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To Overcome The Need To Choose "Either The Eurasian Union Or The EU"

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  • To Overcome The Need To Choose "Either The Eurasian Union Or The EU"

    TO OVERCOME THE NEED TO CHOOSE "EITHER THE EURASIAN UNION OR THE EU"--THEY CAN BE MADE COMPATIBLE

    Posted by: Akio Kawato
    Wednesday, October 2, 2013

    Out of the blue in early September, Armenia's President Serzh Sargsyan
    announced his intention to have Armenia accede to theEurasian Union,
    a Russian project to keep hold on the CIS as its sphere of interest.

    Sargsyan might prefer the association pact with the EU, but he could
    not resist Russia's woo, as the latter had made moves to strengthen its
    ties with Azerbaijan, the arch-enemy of Armenia. Thus, a tug-of-war
    between Russia and the EU have been intensifying in the run-up to
    the summit meeting of the EU Eastern Partnership nations scheduled in
    late November in Vilnius. There the EU is poised to sign association
    agreements with the neighboring countries (Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova,
    Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia).

    Now huge economic blocs are emerging in the world: the EU-U.S. Free
    Trade Agreement, the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP,
    effectively an economic union between Japan, the United States, the
    ASEAN, and the Oceania), and possibly the Eurasian Union. The odds
    are in favor of the first two, as the total economic size (GDP-wise)
    of the Eurasian Union is no more than one tenth of that of the EU,
    U.S./FTA, or the TPP. This strongly reminds us of the situation in
    1989, when the political and economic strength of the newly integrated
    EU lured Eastern Europe away from the Soviet camp.

    In a longer historical perspective this is a matter of a new
    demarcation of the spheres of influence after the collapse of an
    empire, as the association agreements between the "eastern partners"
    and the EU may well lead to the accession of the former to the NATO.

    It is understandable that Russia is eager to prevent this.

    Thus the three parties--Russia, the Eastern Partnership countries,
    and the EU--find themselves in a standoff. In the eyes of the Eastern
    Partnership nations, Russia can only offer discount prices for oil and
    gas as well as employment for these countries' redundant work force.

    Russia does not have the capacity to provide the former Soviet
    republics with investment, technology, and management, which they badly
    need for their autonomous development. But if the Eastern Partnership
    countries opt for the partnership with the EU, they will have to pay
    far more for the Russian oil and gas.

    This barren stalemate should be broken. A special arrangement may
    be devised for the Eastern Partnership countries so that they can
    associate with both Russia and the EU. It would effectively serve to
    form a loose economic alliance between the EU and the Eurasian Union
    tied together by the common denominator: the Eastern Partnership
    nations.

    Such an arrangement has pros and cons for Russia and the EU alike.

    Negative repercussions should be preempted. For example, visa
    requirements for Russians' entry into the EU may be softened, but not
    to a degree of total freedom. Products of the EU and Russia will be
    accorded a better access to each other's market, but not a totally
    free one. And the discount on oil and gas prices will be gradually
    reduced to avoid an unfairly large burden for Russia.

    A break-up of an empire always entails pain--material and spiritual.

    But for the former Soviet Union we had better contrive a more civilized
    and painless process, in which Russia would be able to maintain its
    political and economic stakes in the former Soviet republics. Probably
    the Commonwealth of Nations (former British Commonwealth) may serve
    as a useful example for Russia. The only snag, however, is that Russia
    does not have a queen as symbol of unity.

    Akio Kawato is former Ambassador of Japan in Uzbekistan.

    More On:GeopoliticsEUNew Eastern EuropeRussia

    http://carnegie.ru/eurasiaoutlook/?fa=53172

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