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#13 - RW 264
Jamestown Foundation
www.jamestown.org
July 8, 2003
Russia and Eurasia Review
Volume 2, Issue 14
RUSSIA FACES EUROPE
By Dov Lynch
Dov Lynch is a research fellow at the European Union's Institute for Security
Studies in Paris and holds a doctorate in international relations from St.
Anthony's College, Oxford. The full report on which this comment is based can be
found on the web at http://www.iss-eu.org/chaillot/chai60e.pdf
Since the September 11 terrorist attacks, the United States and NATO have
succeeded in taking security relations further with Russia, while the European
Union has not, mainly because it has not tried to do so. The EU is caught up in
a massive transformation process, one that leaves it little time to pursue
coherent policies toward third parties.
The crisis over Iraq has challenged key features of the system of
international relations. The United States and Britain intervened in Iraq
without the specific support of the United Nations, avoiding a second resolution
in February of 2003 precisely because they feared coercive action would be
vetoed. The UN has taken a serious blow and the parameters of international law
on self-defense and the use of force are being redefined by the U.S. and British
actions. France, Germany and Russia coordinated their positions against coercive
actions within the UN Security Council, adopting a number of joint declarations
in 2003 on how to strengthen the inspection regime and, subsequently, how to run
Iraq after the war. With all the talk of a new Paris-Berlin-Moscow axis and
emergent divisions across the continent and the Atlantic, the very notion of the
West as it existed in the Cold War is now being questioned.
The divisions between the United States and Europe and within Europe raise
two vital questions for Russia: Is the West finished as a concept? And if so,
with which West should Russia seek to align itself? It is important to
understand that the divisions reflect a confluence of unique circumstances: A
vulnerable yet all-powerful America led by neo-conservative thinkers; the
presence of Germany and Spain in the UN Security Council (alongside permanent
members Britain and France); a French president no longer constrained by
"cohabitation" with a parliament controlled by a different party; and
a populist German leader. Moreover, the EU faces the double revolution of
enlargement and a constitutional convention, both of which are giving rise to as
much anxiety as excitement in European capitals. The West is not dead, but it is
changing. And this is a natural process.
In the long term, the emergence of a multipolar West may be a positive
development because it provides Russia with exactly what it needs most--options.
At the same time, recent events challenge President Vladimir Putin's move to
align Russia with the Euro-Atlantic community, since he might now find himself
forced to choose which part of the West he wants to make his ally. That would be
dangerous for Russia: Putin is well aware that Moscow needs all parts of the
West, since each has the potential to serve Russia's interests in its own way.
Thus, Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said at the height of transatlantic tensions
that "the preservation of a unified Euro-Atlantic community, with Russia
now part of it, is of immense importance." [1]
Since 11 September and despite the crisis in Iraq, Putin has accelerated his
strategy of aligning Russia with the states and security organizations of the
Euro-Atlantic community. Putin still sees Russia retaining a unique position in
world affairs, but Russian interests are thought best advanced in close
alignment with the Euro-Atlantic community rather than in opposition to it.
Putin's foreign policy is founded on a cold recognition of Russia's internal
weakness and its limited ability to control external developments. In blunt
terms, Russia has become more an object of international relations than the
subject it once was. Because the main threats to Russia are rising internally
and are linked to challenges from the south and east, Moscow perceives the West
to be a source of solutions to many of Russia's problems.
THE EU-RUSSIA SECURITY DIALOGUE
The EU's security dialogue with Russia took off at the EU-Russia summit in
Paris in October of 2000. The dialogue has come to encompass a wide range of
topics. The EU and Russia cooperate in non-proliferation through an EU Joint
Action in cooperative threat reduction. A discussion on peacekeeping concepts
has started with Russian officials. At the Seville Council in 2002, the EU
agreed to arrangements for Russian participation in EU military operations.
Russia has pledged five officers to the first EU mission--the EU Police
Mission--in Bosnia-Herzegovina, to be launched in January of 2003. After
September 11, the two have developed ties in counter-terrorism, including
intelligence sharing at the national level. EU-Russian cooperation in the
struggle against organized crime overlaps with counter-terrorism, since it
focuses on money laundering and arms and drugs smuggling.
The Russian government is keen to develop technical cooperation in areas of
perceived comparative advantage. Europe's lack of strategic airlift (such as the
U.S. C-130s) has long been noted, and Russia (with Ukraine) has eagerly put
forward its capabilities as a logical option for the EU. The Russian government
has also proposed that the EU draw on Russian satellite imaging to bolster
European Security and Defense Policy (ESDP) capabilities. The EU satellite
center in Torejon has bought Russian satellite images in the past but no special
relationship has been established. Moscow and Brussels launched a Space Dialogue
in 1998, and Russian-EU space cooperation has run parallel to the wider
development of a European joint space strategy. In addition, Russia and the EU
decided to conduct a regular dialogue on mine-clearance during the May 2002
summit.
The security dialogue is now heavily institutionalized. In addition to
biannual summits, the EU and Russia entertain consultations on security and
defense matters between the EU Political and Security Committee (COPS) and the
Russian Ambassador in Brussels. Russia and the EU also agreed to start
expert-level discussions on the issues of disarmament and arms control. In
October of 2001 Brussels and Moscow decided to increase the tempo with the
introduction of a monthly meeting between the Russian ambassador and the COPS
troika "to take stock of consultations on crisis prevention and
management." In addition, contacts have developed at the military level.
The first meeting of the EU Military Committee chairman with officers of the
Defense Ministry occurred in May of 2002. In November of that year the Russian
defense minister assigned an officer to work as liaison with the EU Military
Staff in Brussels. The last EU-Russia summit in St Petersburg agreed to create a
permanent joint committee between Russia and the EU.
THE LIMITS OF COOPERATION
But although this security dialogue is quite wide, it lacks real depth. One
limiting factor is that Russia wants a model of European security that ensures
Moscow an "equal" voice in all security dimensions, in which case ESDP
would serve to create a "Greater Europe." ESDP is nothing of the sort
for the EU. Russia has sought to ensure equality with EU member states at every
level of decision-making in crisis situations, but Russia's insistence on
"co-decision making" is completely inappropriate in Brussels view.
A second limiting factor is that there are a number of gray areas surrounding
EU operations that concern Moscow. The EU is vague on the question of whether it
will seek a UN mandate for its operations. Russia is also concerned that ESDP
might be turned against Russian interests with operations deployed on its
borders, possibly with a strong link to NATO.
A third factor involves the fact that both parties are caught up in their own
transformation projects--the EU toward deepening and widening and Russia toward
state consolidation and economic revitalization. The different priorities of
Russia and the EU dilute any urgency either party may feel in making significant
efforts with the other.
Finally, it must be remembered that Russia and the European Union are
different kinds of actors. Russia is a sovereign state, with a unified
political, economic and military system, an elected leadership dedicated to
advancing the state's interests, and institutions for coordinating means to
desired ends. The EU is nothing of the sort. It is a unique, not to say strange,
political actor, with divided and clashing institutions, unclear sovereignty,
and a weak sense of common interests. These differences have made the
development of a genuine strategic partnership difficult. The security agendas
of Russia and the EU are radically different. This is an encounter between a
state that is deeply defensive about its sovereignty and territoriality and an
association in which sovereignty is pooled and traditional notions of
territoriality are diluted. These differences are reflected--and deepened--in
their divergent institutional structures. In Russia, security policy is heavily
presidential, while in the EU decision making is dispersed across various EU
institutions.
FUTURE PROSPECTS
Despite these limitations, the EU must start to consider proactively how to
develop a security dialogue with Russia. Enlargement will bring the EU and
Russia ever closer. Moreover, as the United States withdraws from peacekeeping
in the region and NATO is transformed, the EU will become Europe's peacekeeper.
The political dialogue with Russia must focus on questions of direct and urgent
interest to both parties. Peace support operations fit these criteria. A joint
approach to the conflict in Moldova, a country that falls in the new periphery
between the EU and Russia, could be an important test for the modalities of the
EU-Russia relationship. There is also a need for a new institutional mechanism,
such as a High Level Group on Wider Security, to catalyze the EU-Russia dialogue
in peace support and other areas, including non-proliferation and military
reform.
1. In his article in the Financial Times, 14 February 2003.
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