23.06.2015 Views

beyondukraine.euandrussiainsearchofanewrelation

beyondukraine.euandrussiainsearchofanewrelation

beyondukraine.euandrussiainsearchofanewrelation

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

52 Beyond Ukraine. EU and Russia in Search of a New Relation<br />

NATO members and Russia would work as equal partners on a<br />

wide spectrum of security issues 12 . Counterterrorism was<br />

identified as a major terrain of cooperation, together with the<br />

development of joint initiatives, including crisis management,<br />

peacekeeping, air defense, joint exercises, and search-and-rescue<br />

operations 13 . The NRC organized unprecedented joint assessments<br />

of the terrorist threat and peacekeeping operations in the<br />

Balkans 14 ; it allowed Russia to contribute to Operation “Active<br />

Endeavour” in the Mediterranean, while at the NATO Istanbul<br />

summit in 2004 the alliance and Moscow agreed on the<br />

development of a Joint Action Plan on Terrorism. The results of<br />

these engagements led, at one point, to then Russian Defense<br />

Minister Sergei Ivanov’s proposal to rename the NRC the “New<br />

Anti-Terrorist Organization” 15 .<br />

Nonetheless, while bridging mutual differences and<br />

institutionalizing a degree of cooperation, the NRC represented –<br />

after the agreement leading to the PJC – another missed<br />

opportunity towards a comprehensive resolution of those issues<br />

that had been left unresolved by the 1989-1990 settlement.<br />

Certainly, both sides had their own share of responsibilities for<br />

this failure. NATO was unwilling to make the concessions (such<br />

as Moscow’s deeper involvement in its decision-making process,<br />

together with an explicit assurance of no further enlargement) that<br />

would have been necessary to accommodate Russian grievances –<br />

dreading the prospect of empowering the Kremlin with veto power<br />

on the alliance’s decisions – and conceived the NRC as a token<br />

gift. Although the agreement had a large symbolic significance,<br />

the difference between the PJC and the NRC was more apparent<br />

than substantial; as emphasised by former NATO Secretary<br />

12 “NATO-Russia relations: a new quality”, Declaration by Heads of State and<br />

Government of NATO Member States and the Russian Federation, available at<br />

http://www.nato.int/cps/ar/natohq/official_texts_19572.htm.<br />

13 “NATO Factsheet on Terrorism” is available at http://www.nato.int/terrorism/factsheet.htm.<br />

14 See the NATO-Russia Council Practical Cooperation Fact Sheet at http://www.nato.int/nrcwebsite/media/104666/nato-russia_council_factsheet_final_2013-11-07_trilingual.pdf.<br />

15 S. Ivanov, “Russia-NATO”, speech given at the International Institute for<br />

Strategic Studies, London, 13 July 2004. Quoted by D. Lynch (2005), p. 151.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!