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Energy Insecurity, Frozen Conflicts Preoccupy GUAM Summit

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  • Energy Insecurity, Frozen Conflicts Preoccupy GUAM Summit

    ENERGY INSECURITY, FROZEN CONFLICTS PREOCCUPY GUAM SUMMIT
    By Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    May 25 2006

    The GUAM summit in Kyiv on May 23 called international attention
    to the challenges and threats posed to the four member countries by
    energy insecurity and secessionist conflicts. Furthermore, Moldova
    and Georgia are the targets of politically motivated Russian embargoes
    on agricultural products and wine, their main exports.

    The founding Declaration of the new GUAM Organization for Democracy and
    Economic Development asserts that economic pressures and monopolization
    of energy markets are unacceptable. The document commits the member
    countries to work together to promote the security of energy supplies.

    In their speeches at the summit, Presidents Mikheil Saakashvili
    and Vladimir Voronin cited Azerbaijan's and Ukraine's emergency
    deliveries of gas to Georgia and Moldova, respectively, when Russia
    stopped supplies in January of this year. Although the emergency
    deliveries were small, they were vital at that time and a mark of
    political solidarity (Channel 5 TV [Kyiv], May 23). However, GUAM
    Organization member countries have yet to begin discussions toward a
    common energy-security policy. Voronin's chief adviser, Mark Tkachuk,
    told the media during the summit that such a policy would require a
    two-fold focus: attracting investments to create alternative routes
    of supply and concluding agreements on the free flow of supplies
    through member countries' territories (Kommersant, May 23).

    For his part, Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko urged the president
    of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, to consider the possibility of setting
    up a network of gasoline and fuel supply stations in Ukraine.

    Yushchenko would order a Ukrainian working group to deal with this
    issue "within three days," he stated. Furthermore, he sought Azeri
    commitments to: supply crude oil to the Odessa-Brody pipeline in the
    northward direction; co-invest in expanding the terminal capacity at
    Odessa to take Azeri and Kazakh oil; co-invest in building a refinery
    in Brody to refine that oil; and support extending the pipeline
    to Gdansk -- a project that the European Union may help finance
    (Interfax-Ukraine, 1 + 1 TV [Kyiv], Interfax-Ukraine, May 23).

    Kyiv has submitted such proposals to Baku repeatedly during the
    last year and Yushchenko has aired them internationally. They seem
    unrealistic, because the great bulk of Azerbaijan's crude oil output
    is pre-committed to the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline. Building a refinery
    at Brody seems incompatible with extending the pipeline to Gdansk,
    inasmuch as the Odessa-Brody line's annual throughput (projected at 8
    million tons, potentially up to 14 million) can hardly sustain both the
    refinery and the extension. In any case, the Odessa-Brody pipeline's
    future depends almost entirely on the availability of Kazakh oil,
    but Russia stands in the way.

    The summit's Declaration expresses a shared concern in pointing out,
    "Occupation of a country's territory through military force or threats
    of force is unacceptable. Territorial annexations and the creation of
    enclaves can never become legal. No country may intervene into another
    country's affairs through military, political, or economic pressures."

    Yushchenko referenced the controversial plan that carries his name
    regarding settlement in Transnistria, which he claimed was "supported
    by both the Moldovan and the Transnistrian side." Moreover, he advised,
    "A plan along the same lines should be developed for Karabakh and one
    along the same lines for Abkhazia." But he seemed to change thought
    immediately: "The solution to each conflict, however, requires an
    individual plan and there can be no recipe on resolving the Karabakh
    problem along with the problem of Transnistria or Abkhazia. It takes
    an individual approach" (Interfax-Ukraine, May 23). Voronin chose
    to focus on the positive side, expressing gratitude for Ukraine's
    recent cooperation with Moldova and the EU in curbing Transnistria's
    contraband trade.

    Aliyev and Voronin called for better coordination among GUAM member
    countries in international organizations regarding the secessionist
    conflicts and foreign troops (Moldpres, 1 + 1 TV [Kyiv], May 23). The
    unspoken reason behind that call is that Ukrainian representatives
    have stopped subscribing to joint GUAM positions on those issues in
    some meetings of the OSCE's Permanent Council and Joint Consultative
    Group in recent months.

    That joint stand was GUAM's primordial raison d'etre. The group emerged
    during debates at the OSCE in 1996 on the Treaty on Conventional Forces
    in Europe in order to seek Russian compliance with force limitations,
    specifically on GUAM countries' territories.

    The four countries' joint stand, authorizing one of them to speak for
    the four, had become its hallmark in international organizations and
    one of the few tangible manifestations of GUAM's viability. Kyiv's
    recent tendency to stand aside from the GUAM position at the OSCE
    has become a matter of concern to some NATO diplomats as well. This
    situation might now be corrected after the presidents' private
    discussions at the Kyiv summit.
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