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March 09, 2012
Putin's Return to Kremlin Could Boost Eurasian Union Project
Robert Coalson | From[1]RFE/RL
A meeting of the prime ministers of CIS member states at the
Constantine Palace in St. Petersburg in October, where Putin
triumphantly announced an agreement to form a free-trade zone after
years of fruitless negotiations.
A meeting of the prime ministers of CIS member states at the
Constantine Palace in St. Petersburg in October, where Putin
triumphantly announced an agreement to form a free-trade zone after
years of fruitless negotiations.
When Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin first announced his
intention to return to the Kremlin back in the fall of 2011, one of the
first programmatic articles that he published was devoted entirely to
his vision of a "Eurasian Union."
"We suggest a powerful supranational association capable of becoming
one of the poles in the modern world and of serving as an efficient
bridge between Europe and the dynamic Asia-Pacific region," Putin wrote
in [2]Izvestia in October 2011.
Now that Putin is returning to the Kremlin for six more years - and
possibly 12 - this priority project seems destined for a new infusion
of energy. Behind the official congratulations that are pouring out of
the capitals of the members of the Commonwealth of Independent States
(CIS) are real concerns about whether closer integration can be
achieved on an equitable footing.
The issue of CIS integration is clearly important for Putin. Just two
weeks after the Izvestia article appeared, he hosted a meeting of prime
ministers from Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova,
Tajikistan, and Ukraine in St. Petersburg and triumphantly announced an
agreement to form a free-trade zone after years of fruitless
negotiations.
"We are opening up our markets to each other, which means that goods
will be brought to our markets at lower prices, which will in turn
provide better conditions for starting new joint enterprises," Putin
said. "All of this, of course, increases the competitiveness of all of
our economies."
"No other way"
Putin sees Eurasian integration primarily as a way of cementing
Russia's international status, says Kyrgyz political scientist Mars
Sariev.
"Following the election, I think Putin will try to realize his vision
about a Eurasian model embracing [the other CIS countries]," Sariev
says. "And so Russia will pursue very close relations with Kyrgyzstan,
will push us to join the Customs Union and the 'Eurasian Union.' If
Russia fails to embrace us - the CIS countries - then Russia itself
will fail. It will be just the backyard of Europe or a source of raw
materials for China. There is no other way for Russia."
In his Izvestia manifesto Putin emphasized that Russia is "not going to
rush or nudge anyone." States should only sign on to the initiative
based on their "long-term national interests," he said.
But countries across the negotiating table from Putin's Russia often
feel as if their "national interests" are being manipulated by their
huge neighbor. Moscow recently announced a [3]ban on imports of
Ukrainian cheese, in a move that was widely seen as a bid to pressure
Kyiv to agree to greater integration -- and to slow down on efforts to
move closer to the European Union.
Ukrainian lawmaker Oleh Zarubinskiy, a member of the Russia-Ukraine
interparliamentary group, expects that Moscow will continue its tough
dealing with Ukraine.
"Over the last few years, Dmitry Medvedev has been in the Kremlin, but
the key questions of Russian politics - both domestic and foreign -
were de facto determined by Putin," Zarubinskiy says. "So we can't say
there will be some sort of fundamental changes or, as some people are
saying, tectonic shifts. Putin has his own style - harsh, pragmatic,
and sometimes raw politics, including in foreign relations."
The gas problem
Cheese, in this case, is just a warning shot. Kyiv knows from past
experience that when Russia really wants to get attention, it cuts off
the gas.
Putin's vision will be hard to realize in the Caucasus, too. The key
country in that region is oil-rich Azerbaijan. Many Azerbaijanis feel
that Medvedev made [4]sincere efforts to make progress resolving the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. By contrast,
they think Putin views the festering conflict as a way of increasing
Russia's leverage over both countries.
In recent months, Baku has turned its attention to the West, seeking
direct markets for its natural gas in Europe instead of, as Moscow
wishes, selling all its energy to Russia's Gazprom.
Energy-rich Turkmenistan is also wary of Putin's tough approach.
Turkmen analyst Amanmurad Bugaev also thinks Putin lacks the subtlety
needed to realize the vision he laid out in his Izvestia article.
"Putin will certainly try to strengthen Russian hegemony in Central
Asia," Bugaev says. "When it comes to Turkmenistan, Putin has always
wanted to keep the Turkmen economy dependent on Russia. He does not
even hide this."
In Izvestia, Putin wrote that the "Eurasian Union" should be built on
the inheritance of the Soviet Union - "infrastructure, a developed
system of regional production specialization, and a common space of
language, science, and culture." But the legacy of the Soviet Union -
both in terms of his own attitudes in the region and the wariness of
its CIS partners - may run deeper than he knows.
Written in Prague by RFE/RL correspondent Robert Coalson on the basis
of reporting by RFE/RL's Armenian, Azerbaijani, Belarusian, Kyrgyz,
Turkmen, and Ukrainian services.
Find more coverage at [5]RFE/RL
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