Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 21 – All eyes are
now on the EU Vilnius Summit and on whether Ukraine and some of her neighbors
will sign association agreements with the European Union, a step that Russian
President Vladimir Putin views as a threat to Moscow’s position in the former
Soviet space.
But even before that meeting takes
place next week, another move on the Eurasian geopolitical chessboard threatens
Russian dominance there and perhaps almost as fundamentally: the leaders of
Azerbaijan and Ukraine are seeking to revive GUAM by having Turkey join that
economic and political grouping of their two countries, Georgia and Moldova.
There are two reasons for that. On
the one hand, GUAM was originally created in 2001 as a challenge to the
Moscow-dominated CIS. And on the other, Turkish membership would both “violate”
the borders of the former Soviet space and ensure that Turkic countries in
Central Asia would look at GUAM with new interest.
If such countries did join GUAM –
and Uzbekistan did earlier but withdrew – that would mean that it would have
within its ranks a majority of the CIS countries, an arrangement that could
give GUAM new influence, and that Turkey would be able to use GUAM to
supplement its own drive to extend Ankara’s influence eastward.
These are only possibilities as of
now, but an event last Sunday suggests that all of them are more likely than
anyone would have thought only a week ago.
On that date, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev made his first
post-election foreign visit to Kyiv rather than to Moscow as many had expected.
While there, he and his Ukrainian
counterpart, Viktor Yanukovich, discussed “the possibility of the revival” of GUAM
by including Turkey within that grouping of states, according to an article by
Tatyana Ivzhenko in “Nezavisimaya gazeta” (ng.ru/cis/2013-11-19/1_guam.html).
She cites a Russian analyst as saying
that there is “no anti-Russian meaning” in this but at the same time points out
that both Ukraine and Azerbaijan are “interested in the creating of a balance
in their interrelationships with the West and Russia.” Neither has been willing
to join the Customs Union; rather, both want to have good relations with CIS
countries and the West.
Vladimir Fesenko, head of the Penta
Analytic Center, says that what took place in Kyiv is part and parcel of the
repositioning of Azerbaijan and indeed other post-Soviet states after what they
anticipate may turn out to be fundamental shifts in the geopolitical situation
at the Vilnius summit.
Moreover, as Ivzhenko adds, economic
ties between Kyiv and Baku are deepening with Ukraine now planning to buy far
more gas from Azerbaijan now that it has decided to free itself from dependence
on Russian gas supplies. Some Russian
analysts doubt Baku has enough gas to allow Ukraine to do that, but however
that may be, Azerbaijan could be a major supplier and that could change the political
balance in the region.
If economics is the foundation of
the new Azerbaijani and Ukrainian interest in the revival of GUAM, politics is
how it is playing out. According to
Konstantin Bondarenko of th Kyiv Institute of Ukrainian Politics, the two
countries are “interested in cooperation in all directions” as strategic
partners.
The Ukrainian
expert notes that both Ukraine and Azerbaijan are part of the Eastern
Partnership and GUAM. While they benefit
from the former, they hold the whip hand in the latter and can promote the expansion
of that organization in ways that the West will support as a means of
influencing the future development of Eastern Europe and the CIS.
As a result, Ivzhenko concludes, “for
Ukraine, this [GUAM move] may become a way out of its [current] situation
however the EU summit in Vilnius turns out.” But although she does not say so,
a revived GUAM will play an equally large role for Azerbaijan, Central Asia,
Turkey and Russia.
For Azerbaijan, it would mean
simultaneously participation in a larger grouping of states that could help it
maintain a balance against Russian pressure and expanded ties with Turkey and
Turkey’s efforts to extend its influence further into the Caucasus and Central
Asia. For Central Asia, it help them resist Russian power and link them for
closely with Turkey.
For Turkey, it would be a natural
next step and give Ankara another channel of spreading its influence. But for
Russia, it would constitute a challenge to its dominance of the former Soviet
space so severe that Moscow will undoubtedly do everything it can to make sure
that the letter “T” and a number of other letters are not added to GUAM.
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