Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 21 – Aleksandr Petrov,
Russia’s ambassador to Estonia, has lashed out at Tallinn’s plan to host a
summit of the 12 member states of the Three Seas Initiative in June 2020, an
action the Russian diplomat suggests is backed by the US – President Donald
Trump may attend – and designed to isolate Russia from Europe.
“We are ready for cooperation with
all our European neighbors if their efforts are not directed at the isolation
of Russia and the establishment of some kind of
‘cordon sanitaire’ as the term used to be,” the Russian diplomat sad,
adding that Moscow would wait and see what direction the Three Seas Initiative
will take (interfax.ru/world/688319).
It emerged in 2015 and held its
first summit a year later in Dubrovnik. It is called the Three Seas Initiative
because its combined area provides access to the Adriatic, Baltic and Black seas.
All 12 members were in the Soviet bloc;
and except for Sweden, Finland, Cyprus, and Malta, they include all the
countries the EU has admitted as member states since 1986.
The Three Seas Initiative is a
logical-follow on to the Vyshegrad Four and then Community of Democratic Choice.
But Russian analysts view the Three Seas Initiative not in that context but
rather as a revival of Polish ideas of a century ago typically associated with
Marshal Pilsudsky to form an alliance against Moscow.
Among Russian scholars who have made
that argument is Lyubov Shishelina. See “The Idea of ‘the Three Seas’: From Its
Appearance to the Present Day” (in Russian), Научно-аналитический
вестник Института Европы РАН 5(2018): 33-38.
The two most important of these
Polish efforts were the Promethean League and Warsaw’s promotion of an Intermarium
accord. (See Etienne Copeaux, “Le movement prométhéen.” Cahiers d'études
sur la Méditerranée orientale et le monde turco-iranien, 16 (1993): 9–45 at
persee.fr/doc/cemot_0764-9878_1993_num_16_1_1050
and Marek Chodakiewicz’ Intermarium: The Land between the Black and Baltic Seas (Transaction Publishers, 2012).
Moscow’s
insistence that the Three Seas Initiative is a continuation of the Polish
effort of a century ago is wrong on two counts, Vadim Shtepa, editor of the
Region.Expert portal, argues in Tallinn’s Postimees newspaper (rus.postimees.ee/6853922/ot-chego-tri-morya-izoliruyut-rossiyu).
On the one hand, he says, Moscow cannot
believe that countries can cooperate on their own and reach agreements which
reflect the working out of their various positions. And on the other, and
related to this, it assumes that some great power, in this case, the US, is
behind this group and that Washington is using this smokescreen to isolate
Russia.
No comments:
Post a Comment