Advertisement

U.S. Warns Russia to Avoid Isolation

Diplomacy: Eastern and Central European foreign ministers meeting with Christopher denounce recent move in Moscow to reestablish Soviet Union.

March 21, 1996|NORMAN KEMPSTER, TIMES STAFF WRITER

PRAGUE, Czech Republic — In a pointed warning that a Communist victory in Russia's June presidential election will cut Moscow out of an increasingly unified Europe, U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher on Wednesday challenged Russia's voters to pick inclusion instead of isolation.

"Of course, Russia must not isolate itself," Christopher told an audience that included the foreign ministers of 12 Eastern and Central European nations, most of them avidly seeking membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization as a shield against a possible revival of Russian imperialism.


Advertisement

"We hope the Russian people will choose leaders that are committed to the path of integration in Europe," he said.

Although Christopher added a disclaimer that the United States does not wish to interfere in Russia's election and will "work with whoever is elected there," aides made clear that a victory by Communist candidate Gennady A. Zyuganov, the current leader in public opinion polls, would be a major setback to Washington-Moscow relations.

"We're not participating in the Russian political campaign, but we can't fail to speak out on American security interests even if the Russians are having an election," a senior State Department official said. "We're for integration with Russia, but not at any price."

Christopher's speech was shaped by a vote last week in the lower house of the Russian parliament to reestablish the Soviet Union, a measure that seems to have little practical effect but apparently had an enormous psychological impact on the United States and on the countries of Europe, especially those that have only recently escaped Moscow's orbit.

"One of the central issues in the future of Europe will be Russia's relationship with its newly independent neighbors," Christopher said. "Last week, we were confronted with a dark vision of that future when the Russian Duma voted in favor of reconstituting the U.S.S.R."

State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns said the foreign ministers of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Albania, Macedonia, Slovenia, Romania, Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, Slovakia and the Czech Republic were unanimous in their denunciations of the Duma vote during a private lunch with Christopher at the U.S. ambassador's residence here.

Czech Deputy Foreign Minister Alexandr Vondra told reporters that the vote shows Russian Communists "are thinking more of the past than of the future. We can't ignore that. Of course, this is disturbing."

Los Angeles Times Articles
|