Publicat tot de www.iwpr.net

Romania Eyes Key Role in Black Sea 

Critics fear Romania's plans to act as America's main
ally in the Black Sea region may complicate its plans
to join the EU.

By Victor Roncea in Bucharest (BCR No 543, 25-Feb-05)

Romania's new president says his country's proximity
to the Black Sea and the Caucasus may provide the West
with a crucial military platform in its future
operations against Islamic militants and organised
crime.

But not everyone is happy with the eastward accent of
the new foreign policy. Some complain that it may
complicate plans to join the European Union in 2007
while others say Bucharest is just playing with words.

Traian Basescu, 53, a former sea captain, said the new
strategic emphasis on the Black Sea was unavoidable if
Romania was to play a key role in forthcoming
struggles over security, oil, migration and, of
course, the war on terrorism.

In tandem with this, Bucharest is promoting the idea
of a security axis linking Washington, London,
Bucharest, the Middle East and Moscow.

"We face many common security threats as the Black Sea
region becomes a bridge for terrorism as well as drugs
and human trafficking to the EU," Basescu said
recently.

"These all pose threats to NATO and EU member states
as well as to countries in the region." 

While Basescu's strategy enjoys broad backing in
Romania, not all dissent has been silenced.

Moreover, the government has encountered criticism
from abroad for its staunch backing of the US during
the war in Iraq, especially from France and Germany.

The former prime minister, Adrian Nastase, said
Basescu's use of the word "axis" in reference to
planned ties between Washington, London and Bucharest
was "unfortunate".

"It reminds many people in Europe of the Second World
War," Nastase complained. The ex-premier said the
drive to re-orientate the country's foreign policy
around such an axis was creating needless anxiety.

Some political analysts are sceptical about Romania's
new strategic plans in the east, fearing they will
undermine the effort to join the EU.

"Before gazing to the east, Basescu should remember
that joining the EU is the country's main immediate
objective," said Bogdan Chireac, editor of the daily
newspaper Adevarul.

"Romania should not be put in the position of choosing
between NATO and the European Union," he added. "The
country's interests lie in strengthening links with
all the western democracies."

However, the staunchly pro-American agenda of the new
president is meeting little serious criticism in
Romania. There are no substantive policy differences
over this.

Support for the US-led coalition against global
terrorism stretches across the political spectrum and
unlike other countries in Eastern or Central Europe,
Romania is not caught between growing domestic
discontent over the war in Iraq and a desire to
maintain close relations with Washington.

After joining NATO last year, Romania promptly showed
its support for the US-led mission in Iraq by sending
troops. It now has about 730 soldiers in the country
and 500 more in Afghanistan.

In contrast to many European countries, which have
started to withdraw soldiers, Bucharest is bolstering
its presence in these trouble spots, recently posting
another 100 members of the infantry to Iraq.

There is not much argument, either, about Romania's
decision (alongside Bulgaria) to place its military
and port facilities at America's disposal.

Bucharest was delighted when the US signalled that it
was keen to take up the offer. "The US Army is ready
to rent some military sites in Eastern Europe,
probably by the end of the year," General James Jones,
commander of US and NATO forces in Europe, said in
mid-January on a visit to Romania.

Jones, who was inspecting military sites to host
American troops as part of a Pentagon plan to create
new, flexible bases in Eastern Europe, thanked Romania
for supporting the US military in Afghanistan and
Iraq, as well as for offering to host American army
units. "This would consolidate NATO's flank on the
Black Sea," Jones said.

"As a NATO member, Romania �has already proved to be a
reliable partner in different world hotspots,"
Britain's ambassador to Bucharest, Quinton Quayle,
told IWPR.

"The alliance relies on the specific military or
geo-strategic capabilities of its members," he added,
"and in this context, Romania's position on the Black
Sea is a trump."

This is the message Basescu is now trying to promote.
"As NATO is given a bigger political role in global
security issues, Romania should become a key player on
the alliance's eastern border," the president said at
recent NATO summit in Brussels.

However, Vladimir Socor, a senior analyst with the
Jamestown Foundation, says Romania's new focus on
Black Sea region might end up inadvertently
dovetailing with Russia's goals in the region, rather
than NATO's.

"Basescu's new proposals for Black Sea�security, by
creating an operational group to combat illicit arms,
drugs, and human trafficking and proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction, would, in fact, exclude
NATO as such from these missions," Socor wrote
recently in Eurasia Daily Monitor, "and would keep the
alliance's naval forces out of the Black Sea."

According to Socor, the proposed operational group of
countries cooperating in the Black Sea area - three
NATO member countries (Turkey, Romania and Bulgaria)
and Russia - was in line with Soviet and post-1991
Russian ideas to "sub-regionalise" security issues in
Europe.

"They typically offer to create groups of NATO and
non-NATO countries in key strategic areas, always
including Russia as the single strongest actor, and
always excluding NATO as such from the proposed
arrangements," he said.

Victor Roncea is foreign editor of the daily newspaper
Ziua



__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
http://mail.yahoo.com 





------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Take a look at donorschoose.org, an excellent charitable web site for
anyone who cares about public education!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/_OLuKD/8WnJAA/cUmLAA/RR.olB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

EuroAtlantic Club: http://www.europe.org.ro/euroatlantic_club/ 

***
Birou de traduceri autorizate. Oana Gheorghiu - tel/fax: 252.8681 / [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/romania_eu_list/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Raspunde prin e-mail lui