Monday, March 19, 2007

Moldova:
<http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2007/03/5EAB769B-BC08-416B-9EEA-308336
107AAA.html> What's Behind Harsh Criticism Of Romania?
By Ryan Kennedy

March 19, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Statements about Romania by Moldovan officials
have recently become increasingly harsh. Officials accuse Romania of trying
to undermine Moldova's statehood and security. What underlies this negative
turn in Moldovan-Romanian relations?

Recent statements by Moldova's government have made headlines for their
caustic tone toward neighboring Romania. President Vladimir Voronin in early
March attacked Romania for "financing a fifth column" in Moldova and not
respecting Moldovan independence.

The Moldovan government has also criticized the Romanian leadership for
"concocting and artificially aggravating" the issue of Moldovan application
for Romanian citizenship. Romanian President Traian Basescu recently
estimated that the total number of Moldovans seeking to obtain Romanian
citizenship could exceed 800,000.

The statement also argued that Romania's refusal to sign a basic political
treaty and a border treaty "cannot but be interpreted as a proof of the
neighbor state's true intentions."

About the same time, Andrei Stratan, Moldova's minister of foreign affairs
and European integration, reversed an earlier decision to open new Romanian
consulates in Balti and Cahul.

The additional facilities were meant to ease workload on visa applications
for Moldovans looking for work in Romania. Stratan, announcing his decision,
said the new buildings were no longer necessary.

For its part, the Romanian government has refused to respond to these
accusations, defending their policies as an attempt to re-establish free
trade and movement that existed between the states before Romania's
accession into the European Union on January 1, 2007.

To some extent, the harsh tone of Moldova's rhetoric toward Romania is an
extension of Moldova's general foreign policy. However, the timing of these
statements suggests that this is also part of an effort to improve relations
with Moscow and the breakaway region of Transdniester.

Ups and Downs

Moldova and Romania have experienced many ups and downs in their
relationship since Moldova's independence in 1991. While pan-Romanianism has
been a consistent part of Moldovan politics, and was adopted in the Popular
Front of Moldova's platform in 1992, it has played only a minor role in
Moldovan policy.

The Front's term in office under Prime Minister Mircea Druc was brief, and
its successor, the Christian-Democratic People's Party, has only entered
government in coalition with the Communist Party.

After calls for unification failed to gain widespread support, relations
with Romania cooled considerably. In 1992, Moldova and Romania started
negotiations on inter-state political and border treaties. Both treaties
were prepared for signing in 2000, but they have yet to be approved by the
Romanian government.

One of the low points in bilateral relations came during the 1994
parliamentary elections, when several Moldovan political parties denounced
Romania's interference and its assertion that the Moldovan language and
culture were Romanian. Romania, in turn, accused the Moldovan government of
using the identity question to stifle dissent.

The 2004 elections in Romania began a period of improved relations. The
newly elected Romanian president made Moldova his first official trip
abroad, and the states found common ground as Moldova set EU integration as
the country's main strategic foreign policy goal.

Two States, One Nation?

Romania's official policy toward Moldova is "one nation, two states," based
on shared history, language, culture and traditions.

In contrast, Charles King, a professor at Georgetown University, describes
Moldovan foreign policy as "Bessarabism."

This policy orientation defines Moldova as "a distinct cultural and
political space, a region whose traditions and interests derive both from
its position as a small region surrounded by large neighbors and from the
overlapping identities of its multiethnic population."

>From this perspective, recent statements from Romania about citizenship
rules may seem hostile, and the magnitude of citizenship applications
claimed by Romanian officials are somewhat embarrassing to the Moldovan
government.

In addition, the government has already expressed its concern about the size
of its population working abroad -- as many as 1 million Moldovans -- and
has encouraged its citizens to stay home. It is understandable that they
would be concerned about the easing of citizenship requirements, which would
allow easier exit to EU labor markets.

The current government has an incentive to reassert its commitment to an
independent Moldova with local elections approaching. Many Moldovans do not
support unification, and this is especially salient among Moldova's
linguistic minority groups.

The Price of Transdniester

Yet, the harsher tone of Moldovan officials toward Romania started well
before these most recent statements. A month before Romania's formal
accession to the EU, President Voronin slammed Romania's offer of help in
Moldova's EU integration, saying "Romania is trying to impose certain rules
of the game and principles of Moldova...this should be qualified as
interference in the domestic affairs of a sovereign state."

It is interesting that the December 1 statements from Voronin came only a
couple of days after Russia announced that it would end its ban on Moldovan
wine. It also fell between the September referendum on independence and the
December presidential election in the breakaway region of Transdniester.

In his New Year's address, President Voronin expressed his belief that 2007
will be "the year when the genuine and final reintegration of our motherland
will start."

It makes sense that, as part of this strategy, Moldova would increase its
efforts to resurrect the inter-state political treaty and border treaty with
Romania as a method for allaying the concerns of Eurasianists in
Transdniester and the regime's sponsors in Moscow.

As Nicu Popescu, a research fellow at the Center for European Policy
Studies, puts it, "The true architect of the foreign policy of Moldova since
the declaration of its independence has been neither Mircea Snegur, nor
Petru Lucinschi, nor Vladimir Voronin, but [Transdniester President] Igor
Smirnov."

The Shorter Long Shot

With EU enlargement put on hold indefinitely, and territorial integrity an
important part of Moldova's EU integration strategy, Moldova's cooling of
relations with Romania can be interpreted as an attempt to reassure leaders
in Tiraspol and Moscow that this administration is not moving closer to
Romania.

Reintegration with Transdniester is a long shot, and Russia continues to
delay the restoration of economic ties that are essential to Moldova's
economy. But criticism of Romanian policy still presents a low-cost method
for Moldova to further a number of its political goals.

(Ryan Kennedy is a Ph.D candidate and a Fulbright researcher from Ohio State
University who recently returned to the United States after living in
Moldova.)

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty C 2007 RFE/RL, Inc.

----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness." (Carlo Goldoni)

"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace." (Jimi Hendrix)

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