Details emerge on new EU-Russia committee
Russia and Germany on Monday (8 June) circulated a five point plan for a new EU-Russia security committee, which was proposed at a bilateral summit in Germany over the weekend to the surprise of senior EU officials in Brussels.
Point four zooms in on the frozen conflict in Transniestria, Moldova, envisaging: "joint activities of Russia and the EU, which will ensure a seamless transition from the current situation to the final stage."
The committee would also "develop guidelines for joint civil/military operations" and "make recommendations" on "the various conflicts and crisis situations, to the resolution of which Russia and EU are contributing within relevant international formats."The Russian-German memorandum envisages a new body bringing together EU foreign relations chief Catherine Ashton and Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov to "exchange views on current issues of international politics and security."
Senior officials in the EU Council and the EU Commission told EUobserver that they had not been formally consulted by Germany or Russia prior to the announcement. But the idea did not come out of the blue either.
"We had heard things vaguely from Berlin over the past couple of weeks," one official said.
A senior diplomat from one EU state said that Russia's willingness to work more closely with the EU on conflict resolution is "very positive." The source pointed to Russian air support for EU member states' soldiers in Chad last year and noted that the recent EU-Russia summit in Rostov-on-Don also made progress in the field by securing a bilateral agreement on sharing classified documents.
The German-Russian proposal would another layer of meetings to an already heavy EU-Russia diplomatic agenda, prompting some EU countries to question its added value, however.
The EU and Russia already meet twice a year at summit level. Ms Ashton and Mr Lavrov meet at least three times a year. The chair of the EU's Political and Security Committee meets with Russia's ambassador to the EU once a month. Numerous expert-level events, such as a twice yearly human rights dialogue, also contribute to making the EU-Russia bilateral calendar the busiest of all its relations with third countries.
"It [the new proposal] is interesting. But we already have multiple formats," a diplomat from another EU country told this website.
For its part, the Moldovan government said in a statement that the German-Russian plan "opens promising perspectives" on Transniestria. But it added that any fresh efforts must "respect ... the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity."
Previous Russian solutions for the conflict were to give Russian soldiers the right to stay on Moldovan territory indefinitely and to hand sweeping political powers in a newly re-uninified state to the Transniestria authorities, which are dominated by figures linked to the Russian secret service. The solutions were put forward in 2003 and again in 2007 but rejected by Chisinau on both occasions following EU advice.