http://ceas-serbia.org/root/images/Ilian_Vassilev_-_South_East_Europe_in_the_eye_of_the_post_Ukrainian_tempest.pdf
New Century
Edition of the Center for Euro-Atlantic Studies – Serbia
President
Putin’s push for a new world order has reverberated across the European
continent and South East Europe makes no exception. Energy dependence
tops the vulnerability check list of SEE governments and the Russian
President’s veiled threat in his “gas” letter to the EU state leaders
alluding to a possible shut down of gas supplies clearly aims at driving
a wedge in the EU camp and trigger sauve-quit peut type of reactions.
The
Bulgarian Grand Slam and mostly the South Stream project exemplify
Russia’s strategy of retaining remote control mechanisms over current
and future EU members foreign and domestic policies, ready to be used in
emergencies like the Ukrainian crisis.
Russia’s
expansion of its up to downstream asset base – expansions,
acquisitions, JVs – in the energy sectors of CEE countries is a key
ingredient of its SEE strategy. Although EU sanctions – formal and
informal – have resulted in a dramatic drop of political level exchanges
between Moscow and SEE capitals – business communications remain
largely immune to strategic level pressure. Where Russia’s diplomatic
resources have come short – Gazprom, Rosneft and Lukoil join in to
complement Moscow’s leverage base.
Apart
from keeping the pressure on Kiev and balancing between different
lobbies’ interests within Kremlin – Russia’s energy arsenal serves to
open and sustain channels of political influence in different South
Stream transit countries. One of the Russian corporate leaders in the
region said it openly – Kremlin can rely on energy resources to a
greater extent than on its military hardware such as tanks. Similar
multilayered web of dependencies hinges upon substantial financial flows
to selected groups in SEE’s business, political and media elites – what
Ambassador Chizhov calls Russia’s Trojan horses.
Even
if Kremlin’s capacity to shape domestic and mostly foreign policies in
SEE countries in the course of EU and NATO accession and later
membership, has been considerably constrained – its business and media
levers have been upgraded to a stage severely impacting the respective
governments’ capacity to engage and implement key EU and NATO membership
strategy initiatives, including trade and political sanctions against
Russia.
Recent
Reuters story referred to Bulgaria as Europe’s anomaly. Most of the
Bulgarian public still fails to grasp the motives behind such an
assertion in spite of piling up evidence of Bulgaria’s elite cognitive
dissonance with EU’s mainstream reasoning on events in Ukraine.
The
European Parliament passed a resolution calling for sanctions on
Russian energy companies and for an effective ban on the South Stream
project as primarily serving Russian strategic interests and
inconsistent with EU’s Third energy package. Yet the Bulgarian
government blasts with infuriation while the leader of the Party of
European Socialists and leader of the Bulgarian Socialists Sergei
Stanishev has called the EP motion “scandalous”.
Minister
of Energy Stoinev remains adamant and seems to ignore Commissionaire
Oetinger’s warnings, stating firm intent to seek compensations and
proceed with South Stream as usual.
With
upcoming elections for European Parliament Bulgarian voters find it
difficult to identify many clear cut messages on what the EU and NATO
should be doing in the Ukrainian crisis. Most of the candidates shy away
from the topic, busy courting pro-nationalist and pro-Russian groups
within their own ranks. The leftist and nationalist groups in the
National Parliament have a long history of replicating vintage old
Zhivkov school of lip service pro-Russian statements in return for
“pragmatic” benefits.
At
the time the former dictator’s business plan was simple – to re-export
cheap Soviet oil collecting instant hard currency gains (close to the
model applied today by Luckashenko). He and his entourage conveniently
ignored the heavily discounted prices for Bulgarian exports to Russian
and expensive items on the import list – cars, machines, military
hardware, including SS-23 missile.
In
modern days the incentives package contains privileged access to
lucrative energy deals with hundreds of millions of euro reshuffling
hands to and fro Russian energy companies with residual reverse flow to
local political and business entourage.
The
attempts of pro-Russian circles in the Bulgarian government and in
Parliament to pursue a virtual midcourse balancing between the West and
the East imply a non-aligned policy line and a sheer neglect for
membership duties within NATO and the EU. Moscow encouraged campaigns
to dissuade new CEE applicants from joining the Euro-Atlantic
institutions preceded Bulgaria’s start of NATO and EU accession talks
after the Kosovo crisis. Then Russian Prime Minister Primakov’s calls
for Finland type of neutrality were echoed by senior figures on the left
with motions in Parliament.
No
wonder these days Kremlin is revisiting the old textbook offering
Ukraine the same East and West midcourse – conveniently ignoring the
risks to Ukrainian security from Russian annexation of Crimea and
intervention in the south and east of Ukraine.
In
a classics mode Moscow has resorted to a blend of coercion (even
subversive actions) against non-compliant governments (such as the
previous GERB government in Sofia) and charm offensives – incentives
such as ”cheap” gas, energy deals at seemingly generous terms,
financing for “politically correct” groups in the ruling elite and the
media.
Russian
propaganda scored a major success and demonstrated its ability to
mobilize divergent groups – left to right, industry to environment,
religion to culture, – in enforcing a moratorium on shale gas
exploration and production, which had the rare capacity to challenge
Russia’s political and business grip on the CEE energy markets.
The
public in the SEE is often irradiated with promises for unique and
privileged access to the ‘insatiable’ Russian market. Few if any of
these promises have ever been met with the region’s market access to
Russia still below EU averages. At the same time, Russian companies have
expanded their strongholds in virtually all segments of the regional
economy that generate exports of goods and services to Russia. Suffice
to look at the petty to negligible share of contracts received by
Bulgarian companies related to the Sochi Winter Olympic.
Moscow’s
energy initiatives remain the key driver in bilateral relations,
systematically enhancing lines of dependence and counterbalancing EU
efforts for diversification of energy supplies.
Putin’s
revered energy pragmatism has triggered shock waves across Bulgaria’s
energy sector parasitizing on widespread idealistic and often naive
perceptions of contemporary Russian politics – a kind of gratitude for
benefits swap.
The
widening gap between the high prices of Russian gas and socially
acceptable domestic gas price levels led to piling up debt in the
Bulgarian state gas company – Bulgargaz and a liquidity crunch that has
crippled its ability to engage in gas supply diversification or local
exploration and production projects. Rising corporate debt levels have
been constantly garnished with tacit proposals for assets swaps by
Gazprom.
Looking
at the EU gas price map of Gazprom one could easily notice the
interrelationship between dependence on Russia and gas price levels.
In
its turn the new NPP “Belene” project has almost wrecked the National
Electric Company with more than 1 billion euro gone and the dispute
ending up in a court of arbitration. Rosatom has made it no secret that
it expects a debt for equity swap resolution with NEC divesting one of
its most valuable assets – the chest of hydro power plants.
The
South Stream pipeline fits naturally into the Soviet time pattern of
politically motivated transaction with long term strategic economic and
political objectives. Gazprom once attempted to take full control of
Bulgaria’s transit system back in 1995. Ever since it has never ceased
to seek fresh opportunities to increase debt levels on energy resource
sales and try swaps for equity in key energy companies.
By
engaging the Bulgarian Energy Holding in South Stream Gazprom has tried
to replay this old adage. Bulgartransgas is guaranteed at present 90%
of the transit fees on a “ship or pay” basis at the moment on more than
17 billion cubic meters of Gazprom gas destined to Turkey, Greece and
FYR Macedonia. If the South Stream goes ahead the Bulgarian side will
have to rely on high risk scenarios for full take up of the South Stream
transit capacity and stretched over time debt amortization on the
ultra-expensive Bulgarian segment of the South Stream. The chances BEH
will follow the fate of NEC and Bulgargaz ending up deeply in the red
and with debt for equity swaps are far from slim.
This
classic Kremlin foreign policy pattern can be traced across Central and
East Europe with Russian energy companies persistently aiming at
acquiring key energy assets. In most countries this key feature of the
Moscow’s foreign political economy has been easily decoded by the
region’s political elites except for parts of leftist and nationalist
circles in Bulgaria and Serbia.
In
the mid and long term, the monoclonal energy power base of Russian
foreign policy is doomed. Events in Ukraine have already triggered a
process of total reappraisal of relations with Putin’s Russia beyond the
tipping point of balancing of mutual interests. With so many red lines
crossed the SEE elites have exhausted the chances to pretend to be part
of the West while enjoying privileged business with Putin’s entourage.
The choice is clear – integrate or join Russia in isolation.
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