[07SOFIA396] BULGARIA: FACING RESURGENT RUSSIAN INFLUENCE ON THE EVE OF THE PUTIN VISIT

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S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 03 SOFIA 001396    SIPDIS    NOFORN  SIPDIS    PASS TO EUR/NCE BULGARIA DESK OFFICER MARK TURNER    E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/19/2032  TAGS: ENRG, PGOV, PREL, BU  SUBJECT: SUBJECT: BULGARIA:  FACING RESURGENT RUSSIAN  INFLUENCE ON THE EVE OF THE PUTIN VISIT    Classified By: Amb. John Beyrle for reasons 1.4 (b) & (d)    1.  (C/NF)  SUMMARY:  Bulgaria is bracing for the January  17-18 visit of the Russian President, fully expecting Putin  will bring some deliverables, but many more demandables.  Together with a few cultural sweeteners, the Russians will  push a hard line on Kosovo; missile defense, CFE, and U.S.  temporary deployments under the Defense Cooperation  Agreement; and energy, especially South Stream.  The  Bulgarians are intent on holding their ground on issues  affecting NATO and the EU, but are more wobbly on energy,  where, despite our concerted work to stiffen their resolve,  Russian blandishments and pressure are strongest.  Putin,s  visit is one aspect of a broader Russian effort to regain  some of the political and economic "market share" it lost  here over the past ten years.  Membership in NATO and the EU  allows Bulgaria a stronger basis for resisting Russian  pressure, but the instinct to accommodate Moscow is still  strong.  High-level U.S. engagement can act as a brake on  this instinct, and we need to look at some planned visits by  Bulgarian leaders to Washington in 2008 as opportunities to  help Bulgaria define and defend its transatlantic interests.  END SUMMARY    SOFT POWER . . .  ----------------    2.  (S//NF)  During his January 17-18 visit, Putin is primed  to sign four agreements:  culture; science and technology;  nuclear fuel return from Bulgaria,s research reactor (we  have a parallel agreement under negotiation); and  anti-organized crime cooperation (sic).  More important, he  will push on key regional and energy topics -- Kosovo,  NATO-Russia, and gas and oil projects.  The Russians are  playing a strong hand.  On the "soft side," Bulgarian popular  mythology romanticizes Russian intervention in securing  Bulgaria's 1880,s independence from Ottoman Turkey.  Drawing  on shared Slavic bonds of culture, language, and religion,  Russia vies with the EU in popularity rankings -- placing in  the 60-70 percent range -- whereas the U.S. average is around  55 percent.  Moscow will also dole out up to 10 million euros  to celebrate the 130th anniversary of liberation as part of  the 2008 "Year of Russia" - renovating churches, battle  sites, monuments, and promoting broader cultural and  educational exchanges.    . . . AND HARDBALL REALITIES  ----------------------------    3.  (C/NF)  On the "hard side," more tangible and powerful  forces are at play:  massive dependence on Russian energy,  Lukoil,s prominence in the economy, legitimate and shady  Russian business investments, and Bulgarian politicians,  strong personal and business ties with Moscow.  The  Bulgarians chafe at and resent Russian big brother  condescension and increasingly heavy-handed tactics.  These  are summed up neatly by candid and typically maladroit  Russian statements (in Sofia and Brussels) that Bulgaria is  Russia's "bridge" into the EU and its "Trojan horse."    4.  (C/NF)  But there are inescapable realities that keep  resentment from hardening into stronger policies.  Bulgaria  depends on Russia for 98 percent of its oil and 95 percent of  its natural gas supplies, according to Bulgargaz officials.  Bulgaria gets all its nuclear fuel for its reactors from  Russia.  Huge energy imports have led to a highly unbalanced  foreign trade deficit, which in 2006 represented 46 percent  (or 2,992.2 million euros) of Bulgaria's overall trade  deficit.  Lukoil is Bulgaria's largest single taxpayer,  accounting for 25 percent of tax revenues and five percent of  GDP.  Gazprom, Bulgaria's sole natural gas supplier, has a  hand in three major energy projects including the    SOFIA 00001396  002 OF 003      Burgas-Alexandropolous Pipeline (BAP), South Stream, and  construction of the Belene Nuclear power plant.  In 2006,  Gazprom/Kremlin pressure forced Bulgaria to renegotiate its  gas supply and transit agreement, resulting in steadily  increasing domestic prices.  Gazprom continues to press to  privatize and take over state-owned Bulgargaz.  In 2006,  Russian AtomstroyExport won the construction of a  long-delayed new nuclear power plant at Belene in a  controversial, non-transparent process involving then  Minister of Economy and Energy Rumen Ovcharov (who later lost  his job in a different corruption scandal).  Belene's  contracted costs have been estimated at 4 billion euro (5.8  billion USD), making it the most expensive single project in  Bulgaria.    OLD SCHOOL TIES TO MOSCOW  -------------------------    5.  (S//NF)  Key officials, including President Georgi  Parvanov, Interior Minister Petkov, Ovcharov (who is now  Budget Committee Chairman in Parliament) have ties to Russia.   Parvanov -- who received major contributions from Lukoil in  his 2006 re-election bid -- has a good personal relationship  with Putin, and has visited Russia eight times since assuming  office in 2002.  Petkov and Ovcharov both are perceived as  pro-Russian with links to Russian business and possibly  organized crime.  Ovcharov studied in Moscow and has spent  much of his career working with Russian energy interests; he  is widely suspected of enriching himself through the deals he  has concluded with Gazprom.  The stakes are huge: if  consummated, the major Russian energy deals in Bulgaria would  be close to USD 10 billion.  Even a one percent rake-off  would inject USD 100 million into a weak rule of law  environment.  The xenophobic Ataka party is widely believed  to receive considerable funding from Russian sources.  Its  daily paper serves as a pro-Moscow mouthpiece, regularly  spewing anti-U.S. and anti-EU rants and routinely criticizing  the U.S.-Bulgarian joint military bases, Bulgaria's military  deployments abroad, and U.S.-Bulgarian cooperation in  general.    TURNING THE SCREWS ON KOSOVO  ----------------------------    6.  (S//NF) Bulgaria supports the Ahtisaari plan and is  working actively within the EU to maintain (or forge) an EU  consensus on recognition for a coordinated declaration of  Kosovo independence, and to act as a bridge between Brussels  and Belgrade.  Moscow will likely prey upon Bulgaria's fear  of Serbia's reaction to recognition and Sofia,s economic  ties to Belgrade to press the Bulgarians to delay  recognition.  The Bulgarian side is negotiating the  non-discussion of Kosovo during the Putin visit, with no real  hope for success.  We expect the predictable Russian hard  sell, and the Bulgarians to hold their (uneasy) ground.    U.S.-BULGARIAN MILITARY COOPERATION: A SORE SPOT FOR MOSCOW  --------------------------------------------- --------------    7.  (S/NF) A Russian embassy official told us the Putin visit  will focus on economic issues because the Russians "do not  have any political problems with the Bulgarians except for  U.S. military bases in Bulgaria."  The Russians have publicly  railed against U.S.-Bulgarian military cooperation,  particularly temporary U.S. training deployments to Bulgaria  under the Defense Cooperation Agreement (DCA), and Joint Task  Force-East infrastructure in Bulgaria and Romania designed to  support this training.  Bulgarian support for U.S. missile  defense plans in Eastern Europe has also ruffled feathers.  Past Russian statements have criticized Bulgaria's hopes to  be covered by U.S. or NATO missile defense plans.  In  general, the Russians see U.S.-Bulgarian military cooperation    SOFIA 00001396  003 OF 003      and the joint-training facilities in particular as the "sore  spot" in the relationship, rarely missing a chance to  mischaracterize the facilities as "U.S. bases" in the media,  and repeatedly claming the facilities violate CFE.  Here  again, we expect the Bulgarians will stand firm, although the  Putin visit has clearly slowed the government,s timetable  for approving new force deployments we are seeking from them  in Iraq and Afghanistan.    ENERGY: THE WEAKEST LINK  ------------------------    8.  (C//NF) SOUTH STREAM AND NABUCCO:  The elephant in the  room is energy.  The Bulgarians do not want to be hurried  into a premature South Stream deal, but also don,t want to  be left out as Russia dangles options to other possible  transit states.  Determined to be an energy hub/corridor and  anxious for transit fees, the Bulgarians are susceptible to  pressure and blandishments.  We have argued against speedy  decisions ("creative delay"), and urged Bulgaria to retain  international legal and technical counsel.  But it now looks  almost inevitable that they will sign an IGA on South Stream  with Putin.  Although likely to be thin on substance, it will  be loaded with political symbolism that Russia can exploit.  Although Bulgaria formally supports the EU-backed Nabucco  pipeline, a South Stream IGA (on the heels of the one with  Greece) will serve Russian interest in further undermining  Nabucco.  Privately, the Bulgarians express doubt about the  seriousness of the EU and its multiple potential investors to  support Nabucco.  The Bulgarians do not trust the Russians,  but also have few direct dealings with, and little confidence  in, the Azeris on alternate guaranteed supplies.  The  Russians play this grand-master-level energy chess match many  moves in advance.  The Bulgarians are simply outclassed if  they do not slow the clock.    FINAL COMMENT  -------------    9.  (S//NF)  As a NATO and EU member, Bulgaria has greater  strengths than ever to resist pressure from a recrudescent  Russia. But the old habit to duck when Russia stamps it foot  is almost an instinct here.  As much as Bulgarians bristle  privately at Russian power plays, they see themselves as  vulnerable and  hesitate to antagonize Moscow.  But there are some important  exceptions to this rule.  Prime Minister Stanishev, despite  strong family ties to the USSR, has been willing to stand up  to Russia/Gazprom in energy negotiations to protect  Bulgaria's interests, and sees nothing good in the backward  drift of Russian democracy.  Foreign Minister Kalfin  repeatedly cites Bulgaria,s NATO and EU membership as a  strong strategic reality when discussing relations with  Moscow. But the sheer weight of Russian economic interests  will sustain Moscow,s influence on business and politics  here, no matter what Putin accomplishes during his visit, and  no matter how well Bulgarian leaders play the board.  Our  strongest lever of influence is Bulgarian recognition that a  good relationship with the U.S is crucial to their ability to  protect their interests.  Upcoming visits to the U.S. by FM  Kalfin (to meet Secretary Rice in January) and Prime Minister  Stanishev (who is seeking a visit in the spring of 2008) will  provide low-cost, high-impact opportunities to demonstrate  our support for some the strongest proponents of the  trans-atlantic view, and also to help them define how to  better leverage their strengths against Russian pressure.  END COMMENT.  Beyrle   
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