Romania's and Moldova's foreign ministers signed a new  "basic treaty" between their two nations. The treaty  took seven years to negotiate and according to several  sources is certain to fail to satisfy Romanian  nationalists and Moldovan separatists. The big problem  of course, remains the 1939 Molotov-Ribbentrop pact that  allowed the Soviet Union to annex Bessarabia and northern Bukovina from Romania. Romanian nationalists  want to stress the "fraternal" nature of relations  between the two nations, while Moldovans are suspicious  that such language could lead to complete absorption by  Romania. The treaty attempts to blur these basic  differences and as a result is (according to an RFE  quote of a Romanian newspaper) "neither horse, nor  donkey."  The treaty establishes "privileged relations" between  Romania and Moldova. The RFE report says "No reference  is made to "two Romanian states," but mention is made of  the joint "roots in the historic past," and of a "community of culture and language."" One commentator  noted that language that would have voided or annulled  the Hitler-Stalin Pact might have made a diplomaticv ase  for returning Moldova to the status of a Romanian
 province.  Why agree to this treaty? RFE suggest because both  nations are seeking better relations with the European  Union and the EU insists that any disagreements  (particularly border disagreements) be resolved  peacefully and by consensus.