ALEX GORKA |
23.02.2018 | SECURITY / WAR
AND CONFLICT
Moldova
appears to be rushing to embrace NATO. According to the statement of Defense
Minister Eugen Sturza, the country’s armed forces will be rearmed to meet NATO
standards. In an interview with Moldova-1 TV channel, he said Moldova
will buy lethal weapons and ammunition abroad for the first time in 27 years.
The republic is to receive €11 million in military aid from the United States.
According to the official, it’s just a beginning. The rearmament and
modernization process will go much further as the military prepares for taking
part in international missions.
The
mention of the need to meet NATO standards (whatever it means) was done on
purpose. It was a policy statement as the Moldovan government is shifting from
neutrality to ally itself with the West. Moldova is a member of the
NATO’s Partnership for Peace program. It has participated in the bloc’s mission
in Kosovo.
On
Feb.5, Romanian Minister of Defense, Mihai Fifor visited Moldova to meet
his counterpart. Joint projects to move Chisinau closer to NATO topped the
agenda. The two officials reached
an agreement on formation of a joint battalion trained to respond to
emergencies. The move is taken to familiarize Moldova's military personnel
with NATO's procedures. It was announced that 41 Moldovan servicemen will go
through training in Romania this year. Some 800 Moldovan soldiers have already
been trained there.
The
Romanian Defense Chief said Bucharest wishes for Republic of
Moldova's European track to become an irreversible process. In December,
2017, the NATO Liaison Office was opened in Chisinau to confirm the fact
that Moldova has become a springboard for NATO information offensive. Last May,
Moldova expelled five Russian diplomats. Just a few days ago a
law banning Russia broadcasting in Moldova came into force. The country has joined NATO anti-Russia
propaganda effort.
Not
much has been said about it but the US Navy plans to construct eight training facilities for
military operations in the Bulboaca training base. Probably, the facility will
host American Marines. Last March, US Army Commander in Europe Lt. Gen. Ben
Hodges, said US seeks “ways to do more exercises in the southern
flank of NATO”. In the summer of 2017, Bulboaca hosted the Dragoon Pioneer
2017, a joint US-Moldovan exercise.
Romanian
Prime Minister Viorica Danchila will visit Chisinau on February 27 after her
trip to European institutions. New moves to strengthen security cooperation
with NATO via Romania are expected. Moldova’s ruling coalition will seek to
limit Russia's influence, said Daniel
Coates, the US Director of National Intelligence, at the hearings in the
special committee on intelligence of the US Congress Senate held on Feb.13.
On
Feb.12, the Moldova’s Defense Ministry announced that the military would join
the US, Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine and Georgia in Platinum Eagle, a large-scale military exercise. The
mission is to deploy joint forces under unfavorable battle conditions.
Speaking
at the Munich Security Conference, Moldova’s Prime Minister Pavel Filip used
the opportunity to call for withdrawal of Russian troops from Transnistria.
Speaker of the Moldovan parliament, Andrian Candu, says that the presence of Russian troops stationed on
the left bank of the Dniester is illegal. According to him, they should be
withdrawn with compensation paid by the Russian government for the damage
supposedly inflicted by the “occupation forces”.
Last
July, Moldova’s parliament passed a resolution urging the withdrawal of Russian
military from Transnistria. The lawmakers for Socialist Party left the
parliament in protest against it, while Moldavia’s President Igor Dodon called
the move a provocation. The vote came a day after the Moldovan government
refused to allow a military aircraft with Russia's Deputy Prime Minister
Rogozin on board to land in Chisinau. The official was to take part on the
festivities devoted to the 25th anniversary of the Transnistria’s
peacekeeping mission.
The
authorities of the breakaway republic oppose such a move. They say the Russian
military presence guarantees peace. The Russian-speaking region of Transnistria
separated from Moldova in 1991. An armed conflict broke out in 1992-1993.
Russian peacekeepers put an end to the fighting. The 1,000-strong task force,
including Russian, Transnistrian and Moldovan military assisted by a dozen of
Ukrainian military observers, has been securing peace for about 26 years.
Roughly,
1,000 Russian servicemen guard the warehouses in Kolbasna (some 20,000 tons of
ammunition). This presence is very limited and poses no threat to anybody but
it ensures peace. Suppose Russian peacekeepers leave, is there any OSCE member
willing to contribute its forces? Can anybody guarantee no armed conflict will
spark again to take away human lives? It should be noted that the “5+2 format”
talks on Transnistrian peace held since 2005 by Moldova, Transnistria, the
OSCE, Russia, Ukraine as parties and the EU and the US in external
observers’ roles have produced no results so far. No one of those who want
Russia to go has ever come up with any ideas or initiatives to give fresh
impetus to the process.
Should
the situation in Transnistria become part of “the worse for Russia, the better
for us” geopolitical game? What about the Transnistrian people? Who will
protect their rights? So, Moldova can make one step after another to get closer
to the North Atlantic Alliance, buy weapons from bloc’s members and host NATO’s
facilities on its soil. But Russian peacekeepers cannot stay in Transnistria
despite the fact that it is done in strict compliance with the international
obligations (the 1992 Agreement on the Principles for a Peaceful Settlement of the
Armed Conflict) and the wish of Transnistrian people and government.
Moldova
seldom hits media headlines but the situation there is another example of
creeping NATO expansion. The US is in the process of establishing its military
presence there to make American soldiers and Russian peacekeepers watch each
other through gun sights. It’s sad, because Russia and Moldova have never seen
each other as adversaries. Moldova, a neutral state, will inevitably become a
target for Russia’s potential retaliatory strike.
The
situation can be changed before it is too late. Moldova holds parliamentary
elections in November. A new parliament may adopt a more responsible foreign
policy to put the relationship between Moscow and Chisinau back on track to
benefit all.
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