Well-merited.
 
B
 

http://www.jamestown.org/publications_details.php?volume_id=427&issue_id=436
1&article_id=2372741
TWO SETBACKS FOR THE KREMLIN AT THE COUNCIL OF EUROPE
By Vladimir Socor, EURASIA DAILY MONITOR,  23 January 2008,  Volume 5, Issue
13




On January 21 the Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly (PACE)
protected its reputation  by eschewing the election of Mikhail Margelov  as
PACE president. Apparently,  many members realized  that PACE could have
discredited itself irreparably by electing a Kremlin-affiliated figure  as
president of Europe's leading democracy- promoting body.
PACE elected the Catalan-Spanish Socialist, Lluís Maria de Puig, instead of
Margelov, as president.
Also on January 21, Russia and its allies  narrowly missed their goal to
disinvite Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili from PACE's upcoming debate
on Georgia.


Margelov,  an Arabic-studies graduate from Moscow State University  (known
at the time as a KGB training ground)  was an instructor at the KGB Academy
during the 1980s, according to his official Russian biography (Vedomosti,
January 16). Margelov was Russian President Vladimir Putin's liaison with
international media during Russia's 2000 presidential campaign  and has
served since 2001 as the Russian Federation Council's international affairs
committee chairman.  According to Margelov himself, Russia's presidential
administration and Ministry of Foreign Affairs had authorized his candidacy
for president of PACE (Moskovskye novosti, September 14, 2007).


Moscow came very close to success  through skillful manipulation of
procedural rules by the Russian delegation and winning over  some key
conservative figures among PACE leaders.  With minimal notice in Europe, the
Strasbourg forum had become the scene of a Kremlin experiment with
recruitment of political allies  at the core of the European Right. PACE's
outgoing president René van der Linden, a conservative Christian-Democrat
(European People's Party - EPP) and the British Tory contingent in the
European Democrats' Group (EDG, an alliance of conservative parties somewhat
to the right of EPP)  were Margelov's leading backers.


In a deal with PACE's Tories,  the delegation of the party of power,  United
Russia, had joined the EDG en masse, despite the inherent incompatibility;
and, thanks to Tory leader David Wilshire, the numerically dominant United
Russia installed Margelov as EDG leader. Under PACE's procedures, the five
major political groupings take turns designating PACE's president  for a
three-year term, thus practically guaranteeing the election's result in
advance. EDG's turn came in January 2008 and they designated the
"conservative" Margelov well ahead of the deadline, with vocal Tory support
in Strasbourg and tacit acceptance by the Tory leadership in London  (Denis
MacShane, "Putin's Tories," The Spectator, January 10). Van der Linden, who
developed a close relationship with Russia during 2007,  was instrumental in
arranging this succession scenario  and marshaling the EPP behind Margelov's
presidential bid.  Very few at PACE or elsewhere came out  against this
seemingly done deal.


However, Russia's deeply flawed parliamentary elections in December  changed
the terms of debate at PACE.  Many felt that they could no longer proceed
automatically to install a proponent of the Kremlin's "managed democracy" as
PACE presiden t in the immediate wake  of that electoral travesty.  On
January 10,  leaders of PACE's five political groupings met informally  and
agreed to modify the rotation procedure  for electing the president. Under
the new arrangement,  the Socialists would on January 21 nominate their
candidate for PACE president;  EDG's - that is, Margelov's - turn would be
postponed to the next rotation,  and the president's tenure would be
abridged from three years  to a one-year, once-renewable term.


Thus, Moscow had to accept a two-year postponement  without a fight.
However, it demanded and received promises that PACE would disinvite the
reelected President Saakashvili from PACE's January 24 debate on Georgia;
that Putin would be invited to PACE in the spring;  and that the debate on
Russia's recent parliamentary elections would be postponed to the summer -
that is, to the brink of political oblivion.
Putin finalized this informal agreement with the visiting Van der Linden on
January 17 in Moscow (see EDM, January 21). Margelov duly desisted from
running for president of PACE and de Puig was elected to that post without
opposition on the session's opening day, January 21. A defiant Wilshire is
quoted as declaring that he could not congratulate de Puig because he had
prepared the congratulatory text in Russian (Kommersant, January 22).


However, the next part of the bargain fell through, albeit by the narrowest
of margins. Van der Linden's and Margelov's allies  had for several weeks
blocked the sending of the invitation to Saakashvili.
Finally on January 21 the PACE Bureau (which consists of PACE's vice
presidents and the chairmen of committees and political groups) decided to
invite Saakashvili, with 11 votes in favor and 10 against.  The incoming
president de Puig (hitherto leader of the Socialist grouping) and Matyas
Eorsi of Hungary, leader of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats (ALDE,
the liberal parties' grouping) led the argument  in favor of inviting
Saakashvili.


Russian delegation leaders Margelov and Konstantin Kosachev  and Tory leader
Wilshire spearheaded the objections.  Van der Linden's ally,  EPP leader Luc
van der Brande, lined up behind them,  despite assurances he had given to
Christian-Democrat luminaries in EPP  that he would not support Moscow on
this issue.
Apart from the familiar arguments against Georgia, they claimed that
inviting Saakashvili ahead of Georgia's parliamentary elections  would
amount to interfering in those elections in favor of the governing party
(Interfax, RIA-Novosti, January 21, 22).

That argument looked contrived  inasmuch as almost four months separate the
January 24 debate on Georgia from the parliamentary elections in that
country.
Ultimately, the reports on van der Linden's January 17 bargain with Putin in
the Kremlin to disinvite Saakashvili (see EDM, January 21) shifted the
balance in PACE's Bureau, frustrating Moscow's goal  at the last moment.
And, as predicted some months ago (see EDM, October 11, 22, November 2,
2007), the then-prevailing sentiment at PACE about the irreversibility of
the deal made for a Russian presidency proved ultimately unfounded.




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