Tag: Moldova-the EU Association Agreement

  • The Republic of Moldova Looking towards the East

    The Republic of Moldova Looking towards the East

    In late December,
    Igor Dodon was sworn in as President of the Republic of Moldova. The head of
    the former Soviet state with a predominantly Romanian-speaking population made
    a stormy entrance into his new office. Although in 2013 the Constitutional
    Court of Moldova ruled that the Romanian language was the official language of
    the Republic, Igor Dodon replaced it, on the site of the presidency, with the
    so-called Moldovan Language. Also, he felt the urge to settle accounts with the
    former president of Romania Traian Basescu, by withdrawing his Moldovan citizenship,
    only two months after the latter had obtained it.

    Also, as a continuation of the speeches held during the election
    campaign against the Association Agreement with the EU, he decided to remove
    the EU flag from the entrance of the Republic’s Palace in Chisinau. On the
    other hand, in order to reconfirm his pro-Russian orientation, Igor Dodon chose
    to pay to Moscow his first formal foreign visit as head of state, this being
    the first bilateral visit by a Moldovan leader to Russia in the past 9 years.
    Igor Dodon’s main goal is to resume the strategic partnership with Russia, left
    aside during the term in office of his pro-European predecessor Nicolae
    Timofti, to whom the rapprochement with the EU, with help from Romania, was a
    priority.


    On Tuesday,
    president Dodon was received at the Kremlin by his Russian counterpart Vladimir
    Putin, to whom he said that the Association Agreement between the Republic of
    Moldova, concluded in 2014, could be revised or even cancelled after the next
    parliamentary elections in Chisinau, provided they are won by the Socialists’
    Party, whose leader he was until taking over the office of president. In Igor
    Dodon’s vision, the association agreement with the Europeans has not benefited
    the Republic of Moldova in any way. On the other hand, Chisinau would get
    considerable advantages if part of the Eurasian Economic Union and president
    Dodon asked for Putin’s support for Moldova to get the status of observer.

    Moscow, too, granted Igor Dodon’s visit a higher political status, which could
    be seen in the way in which the visit was organized, the list and format of
    talks. Vladimir Putin offered Dodon a historical map of the Republic of
    Moldova, as it was back in the 18th century, which made Dodon state
    that half of the current territory of Romania is Moldovan. Pundits say that
    Dodon is in Moscow to approach issues that are of interest not to Moldova, but
    to Moscow. The fact that the official delegation does not include any member of
    the Government is evidence enough that Igor Dodon is on his own and does not
    act as a representative of the state.