István Gyarmati (Professor and President of the Center for Democracy Public Foundation in Budapest) opens the first panel session of the OSCE Security Days conference noting the increasing division between East and West but also underlines that there is less substance in trans-Atlantic relations. OSCE has been important in putting forward a broad concept of security, now including transnational threats. There are increasing challenges to democracy even in Europe. Francis Fukuyama notes that the crisis of democracy is due in part to shrinkage of the middle class.
Heather Conley of CSIS asks how the OSCE can be effective. The OSCE needs to be on the side of the global political awakening. She offers a SLOT analysis:
Here are things the OSCE can do:
Igor Yurgens, Director of the Institut Sovremenogo Razvitiya, opens underlining that we are living in an unusally safe world. OSCE is not much of a player on security or economy. It should beef up on economic issues. It is already important to democracy and human rights, which is where it should concentrate its efforts. Frozen conflicts are a major issue, because that is where trust is lost (trans-Dniester, Nagorno-Karabakh, Georgia). There is no substitute for civil society engagement. He worked for 15 years on reconciliation with Latvia, engaging civil society and business. This is the kind of effort that is needed: nongovernmental organizations, experts and business can do more than diplomats. OSCE should create a “network of the willing.”
Professor Alyson Bailes of the University of Iceland focuses on transnational non-military threats. Common exposure to these threats does not necessarily mean common experience. Economic instability, terrorists, cyberthreats, natural disasters vary a good deal across the OSCE. Not everyone has security forces that they trust, or security forces from neighbor countries that they would trust. Nor is political will necessarily there to respond to other countries’ problems. The legal basis may be lacking, even within the European Union. The OSCE cannot fix all this. It has limits to its funding, limits to its expertise, and limits to its legal authority. The problems often extend beyond the OSCE area or strike only a part of the OSCE area. Other organizations may be more appropriate.
What can OSCE do? Analysis, development of norms, a clearing house for expertise. OSCE is a relatively privileged area that can set a good model.
A Georgia representative underlines OSCE’s weakness in the security dimension. Inviolability of borders and respect for human rights were the pillars of the Helsinki agreement. The former is obviously a problem for Georgia, 20% of whose territory is occupied by another power. OSCE as an organization is still strong on human rights, but not all member states welcome that focus. Are transnational threats attracting attention because they are easier to deal with than the human rights issues that remain important in some OSCE member states?
A Ukrainian representative from an institute for research puts emphasis on OSCE values and civil society engagement. The Polish ambassador to the OSCE notes there is pressure on all multilateral institutions, which are having difficulty meeting challenges like youth unemployment. Core contributions of the OSCE have been conceptual innovations in response to new challenges, including engagement of civil society. Gyarmati notes a tweet that identifies OSCE’s search for easy transational issues as a mistake. The U.S. amabassdor underlines the OSCE role in promoting security transparency and confidence, including confidence building measures in the cybersecurity area.
The Canadian ambassador says three quarters of the OSCE iceberg is in the field, Warsaw and The Hague. Vienna is a hub for expertise on convential arms control. Shouldn’t we underline the early warning and mediation functions outside Vienna? The French ambassador underlines that OSCE does not exist in isolation and needs to coordinate with other organizations. Shaping the security environment is a goal that extends beyond the OSCE. A German foreign ministry official, noting the safer security environment, asks how OSCE can preserve and improve it. OSCE has competitive advantage in arms control and disarmament. In cybersecurity, OSCE can develop confidence building measures. The Turkish ambassador underlines the value added of a comprehensive security approach that unites East and West.
Conley emphasizes networks in civil society and business. Yurgens welcomes the idea of OSCE accrediting civil society and thinktanks so that they can be heard by their governments. OSCE should also welcome the professional peacekeeping capacity of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO). Bailes recognizes the importance of resolving the basic security issues but also thinks it is possible to sometimes focus on “easier” issues. CSTO should be heard at OSCE.
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