Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 6 – When Ukraine and
Moldova declared their intention to sign association agreements with the
European Union, Vladimir Putin reacted by speeding up his timetable for the
creation of his own Eurasian Union, but that change in schedule may have the
unexpected result of delaying or even undermining the formation of that Moscow-led group.
Initially, Viktoriya Panfilova, a “Nezavisimaya
Gazeta” commentator, writes in “Novoye Vostochnoye Obozreniye,” Putin had planned
to have the founding document signed in the fall, then he moved it up to June,
and now he has advanced the date again to later this month (ru.journal-neo.org/2014/04/29/rus-eas-vernet-rossii-status-sverhderzhavy/).
That change in schedule has had at
least two serious results, both of which are likely to make Putin’s way forward
on this project more difficult. On the one hand, it has given Belarusian
President Alyaksandr Lukashenka the whip hand, allowing him to demand
concessions that he might not have been able to advance (regnum.ru/news/polit/1797890.html).
That
is simply good politics on his part. Because he knows Putin wants this accord
so much and so quickly, Lukashenka has clearly concluded that there will be no better
time to issue ultimatums. And because such ultimatums highlight his independence,
they play to his own population and send a message to the West that Belarus is
not simply tagging along with anything the Kremlin wants.
And
on the other, this speeding up has sparked a discussion in the Russian expert
community that is highlighting the many ways in which Putin’s Eurasian
Community will not be at all like the European Union and that power politics
rather than economics will be the driving factors.
Panfilova
surveys some of this opinion in her article, but other studies of the contrast
between the two projects are even more detailed and damning. One of the most thoughtful is provided by
Sergey Ermak in a 2400-word article postedon the Expert-Urals portal (expert.ru/ural/2014/19/backup-of-the-ussr/).
He explains why Putin’s Eurasian
Economic Union is in no way like the European Community and cannot be because “the
interests of the former Soviet republics are too varied” and “the economic
links among them are too weak” as well. Conseuently, this project will be
political rather than economic, whatever anyone says.
Ermak provides a variety of evidence
for that, and his words and those of others writing on this subject now because
of the hurry-up schedule are certain to have an impact, causing some countries
that may sign to demand concessions up front and leading others to hold back
from signing given what the Putin Union is all about.
While the Kremlin leader has gotten
a boost in the public opinion polls from his actions in Ukraine, the fact that
he has had to change his timetable for the Eurasian Union is just one more
example of how the Ukrainian events are complicating or even undermining his
strategy elsewhere.
Given that public opinion is likely
to be fickle once the costs of what Putin is doing become clearer, these other
consequences will loom larger and in this particular case may mean that the too
hasty creation of a Eurasian Union like the overly hasty creation of the CIS 20
years ago will mean that the new body will have no more meaning than the one it
is to replace.
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