate west.

    In a replay of the East-West rivalry of the Cold War, but with the
    United States on the sidelines, Russia has used economic and security
    threats to try to draw neighbors into its Eurasian Customs Union
    and to block the European Union's Eastern Partnership initiative,
    which seeks the reform and possible eventual integration of Armenia,
    Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine into E.U.

    structures. Russian pressures have escalated with the approach of
    a November summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, at which several of the
    countries could sign association or free-trade agreements with the E.U.

    So far only Armenia has buckled under pressure, agreeing to join
    the customs union after Moscow, which guarantees Armenia's security
    against neighboring Azerbaijan, signed contracts to provide Azerbaijan
    with $4 billion worth of military hardware.

    Elsewhere, Moscow's bullying has backfired. Russia has banned Moldovan
    wine, threatened to cut off gas supplies and warned that the people
    of its Russian-occupied separatist enclave of Transnistria would
    resist any agreement with the E.U. But Moldova remains committed to
    initialing a free-trade agreement with the European Union, and it
    responded to the threat of an energy boycott by agreeing with Romania
    to build a pipeline linking the two countries.

    Georgia, for years the target of Russian boycotts and threats,
    is ruled by Prime Minister Bidzina Ivanishvili, rumored to be less
    anti-Russian than outgoing President Mikheil Saakashvili. Yet it, too,
    is about to initial a free-trade agreement in Vilnius, signaling that
    European integration is a national aspiration, not the choice of any
    particular party.

    Ukraine is the biggest prize, and there Russia's bullying has been
    particularly counterproductive. In addition to the usual economic
    threats and trade sanctions, including a ban on the import of Ukrainian
    chocolates, Putin offended Ukrainians during a state visit in July,
    saying that they and the Russians were a "single people," and that
    the Ukranians had flourished under Soviet rule - totally ignoring
    the famine of the early 1930s that Ukrainians call the Holodomor, or
    "extermination by hunger."

    In an August speech, Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych called
    association with the European Union "an important stimulus for forming
    a modern European state." In short order, Ukraine's parliament passed
    reforms required by the E.U. dealing with corruption, tariffs and
    prisons.

    Russia's problem is more than tactical. Its neighbors prefer the
    relative dynamism of Europe to Russia's stagnant economy.

    The process playing out in Europe has attracted little attention in
    the U.S. or from the Obama administration, which has been preoccupied
    with the Middle East and its pivot to Asia. But the opportunities
    are considerable, and there are important ways Washington could help.

    America should engage with governments and civil society in Ukraine,
    Georgia and Moldova to ensure the reform process under way not only
    promotes greater trade and development but also produces governments
    that are less corrupt and more accountable to their societies. An
    agreement with the European Union should be seen as a starting point
    that makes possible deeper reforms.

    Russian democracy also can benefit. Ukraine's choice to join Europe
    will accelerate the demise of the ideology of Russian imperialism
    that Putin represents. There are signs of the emergence of a new
    Russian nationalism: the strong performance by opposition leader
    Alexei Navalny in Moscow's recent mayoral election and polls that show
    greater opposition to Putin in the Russian provinces, his traditional
    support base. This nationalism is concerned not with the restoration of
    Russia's imperial greatness, which would be inconceivable if Ukraine
    joined Europe, but with fighting corruption and addressing the severe
    economic and social problems of the Russian people.

    Russians, too, face a choice, and Putin may find himself on the losing
    end not just in the near abroad but within Russia itself.

    Carl Gershman is president of the National Endowment for Democracy. He
    wrote this for The Washington Post.

    http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/opinion/commentary/carl-gershman-former-satellites-stand-up-to-russia/article_7c1f02c0-a1cd-5f18-9d17-cd36f3e8e163.html

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