
#11
Moscow News
September 11-17, 2002
BERING SEA TO BE REDIVIDED
Anastasia Kornya
The Federation Council resolves to erase the Baker-Shevardnadze line and go
ahead with redividing the Bering Sea between Russia and the United States in an
effort to uphold the interests of Russian regions
Within the next few months Russia will propose a new draft agreement on
delimiting the Soviet-U.S. maritime border in the Bering and Chukchi Seas.
This was announced by Alexander Nazarov, head of the Federation Council
Committee for Northern Affairs, after the first session of a Federation Council
working group on revising the current agreement on the delimitation of maritime
borders. According to Nazarov, the working group is now preparing proposals to
U.S. senators to look for points of convergence which should help resolve an
outstanding problem.
What is the root of the problem? Under the document signed back in 1990, the
border between Russian Chukotka and U.S. Alaska was not equidistant from Soviet
and U.S. coasts, with 50,000 square kilometers of Russian territorial waters and
continental shelf ending up under U.S. jurisdiction.
Their fishing capacity is estimated at 200,000 tonnes of walleye pollack a
year (not counting crab and mollusk); furthermore, there is evidence of
substantial oil, natural gas, coal, and ore reserves on the shelf.
The agreement (it was signed by the then Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard
Shevardnadze, on the Soviet side, and U.S. Secretary of State James Baker, on
the U.S. side) was never ratified - either by the USSR Supreme Soviet or the
Russian parliament - as infringing on Russia's national interests. The treaty
entered into force merely on the strength of diplomatic instrument exchange, its
legitimacy thus questionable from a lawyer's point of view. Nonetheless, the
United States has for more than a decade been using the Baker-Shevardnadze
agreement in its economic interests. In February 1999, the State Duma once again
refused to ratify the agreement, deciding to restore Russia's rights in the
Bering Strait area. To date, however, only the RF State Committee for Fishing
has been taking concrete steps in this direction, in particular initiating
negotiations on the issue with the leadership of the U.S. fishing department,
which are due to begin in two weeks time.
Now Russian upper house members have joined in, counting on constructive
dialogue with the United States - at least in the Federation Council working
group-U.S. Senate format.
"The Federation Council is often criticized for purportedly failing to
uphold regional interests," says Mikhail Margelov, chairman of a Federation
Council committee. "In this instance we in fact maintain the interests of
specific regions in Russia's Far East. We have taken on the issue not to earn
cheap popularity but to resolve it on a practical level. In the last 18 months
we have established a viable working mechanism with U.S. senators to discuss
moot questions in Russian-U.S. relations which could become a problem for the
executive. We are beginning the process in a politically correct manner with
regard to our U.S. partners: We are now preparing the text of a letter that I
will, on September 30, in Washington, hand to Joseph Biden, chairman of the U.S.
Senate Foreign Relations Committee."
Melissa Sanderson, first secretary of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, who
attended the first session of the working group, had no comment to make on the
matter, but parted with Federation Council members in a very friendly manner.
Meanwhile, the Federation Council sent an official query to the RF Foreign
Ministry on the legal status of the controversial agreement, also asking whether
former Foreign Minister Shevardnadze had not exceeded his powers in signing the
document. To the latter question, officials at the Foreign Ministry Legal
Department who had taken part in the session of the working group, said that the
incumbent Georgian president had been but a pen driven by the hand of Mikhail
Gorbachev, promising to provide written replies on all matters within the next
few days.
Admittedly, hardly anyone seriously believes that the United States will of
its own free will review such a beneficial agreement. Meanwhile, the 1969 Vienna
Convention leaves Russia this opportunity: after a simple notification of the
United States to the effect that the agreement will not be ratified, it will be
terminated unilaterally.
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