Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), community of independent nations established by a treaty signed at Minsk, Belarus, on Dec. 8, 1991, by the heads of state of Russia , Belarus , and Ukraine . Between Dec. 8 and Dec. 21, the three original signatories were joined by Armenia , Azerbaijan (its parliament, however, rejected ratifying its membership until 1993), Kazakhstan , Kyrgyzstan , Moldova , Tajikistan , Turkmenistan , and Uzbekistan . When Georgia joined in 1993 all of the former republics of the USSR except the Baltic states had become members of the CIS. Its headquarters are in Minsk.
The organization was conceived as the successor to the USSR in its role of coordinating the foreign and economic policies of its member nations. The treaty recognized current borders and each republic's independence, sovereignty, and equality, and established a free-market ruble zone embracing the republics' interdependent economies and a joint defense force for participating republics. Strategic nuclear weapons, in Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine, were to be under the joint control of those republics, with day-to-day authority in the hands of the Russian president and defense minister; Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine, however, no longer possess such weapons. The CIS at first convened only a council of the heads of state of its members, but in 1992 it convened a council of heads of government and a council of foreign ministers.
The republics' level of receptivity to integration with Russia has varied. All CIS nations now have their own currency, and most members have had occasion to criticize Russia for slow implementation of CIS agreements. Ukraine (which had a prolonged disagreement with Russia over the disposition of the Black Sea and remains wary of Russian power, particularly after Russia took sides in the 2004 presidential election), Turkmenistan (whose large gas reserves free it from dependence on Russia), Azerbaijan (whose oil reserves also allow for independence from Russia), and Moldova (which faced an insurgency in the Russian-dominated Trans-Dniester region) have been relatively inactive in the alliance, and in 2005 Turkmenistan became an associate member. Armenia (surrounded by the Muslim nations of Azerbaijan, Iran, and Turkey), Georgia (with separatist movements in Abkhazia and South Ossetia), Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan (vulnerable because of its limited natural resources) accepted Russia's protection under a joint defense system and Azerbaijan, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan also signed the Collective Security Treaty, but Azerbaijan and Georgia have since withdrawn from the defense agreement. In 2002 the treaty adherents agreed to establish the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), which superseded the CIS as a forum for military cooperation in 2005. Uzbekistan, which had suspended its treaty membership in 1998, joined the CSTO in 2006.
Because the CIS has remained essentially a regional forum, progress toward the integration of its member nations has tended to take place outside the organization. In 1996, Belarus signed a treaty with Russia to coordinate their defense and foreign policy apparatus and to eliminate trade restrictions and eventually unite their currencies. Individual sovereignty is to be maintained, but they created supranational bodies to effect these changes. The two nations have since signed several follow-up agreements, but actual progress toward integration has been slow. They, Kazakhstan (which has a large Russian community), and Kyrgyzstan additionally agreed to pursue economic integration without customs restrictions. Tajikistan later joined the customs union, which became the Eurasian Economic Community (EurAsEC) in 2000. Several other CIS members are EurAsEC observers. In 2003, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine agreed to form a Single Economic Space; the treaty was ratified the following year. Meanwhile, concerns over Russian domination of the CIS prompted Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, and Moldova to establish a loose international association; from 1999 to 2005 Uzbekistan also was a member.
Author not available, COMMONWEALTH OF INDEPENDENT STATES.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
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Nothing in common, no wealth. (Commonwealth of Independent States)
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists; 1/1/1993; Kiselyov, Sergei; 1236 words;
... predicted, the Commonwealth of Independent States is merely ... created the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). The ... entered the Commonwealth. Later, five ... there is no commonwealth, nor did the union of states take place ...
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FROM COMMON HERITAGE TO DIVERGENCE: WHY THE TRANSITION COUNTRIES ARE DRIFTING APART BY MEASURES OF AGRICULTURAL PERFORMANCE.(Central Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States)
American Journal of Agricultural Economics; 11/15/2000; LERMAN, ZVI; 4364 words;
... Europe (CEE) and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) embarked on their ... Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States. World Bank Discussion ... Eastern Europe and Commonwealth Independent States Percentage Change 1992- ...
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C.I.S. overland shipments challenge cargo insurers. (Commonwealth of Independent States)
National Underwriter Property & Casualty-Risk & Benefits Management; 9/26/1994; Jennings, John; 922 words;
... governments of the Commonwealth of Independent States has presented a vast ... major problems in the Commonwealth of Independent States, said Dietrich Gundermann ... be a problem in the Commonwealth of Independent States. To put it bluntly ...
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FIFTEEN YEARS OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF INDEPENDENT STATES.(Brief article)
European Report; 1/8/2007; 88 words;
... fifteenth anniversary of the founding of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). The publication answers the questions ... Russia has no control. Fifteen years of the Commonwealth of Independent States, Bartosz Cichocki, Centre for Eastern Studies ...
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Capital Markets: Issuer Strategy - MDM Securitisation Marks First Of Many - MDM's Auto Loan Securitisation Issue, The Largest Ever Out Of Russia, Was Comfortably Oversubscribed And More Issues Are In The Offing, Reinforcing The Trend In The CIS Region. Ed.(Commonwealth of Independent States)(KMB-Bank)(Merrill Lynch and Company Inc)(Dresdner Bank AG)
The Banker; 12/1/2006; Russell-Walling, Edward; 743 words;
... emerging market securitisations, one in which Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) issuers have begun to dominate a sector ... takeover. When it appointed a number of new independent directors earlier this year, gossips said it ...
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Packaging shortages plague CIS food distribution. (Commonwealth of Independent States)
Packaging Digest; 4/1/1992; 1127 words;
... special seminar on food packaging needs in the new Commonwealth of Independent States (formerly the Soviet Union). The seminar took ... providing our people with adequate food, Boiko states. Today, even the military complex has become involved ...
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New year, old fears. (Commonwealth of Independent States)
U.S. News & World Report; 1/13/1992; Knight, Robin; 1385 words;
... month ago, the Commonwealth of Independent States drew unflattering ... members of the commonwealth have little ... What can the commonwealth do to prevent ... policies of the 11 states be coordinated? Last week the commonwealth's leaders agreed ... chief of the commonwealth's ...
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Grain question. (Commonwealth of Independent States imports)
Futures (Cedar Falls, Iowa); 2/1/1992; Watts, Bill; 304 words;
... the Soviet Union, leaving in its place the new Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and a lot of new questions. For grain traders ... may seriously limit the ability of the United States and other Western nations to ease food shortages ...
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Golden Telecom and AT&T reach agreement to provide access to SWIFTNet in Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States.(Russia)(Brief Article)
European Telecom; 11/1/2003; 134 words;
... into an agreement with AT&T to provide access to SWIFT's Secure IP Network (SIPN) in Russia and other Commonwealth of Independent States countries via AT&T's Network Based VPN service. The agreement between AT&T and Golden Telecom ...
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Finding information on Russia and the CIS. (Commonwealth of Independent States)(sources of information for conducting business in the CIS)
The Information Advisor; 9/1/1996; 1867 words;
... precisely, the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). These ... the Baltic States. (Available ... the Baltic States, and the CIS ... Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States Graham & ... other CIS states. Includes ... trade with the independent ...
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The commonwealth to be built on the ruins of empire: price hikes will be the first test for Yeltsin and the republics. (Boris Yeltsin, Commonwealth of Euro-Asian Independent States) (Predictions 1992)
U.S. News & World Report; 12/30/1991; Stanglin, Douglas; 612 words;
... member of the new Commonwealth of Euro-Asian Independent States, Russia's success ... cohesion in the new commonwealth. Kazakh President ... country may use the commonwealth as a way station ... hastened if the commonwealth tries to turn ...
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Beyond catastroika: prospects for market transition in the Commonwealth of Independent States. (catastroika-complete economic collapse)
Atlantic Economic Journal; 3/1/1992; Rosefielde, Steven; 5384 words;
... successor, the Commonwealth of Euro-Asian Independent States have been groping ... operative in the Commonwealth, and self-directed ... constitutent sovereign states develop integrated ... managers in the new commonwealth are likely to ...
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The Commonwealth of Independent States' troubled energy sectors.
Finance & Development; 9/1/2002; Mathieu, Paul Shiells, Clinton R.; 2542 words;
... electricity sectors in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)-the economic alliance ... countries has been large (see maps on pages 35 and 36). Russia ... Turkmenistan's sales to other CIS states and the Baltic republics ... recommended the establishment of independent regulatory ...
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Nagorno-Krash'n'bash; the West may have to step in where the Commonwealth of Independent States is having to back out. (Nagorno-Karabakh, former Soviet Union) (Editorial)
The Economist (US); 3/14/1992; 736 words;
... has brought two independent states, Azerbaijan and ... together with newly independent Kazakhstan: a ... dragged in six states, with between ... end in war. The Commonwealth can't cope The ... hoping that the new Commonwealth of independent States will keep things ... control ... .
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Oriflame sold cosmetics worth 300m [euro] in Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States in 2003.(European News)(Brief Article)
Cosmetics International; 3/12/2004; 29 words;
ORIFLAME SOLD cosmetics worth 300m [euro] in Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States in 2003, as compared with 210m [euro] the previous year, according to the Interfax news agency.
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