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  • BSEC Seeking Rationale

    - BLACK SEA FORUM SEEKING ITS RATIONALE
    - MOSCOW, ANKARA RELUCTANT TO WELCOME NEW BLACK SEA FORUM
    - VILNIUS CONFERENCE ON EUROPE'S COMPLETION IN THE EAST

    ******************************************** *******************************
    Thursday, June 8, 2006 -- Volume 3, Issue 111

    BLACK SEA FORUM SEEKING ITS RATIONALE

    by Vladimir Socor

    Presidents Traian Basescu of Romania, Vladimir Voronin of Moldova, Viktor
    Yushchenko of Ukraine, Mikheil Saakashvili of Georgia, Robert Kocharian of
    Armenia, and Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan were joined by senior officials from
    the United States, Turkey, Bulgaria, and international organizations at the
    inaugural session of the Black Sea Forum for Partnership and Dialogue on
    June 4-6 in Bucharest.

    A Romanian initiative, the Forum is tentatively meant to hold annual
    presidential-level summits -- the venues rotating among participant
    countries -- and thematic or sectoral-cooperation meeting during those
    annual intervals. The Forum is not meant to create new regional
    institutions, but rather to turn into a regular consultative process among
    countries of the extended Black Sea region (defined as including the South
    Caucasus to the Caspian Sea) and between this group of countries and
    international organizations such as the European Union.

    Russia refused to send a delegation to the Forum; instead, it merely
    authorized the ambassador to Romania, Nikolai Tolkach, to sit in as an
    observer, without taking part in discussions or signing a concluding
    document. Tolkach had to be practically corralled to pose for the "family
    photo" by the irresistibly jovial Romanian president. Moscow had turned down
    the Forum initiative as soon as Bucharest announced it last December:
    Russia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs publicly deprecated the proposed Forum
    as redundant, duplicative of existing cooperation frameworks, and apt to
    siphon off limited resources from those frameworks (Interfax, December 13,
    2005). From that point on and practically until the Bucharest session's eve,
    Russia turned down entreaties to join the Forum as a participant and to send
    an official delegation: if not one led by President Vladimir Putin, then a
    ministerial one under Sergei Lavrov, or at least on some decent level.

    Moscow maintains that existing cooperation frameworks such as the Black Sea
    Economic Cooperation (BSEC) and the joint naval activity Black Sea Force
    (Blackseafor) are adequate in themselves as well as the only possible basis
    for deepening regional cooperation. Tolkach reiterated this position to
    local media during the summit, thus sniping at the Forum from the sidelines.
    Apparently, Moscow would not want the Forum to become a means for Western
    countries and organizations to voice their positions on Black Sea region
    issues.

    Moscow finds BSEC and Blackseafor to its liking because it can dominate them
    jointly with Turkey and can also use them to promote Russian objectives in
    the region. For its part, Turkey regards itself as Russia's peer in the
    Black Sea and is keen to share a leadership role with Russia. There is,
    however, a broader political message in Russia's dismissive attitude toward
    the Forum: It suggests, first, that it is not for "lesser" countries to take
    major regional initiatives on their own that are not worked out from the
    beginning with Moscow; and, second, that no regional project can be
    successful without Russia's participation in a key role. This is an
    oft-heard proposition in Black Sea diplomacy, and Moscow tries to reinforce
    by distancing itself demonstratively from projects not its own or perceived
    as Western-oriented, such as this Forum.

    Nevertheless, Forum organizers hoped until the last moment to secure a
    decent-level Russian representation at the founding session as well as
    participant status for Russia in the Forum down the road. This consideration
    loomed large in shaping the summit's agenda in a way that would not risk
    irritating Moscow. In this regard, the Forum summit duplicated (instead of
    learning from and avoiding) the experience of the December 2005 summit of
    the Community of Democratic Choice (CDC) in Kyiv. There, President Viktor
    Yushchenko's forlorn hope (tied to the electoral campaign) to induce Putin
    to visit Ukraine trumped the CDC's own democracy-promoting goals and made
    for a bland, irrelevant agenda at that summit. Similarly in Bucharest, the
    shadow of absentee Russia weakened the Forum's agenda and raised unnecessary
    question marks about the rationale of this initiative.

    Energy transit and the secessionist conflicts -- those uppermost policy
    issues in the extended Black Sea region -- seemed almost lost among a wide
    variety of issues on a kaleidoscopic agenda. Several participating heads of
    state did not avoid addressing the conflicts. Thus, Saakashvili described
    the latest claims by Russia-sponsored secessionist movements to legitimacy
    through a "democratic referendum" as a "cannibal-style democracy": It
    involves the violent seizure of a territory, ethnic cleansing, despotic
    rule, and criminality, all of which is then to be crowned by a referendum
    and claims for international recognition on such a basis, Saakashvili noted.

    For his part, Voronin criticized the draft of the Forum's concluding
    declaration for failing to identify the external source and sponsor of the
    secessionist conflicts: Resolving the conflicts will not be possible if the
    external factor is not identified with the necessary clarity, Voronin
    observed. Aliyev declared that Azerbaijan's territorial integrity would not
    be subject to negotiations; while Kocharian characterized Karabakh as a
    "classic case of secession through self-determination" -- a formulation
    seemingly in line with Moscow-led recent attempts to provide a "model" for
    post-Soviet conflict resolution. Aliyev and Kocharian held five hours of
    inconclusive talks, including a working dinner with Basescu, during the two
    days of the Bucharest summit.

    Yushchenko harked back in his speech to the 2005 CDC, although that
    initiative does not seem to have survived its birth. He also urged, as he
    had then, Black Sea countries to co-invest in a project to build a massive
    industrial center and transport hub at Donuzlav on Ukraine's Black Sea
    coast, without providing specifics or rationales; and in the same vague
    manner he called for coordination among Black Sea, Caspian, and Baltic
    countries in addressing energy problems. Yushchenko held a news conference
    for Ukrainian journalists, presumably dealing with the deepening instability
    back home, and prompting the local press to complain of being excluded.

    Aliyev's speech, delivered extemporaneously, stood out for reflecting the
    political stability and bright economic prospects of Azerbaijan, possibly
    the most successful among the region's countries at this stage. His speech
    exuded quiet confidence in the strategy of evolutionary political and
    economic reforms on parallel tracks and the advance of Azerbaijan from a
    regional to a global role in energy projects.

    (Rompres, Moldpres, Interfax-Ukraine, AzerTaj, June 5, 6)


    --Vladimir Socor

    ******************************************* ********************************

    Friday, June 9, 2006 -- Volume 3, Issue 112

    MOSCOW, ANKARA RELUCTANT TO WELCOME NEW BLACK SEA FORUM

    by Vladimir Socor

    When the presidents of Romania, Moldova, Ukraine, Georgia, Armenia, and
    Azerbaijan gathered in Bucharest on June 4-5 for the first session of the
    Black Sea Forum for Partnership and Dialogue, Russia's minimal presence was
    notable.

    Russia refused to send a delegation to the Forum and instead, it merely
    authorized the resident ambassador in Romania, Nikolai Tolkach, to sit in as
    an observer, without taking part in discussions or signing a concluding
    document. Romanian President Traian Basescu practically had to corral
    Tolkach to pose for the summit's "family photo." Moscow apparently is
    concerned that the Forum will become a means for Western countries and
    organizations to voice their positions on issues related to the Black Sea
    region.

    Attending the inaugural session of the Forum were Presidents Traian Basescu
    of Romania, Vladimir Voronin of Moldova, Viktor Yushchenko of Ukraine,
    Mikheil Saakashvili of Georgia, Robert Kocharian of Armenia, and Ilham
    Aliyev of Azerbaijan. They were joined by senior officials from the United
    States, Turkey, Bulgaria, and several international organizations.

    A Romanian initiative, the Forum is tentatively meant to hold annual
    presidential-level summits -- the venues rotating among participant
    countries -- and thematic or sectoral-cooperation meeting during those
    annual intervals. The Forum is not meant to create new regional
    institutions, but rather to turn into a regular consultative process among
    countries of the extended Black Sea region (defined as including the South
    Caucasus to the Caspian Sea) and between this group of countries and
    international organizations such as the European Union.

    However, Russia maintains that the existing cooperation frameworks, such as
    the Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) and the joint naval activity Black
    Sea Force (Blackseafor), are adequate in their present composition, which is
    limited to "regional" countries. Russia insists that such bodies form the
    only possible basis for regional cooperation and it calls for deepening
    cooperation in these frameworks without bringing in Western members. Tolkach
    reiterated this position to local media during the summit, thus sniping at
    the Forum from his observer's perch.

    Moscow finds BSEC and Blackseafor to its liking because their limited
    membership maximizes Russia's weight within these bodies. Turkey, guided by
    parallel calculations of its own, regards itself as Russia's peer in the
    Black Sea and is keen to share the leadership role with Russia. Russian
    Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov reasserted that position while visiting
    Ankara on May 31 and released his statement in Moscow on June 4, timed to
    the Bucharest Forum's opening: "Concentrating the regional countries'
    cooperation efforts around Blackseafor and BSEC, which exist and are
    functional, is the optimal way to resolve issues in the region" (Interfax,
    June 4). Furthermore, Lavrov sent an elaborate congratulatory message to a
    totally irrelevant parliamentary assembly of BSEC member countries that
    opened in Yerevan the day after the Bucharest Forum, but he did not deign to
    send a cable to the Black Sea summit among six heads of state.

    Moscow and Ankara jointly resist NATO's proposal to extend the alliance's
    maritime security operation, Active Endeavor, from the Mediterranean into
    the Black Sea. Romania, Bulgaria, Georgia, and Ukraine --- NATO member and
    aspirant countries in the Black Sea --- support the alliance's proposal.
    Russia, however, calls for institutionalizing Blackseafor and turning it
    into a "regional" naval security grouping with a wide range of missions,
    including anti-terrorism operations. The proposal is designed to create a
    seeming alternative to NATO in the Black Sea and support the argument that
    NATO's presence is not necessary there, as the "regional countries" can cope
    thanks to Russia and Turkey. For an initial step toward institutionalizing
    Blackseafor, Moscow launched during the days of the Bucharest Forum a
    proposal to endow Blackseafor with civil defense missions and a
    corresponding headquarters.

    Beyond those specific calculations, there is also a more general political
    message in Russia's dismissive attitude toward the Forum: It suggests,
    first, that it is not for "lesser" countries to take major regional
    initiatives on their own that are not worked out from the beginning with
    Moscow; and, second, that no regional project can be successful without
    Russia as a major participant. This is a proposition that Russia seeks to
    turn into a general axiom in the Black Sea region and it tries to enforce it
    by distancing itself demonstratively from projects not its own, or perceived
    as Western-oriented, such as this Forum.

    The creation of a Black Sea Trust for Democracy is the only palpable, major
    result of the Bucharest summit thus far. The German Marshall Fund of the
    United States is the main donor and will also staff the Trust. Other U.S.
    foundations as well as the Romanian government are expected to contribute
    as well to the Trust's $20 million initial endowment. Announcing this
    initiative at the Forum, Jack D. Crouch, deputy national security adviser to
    the U.S. President, underscored the abiding U.S. interest of in the region's
    security and seeing it advance toward prosperity.

    (Rompres, Moldpres, Interfax-Ukraine, AzerTaj, June 5-7)

    --Vladimir Socor


    ****************************************** *********************************

    Friday, May 5, 2006 -- Volume 3, Issue 85

    VILNIUS CONFERENCE ON EUROPE'S COMPLETION IN THE EAST

    by Vladimir Socor

    U.S. Vice President Richard Cheney joined the presidents of the three Baltic
    states, Poland, Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Bulgaria, and Georgia, as well as
    other high-level European officials, for a conference on "Common Vision for
    a Common Neighborhood" on May 3-4 in Vilnius. The common neighborhood is
    that between the Baltic and the Black Sea-South Caucasus.

    The Vilnius Conference `06 carries forward a process initiated by Lithuania
    in 1997 that led to the creation of the Vilnius Ten group of countries in
    2000 for common pursuit of Euro-Atlantic integration. Crowned with success
    through the 2002-2004 "Big Bang" enlargement of NATO, that Vilnius Process
    continues in a modified form to promote the completion of Europe through
    integration of countries in Europe's East -- Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, and
    Azerbaijan -- and work through Euro-Atlantic institutions toward that goal.
    Lithuania's initiatives in the Vilnius Process have turned a small country
    into a significant international actor, as did recently Lithuania's active
    role alongside far larger countries in the coalition in Afghanistan.

    Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus urged the Vilnius Conference '06 to
    initiate a strategic discussion about policies in Europe's East on two
    levels: commitment to reforms on the part of these countries and Western
    commitment to completion of Europe in the East. However, the context of this
    effort at present differs markedly from that of the first two rounds of
    Euro-Atlantic enlargement. Many in Western Europe are no longer aboard such
    efforts -- indeed in some cases tend to obstruct them -- while Russia has
    embarked on a political and economic counteroffensive not only in Europe's
    East but within core Europe itself.

    Cheney's address in Vilnius introduced a long-awaited new tone in the
    Administration's discourse on Russia: "The [Russian] government has unfairly
    and improperly restricted the rights of its people. [And] no legitimate
    interest is served when oil and gas become tools of intimidation and
    blackmail, either by supply manipulation or attempts to monopolize
    transportation. And no one can justify actions that undermine the
    territorial integrity of a neighbor, or interfere with democratic
    movements."

    Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili's speech to the conference focused on
    Russia's challenge: "Freedom is under threat, the changes that we once
    thought were irreversible and universal are now confronted by very serious
    forces, intent on promoting very different outcomes. Increasingly
    well-organized and financed, and tolerated in the discourse of today's
    European debates ... [those] forces in Moscow actively work to undermine our
    economies, our sovereignty, using such tools as energy dependence, state
    censorship, and the power of monopolies ... The fate of Georgia or Ukraine is
    not the only one held in the balance. If Europe fails to respond, it puts at
    risk its very system of governance and European security. Let this be a
    wake-up call for all European leaders: Without real action and a genuine
    recognition of what is at stake, we risk a reversal of the wave of
    liberation that strengthened and unified Europe during the past fifteen
    years."

    Alongside Georgia, Moldova is being directly targeted by Russia for economic
    devastation through embargoes on these two countries' main export
    commodities -- agricultural produce and wine -- on the Russian market and
    manipulation of energy supplies, as well as exploitation of conflicts.
    President Vladimir Voronin's speech to the conference reflected the
    intimidating effect of these Russian pressures on Moldova, Western support
    for which amounts to only a fraction of the support earned by Georgia.
    Compared to his speech, however, Voronin's message in private conversations
    to the heads of state present in Vilnius was far more straightforward,
    reflecting his resolve to maintain the country's European orientation in the
    face of Russian pressure. However, recurrent suggestions by some
    medium-level American diplomats (apparently bucking the White House line)
    and in Brussels to negotiate on Transnistria on Russia-defined terms pose a
    problem of a different order.

    European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana's address in Vilnius could
    for the most part have fitted any place, moment, or forum. Its only novel
    element was a far-reaching deference to Moscow regarding the "frozen
    conflicts": "It is up to the parties to settle these conflicts. But we are
    willing to help. We do so together with our international partners,
    including Russia, whose role is crucial. ... Such an offer is there for
    Transnistria and the conflicts in Georgia. But it is up to the parties to
    take responsibility and bring about a settlement." In this terminology, "the
    parties" means Moldova and Transnistria, Georgia and Abkhazia, Georgia and
    South Ossetia. Solana's concept would seem to transform Russia from
    initiator of and party to these conflicts into their bona-fide solver; and
    EU help seems confined to post-conflict reconstruction, without seriously
    attempting to shape the political settlements. Further illustrating the
    drift in EU policy, France and Germany each sent a second-tier official to
    this summit.

    Russia's use of energy supplies for political leverage was a constant
    reference point during the conference. Adamkus and Polish President Lech
    Kaczynski criticized the German government for the signing of gas deals with
    Russia without even informing, much less consulting with, its partners in
    the European Union. Meanwhile, Norway's Statoil, bidder for a stake in
    Russia's Shtokman gas field, declines to comment on possible oil deliveries
    to Lithuania's Mazeikiai refinery for fear that Moscow could retaliate by
    excluding Statoil and its Norwegian partner Norsk Hydro from the Shtokman
    deal.

    (www.vilniusconference2006.lt)



    --Vladimir Socor
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