Security & Economic Concerns

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Eurasian
Economic Union on Shaky Ground at Outset
by Daniel Schearf
December 23, 2014
The Eurasian Economic
Union is headed for a rough start.
Officials from members
of the economic alliance, which was modeled on the European Union and
officially comes into effect January 1, met Tuesday in Moscow under the pain of
Russia's collapsing economy and the absence of Ukraine.
Western sanctions over
Ukraine and a drop in the price of oil are pushing Russia's economy into a
recession that is also hurting its neighbors in the trade group.
But speaking after a
meeting of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council, Russia's President Vladimir
Putin voiced optimism that the trade bloc was making headway for its members.
Putin said a joint
market was being created to act on the basis of the general rules of the World
Trade Organization with more than 170 million consumers and a joint GDP of more
than $4.5 trillion. Many customs and administrative barriers, he said, have
been eliminated and business opportunities for realization of joint investment
projects have expanded significantly.
The leaders of Belarus,
Russia and Kazakhstan will launch the union in January, while Armenia is in the
process of joining and Kyrgyzstan plans to join next year.
Russian response
Former Ukrainian
President Viktor Yanukovych was ousted from power this year in a popular
uprising after he backed out of a European deal in favor of the Russian
economic plan. Russia responded to Ukraine's revolution with a flood of
propaganda, annexation of Crimea, and support for armed rebellions in eastern
Ukraine in fighting that has claimed 5,000 lives.
Kyiv's Western-leaning
leaders signed an association agreement with the European Union.
Ukraine further
distanced itself from Russia when its recently elected parliament voted Tuesday
to lift the nonaligned status that prevented it from joining NATO, the Western
military alliance.
Ukrainian Foreign
Minister Pavlo Klimkin, addressing the parliament in Kyiv, said that under the
conditions of the current aggression against Ukraine, this law opens for them
new mechanisms and new forms of realization of their goals of effective
internal policy. Also, he said, the logic and philosophy of this law and its
formulation coincides with the words of their friends and partners of the NATO
alliance.
Russian officials
denounced the move as threatening the peace process in Ukraine. Representatives
of Russia, Ukraine and Russia-backed rebels are to meet Wednesday in Minsk for
peace talks.
Political analysts say
Russia's backing of the rebels is aimed at keeping Ukraine unstable so it
cannot join NATO, which does not offer membership to nations in conflict.
Before meeting in Moscow,
the presidents of Belarus and Kazakhstan stopped in Kyiv for what political
analysts said was an effort to balance relations between Ukraine and an
increasingly assertive Russia.
Security concerns, too
Analyst Balazs Jarabik,
a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for Peace, said Russia's neighbors
are looking more carefully at security and economic concerns.
'So, if Russia goes to
hell and Ukraine goes to hell, then Belarus certainly will be the third to
going to hell,' economically speaking, Jarabik said, and that is one reason why
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko 'is taking the center stage and
trying to facilitate between the two countries.'
Jarabik also saw the
three-way meeting in Kyiv as a sign that Belarus and Kazakhstan 'are not buying
the Russian propaganda and not buying what Russia is actually doing' in Ukraine
and are seeing themselves as possibly 'the next [target] of a Russian incursion
or aggression.'
Moscow has also wanted
greater control through a stronger union. Russian lawmakers, in addition to an
economic alliance, wanted political and military ties, but Minsk and Astana
insist the union remain only about economics.
They also refused to
join Russia in temporarily blocking imports of European and North American food
in retaliation for Western sanctions against Russia. The Kremlin responded with
restrictions on transit of some products from Belarus it believed to be
reimports of European goods.
The Belarusian ruble
dropped 30 percent in value after Minsk introduced a 30 percent tax for
purchasing foreign currency. On Tuesday, Minsk stopped all over-the-counter
foreign currency exchange.
The measure was taken to
try to prevent further devaluation in line with Russia's ruble, which halved in
value this year against the dollar. Lukashenko also declared his intention to
stick with dollars for trading with Russia in a blow to the Kremlin's hopes to
one day unify the trade bloc under the Russian ruble.
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