http://euobserver.com/9/24217


*Moldova** breakthrough could soothe wider EU-Russia tensions*

*07.06.2007 - 17:42 CET | By Andrew Rettman*

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - The EU says a new settlement on Moldova's rebel
province of Transnistria would help soothe wider EU-Russia tension over
military deployment in Europe, with some EU states keen to send EU
badge-wearing police to the region to help keep the peace.

"The right settlement would make a tremendous contribution to confidence
building on the continent, including the CFE treaty," the EU special envoy
to Moldova, Kalman Mizsei, told EUobserver on Wednesday (6 June), in
reference to the Conventional Forces in Europe II treaty, which was signed
by 30 European countries in 1999.

The 1999 document puts constraints on the number of troops NATO or
Russiacan deploy in European states. But NATO countries have not
ratified the
text, saying Moscow should first make good on old political promises to
remove 1,300 troops from Transnistria.

CFEII hit the headlines last week when Russian leader Vladimir Putin
threatened to pull out of the treaty in response to US plans to build a
missile shield in Europe, with Moscow calling for CFEII crisis talks on 12
June in Vienna. "Moldova could be instrumental in building goodwill," the
EU's Mr Mizsei said.

Transnistria broke away from Moldova in a civil war in 1992, with a tense
ceasefire holding for the past 15 years. Multilateral conflict resolution
talks in the so-called 5+2 format - Moldova, Transnistria, Russia,
Ukraineand the OSCE plus observers the EU and US - started in 2005 but
have lain
dormant for 15 months.

Meanwhile, Chisinau and Moscow last autumn began bilateral talks that have
led to a new draft settlement, raising hopes of a breakthrough. Brussels had
been concerned about lack of transparency on the bilaterals, but in recent
days the EU received Moldovan and Russian assurances no deal will be signed
outside the 5+2 format.

EU envoy Mr Mizsei said the 5+2 meetings could restart in late June. He
explained that - according to Moldova's settlement ideas - Russia should
ship out its ammunition dump in Transnistria in the four to six months after
an agreement and that Russian soldiers should be replaced by an
international monitoring mission by January 2009.

The international monitoring mission could be of a military or a police
nature, potentially including a Russian as well as an EU contingent. Mr
Mizsei added that he had not seen anything other than the "rather sensible"
Moldovan settlement proposals come out of the bilateral talks.

*The negative scenario *
But another senior diplomat from the 5+2 group told EUobserver he has seen a
"document" which foresees powerful jobs for Transnistrian officials in a
post-settlement Moldovan government. He said the document also leaves the
door open for Russian soldiers to stay indefinitely, giving Moscow de facto
control of the country.

An official from one of the EU member states warned that if the final form
of the Transnistria settlement is overly pro-Russian, it could spark
internal opposition to Moldova president Vladimir Voronin, who could react
with a crackdown, further undermining his credentials as a pro-democracy
reformist.

The EU official said the negative scenario could harm a €1.1 billion 2007 to
2010 EU and US aid package for Moldova. He added that while some EU states
support one day sending EU troops to Transnistria, others are concerned that
Russian soldiers stationed close by to, say, Polish troops in a mixed
mission "might not get on well."

For his part, EU envoy Mr Mizsei said "a bad [Transnistria] resolution would
be worse than postponing the resolution. I don't want to speculate on a bad
resolution. I just don't want it to happen." The diplomat also voiced
optimism that a positive scenario is possible, as ordinary Moldovans want to
move on.

*'Not a place of hatred' *
"The fact the last decade has not seen hostilities there is significant.
It's just not a place of hatred, neither ethnic nor religious, unlike most
other conflict areas in the world. There are 4 million Moldovans who are
poor, who should not be so poor, and who are being held hostage by this
conflict."

Mr Mizsei played down the importance of aggressive Kremlin rhetoric on
Europe - Russia's Putin this week said he might again point nuclear missiles
at the west and that Transnistria's claim to independence is equally as
strong as Kosovo's. "The [Russian 2008 presidential] election season is
definitely a factor in the rhetoric," the EU envoy said.

He added that his job is made more "complex" by the fact the EU "is not in a
position" to offer an "immediate membership perspective" to states like
Moldova. Referring to 2004 EU enlargement countries, such as his own native
Hungary, he said the prospect of EU accession was a major tool of change.

"This perspective worked as the most powerful anchor of rapid institutional
reforms," Mr Mizsei said. "We need to achieve the same with less attractive
incentives here."


*(c) EUobserver.com 2007*

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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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