Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09TALLINN125
2009-05-08 11:13:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Tallinn
Cable title:  

SCENESETTER FOR ESTONIAN PM ANSIP'S U.S. VISIT

Tags:  PGOV PREL ENRG NATO ECON EN 
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R 081113Z MAY 09
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TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 1132
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E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/08/2019
TAGS: PGOV PREL ENRG NATO ECON EN
SUBJECT: SCENESETTER FOR ESTONIAN PM ANSIP'S U.S. VISIT
MAY 12-15

Classified By: CDA Karen Decker for reasons 1.4 (b) &
(d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 TALLINN 000125

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FOR EUR/NB - GILCHRIST/RODRIGUES
NSC FOR OVP - HAAVE
DOE FOR APICELLI

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/08/2019
TAGS: PGOV PREL ENRG NATO ECON EN
SUBJECT: SCENESETTER FOR ESTONIAN PM ANSIP'S U.S. VISIT
MAY 12-15

Classified By: CDA Karen Decker for reasons 1.4 (b) &
(d).


1. (C) SUMMARY: Prime Minister Andrus Ansip will visit
Washington and New York May 12-15. Estonia's longest-
sitting Prime Minister is ardently pro-American, a
leading advocate for Estonia's military engagements
abroad and the face of Estonian fiscal restraint. In his
meetings, the Prime Minister will underscore that Estonia
has been and will remain a good Ally of the United
States. He will express heartfelt appreciation for
President Obama's strong statement on collective security
at the NATO Summit and will reaffirm Estonia's plan to
increase its presence in Afghanistan this summer.
Estonia has staked its economic credibility on keeping
its budget deficit low and acceding to the Euro zone as
soon as possible. Ansip will want to highlight how
Estonia's approach to the economic crisis is distinct
from the rest of Eastern Europe. Finally, Ansip will
highlight Estonia's efforts to diversify its energy
supply through nuclear and other clean energy sources and
will express interest in U.S. nuclear technology.


2. (C) In Washington, PM Ansip hopes to meet with the
Vice President and Speaker Pelosi and speak at the U.S.-
Baltic Foundation (USBF) annual conference. In New York,
Ansip will visit the NASDAQ and N.Y. Stock Exchange and
meet with the President of the New York Federal Reserve
and officials at Deutsche Bank.


3. (C) In meetings with Prime Minister Ansip, it would be
useful to:

-- Commend the Prime Minister's efforts to manage
Estonia's economic downturn, while also maintaining
Estonia's international commitments.

-- Recognize that Estonia's experience and response to
the crisis has been different from that of its neighbors.

-- Express appreciation for Ansip's decision to deploy a
mechanized company to Afghanistan this summer for
election security (tripling his NATO summit pledge of a

platoon).

-- Welcome the importance Estonia places on participating
in joint operations with U.S. forces and emphasize there
is significant scope for future cooperation in
Afghanistan.

-- Acknowledge the importance of collective defense to
Estonia and reiterate U.S. commitment to this principle.

-- Applaud focus on climate and energy security.
Highlight interest in linking up American and Estonian
technologies to secure a cleaner, more diverse energy
supply that decreases Estonia's dependence on Russia.
END SUMMARY.

ESTONIA'S ECONOMY - FOCUS ON THE FUNDAMENTALS


4. (C) Ansip, who recently passed the four-year
milestone as Prime Minister, was re-elected Prime
Minister in early 2007, when Estonia still enjoyed high
GDP growth and a budget surplus. The economic crisis has
taken its toll on his popularity, and there is inevitable
speculation about the future of his coalition government.
Estonia's GDP is expected to decline more than 12 percent
in 2009 and unemployment (now at nine percent) will
increase. The Prime Minister has staked his credibility
and Estonia's economic recovery on achieving Euro
accession by meeting the Maastricht criteria "as soon as
possible." To do this, the Government of Estonia (GOE)
must keep its budget deficit below three percent of GDP.
The government is now struggling to reach agreement on an
eight-percent budget cut (the second such cut this year).
One coalition partner has called for increasing income
tax rates, cutting defense spending to as low as 1.1
percent of GDP and abandoning Estonia's hallmark flat tax
system. These are redlines for PM Ansip who believes
Estonia's long-term economic success is rooted in its
core policies of transparency, low taxes, a balanced
budget and free trade. On this front, Ansip will express
appreciation for President Obama's remark at the U.S.-EU
summit that the U.S. has "no room for protectionism."


TALLINN 00000125 002 OF 003



5. (C) While acknowledging the region is integrated
through trade and investment, Ansip will want to
distinguish Estonia's economic situation and policies
from those of its neighbors. In particular, he will
highlight that Estonia has one of the lowest levels of
public sector debt in the EU, significant reserves
accumulated during the boom years, and a relatively
healthy banking sector (dominated by Swedish banks).
Ansip will note that in recognition of these factors,
international credit agencies have kept Estonia's
rankings high. However, foreign investors lack
confidence in the currencies of small countries like
Estonia and need a visible signal that Estonia is a safe
place to invest. Admission to the Euro zone would help
Estonia attract foreign investors (and create jobs).
Ansip will stress that he does not want the EU to relax
accession criteria to make it easier for new members to
join. From the GOE's perspective, this would weaken the
credibility of the Euro zone and dilute the benefits of
membership.

CONFIDENCE IN COLLECTIVE SECURITY


6. (C) Ansip called President Obama's message on
collective security at the NATO summit "music to his
ears." He will seek assurances that a new Strategic
Concept will maintain collective self defense as the core
function of the Alliance and will stress that this is of
primary importance to Estonia. Despite the budget
crisis, Ansip is a vocal proponent for upholding
Estonia's NATO commitments, and points to the Russian
invasion of Georgia in August 2008 as one reason
countries should invest in defense capabilities.
"Defense is not a luxury," he will say, and although the
GOE must make additional budget cuts, we expect Ansip to
stick as closely as possible to Estonia's commitment to
spend 2 percent of GDP on defense by 2010. (Note:
Defense spending is currently about 1.75 percent. End
note.)

AFGHANISTAN


7. (C) Estonia has one of the highest deployment rates in
NATO (about eight percent of its forces are deployed
abroad) and Afghanistan is the GOE's top foreign policy
priority. Estonia has a company of 140 soldiers embedded
with UK forces in southern Afghanistan (Helmand province)
where they operate without caveats. At the NATO Summit,
PM Ansip answered the President's call for more troops
for Afghanistan: the GOE will deploy a mechanized company
in July to provide security for the Afghan national
elections. While we understand the new company will be
collocated with U.S. Marines in Helmand, this is not yet
a done deal, and we expect PM Ansip will highlight the
importance Estonia places on participating in joint
operations with U.S. forces (as Estonia did in Iraq for
six years).


8. (C) Reflecting the GOE's desire to match its military
contributions with civilian assistance, Afghanistan is
also a priority development assistance country for
Estonia. The GOE has focused its efforts on building
health sector capacity in Helmand but is also considering
education sector projects in Kabul, providing training
for Afghan diplomats and is looking at ways to enhance
the Afghan parliament's IT capabilities.

WELCOME TO THE NEIGHBORHOOD


9. (C) The GOE remains a staunch advocate for EU and NATO
enlargement, including MAP for Georgia and Ukraine, as
well as a firm supporter of democratization in the
Balkans. In fact, Estonia decided to maintain its
contingent in KFOR, unlike several other Allies. Ansip
will emphasize the importance Estonia places on NATO and
the EU maintaining an "open door policy" toward aspirant
countries. While the GOE is not reluctant to deliver
hard messages to transition countries, it also believes
these countries need concrete targets and encouragement
to keep them on the right path. Estonia's own remarkable
post-Soviet transition experience gives it a high degree
of credibility as a model for reform in Georgia, Ukraine,
Moldova, Belarus and the Balkans. Estonia has provided
training on issues ranging from law enforcement, border
security, economic and market reforms to cyber security
and IT to civil servants and military personnel from

TALLINN 00000125 003 OF 003


these countries. PM Ansip will arrive in Washington
fresh from the EU's Eastern Partnership Summit in Prague.


9. (C) In discussions of the "neighborhood," Russia
remains the thousand-pound elephant in the room. Ansip
may express concerns about the possibility of increased
Russia-Georgia tensions and speculate another regional
flare-up this summer. He will also reiterate Estonia's
long-standing position that Allies must not forget that
Russia has invaded a sovereign country. Ansip may also
ask about the future of U.S.-Russia relations and for
more details on the "re-setting" of relations with
Russia.

OTHER CHALLENGES: CYBER AND CLIMATE SECURITY


10. (C) In addition to enlargement, Estonia has a keen
interest in NATO strategic challenges like cyber and
energy security. The GOE was pleased the NATO communique
at Strasbourg-Kehl specifically referenced Estonia's
Cyber Center of Excellence. The U.S. was the first Ally
to send a representative to the COE (in 2007) and
Secretary of Defense Gates committed us to become a
"Sponsoring Nation" during his visit to Tallinn in
November 2008 (although that process is not yet
complete). Six other Allies are Sponsoring Nations
(Germany, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovak Republic and
Spain).


11. (C) Estonia's energy policy is at a crossroads.
While domestic oil shale reserves provide significant
energy independence (supplying 95 percent of Estonia's
electricity needs),oil shale also makes Estonia the
heaviest polluter per capita in the EU. The GOE is
working to diversify supply (to reduce dependence on
Russian gas),bring Estonia in line with EU environmental
standards, and invest in a mix of new supply options,
including nuclear power, cleaner oil shale technology and
renewables (wind and biofuels). PM Ansip met with his
counterparts in Lithuania, Latvia and Poland on April 27
to try to advance plans for a regional nuclear power
plant (NPP) in Visaginas, Lithuania. His is, however,
frustrated by the lack of progress on this project and
will want to highlight Estonia's growing interest in
building its own domestic NPP using U.S. technology.


12. (U) We appreciate the support Washington has
provided for this visit.

DECKER