Kiev required the neighbours to protect each others’ state secrets. It was initially adopted with the arrival of one-time spy Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin in 2000.
Another law covered basic Russian military transports across Ukraine and a fourth concerned mutual arms purchases.
Ukraine inherited several huge Soviet-era arms manufacturing sites that formed the backbone of Russia’s armed forces.
The final law covered intelligence sharing between the two sides.
“Many Ukrainians must have learned with some surprise today that these laws were still around,” Kiev’s Razumkov Centre analyst Oleksiy Melnyk told AFP.
Ukraine’s Western allies have encouraged parliament to spend less time on populist — and often little-more than symbolic — measures and to focus instead on the numerous laws needed to get the recession-hit economy back on track.
Rafts of nationalist legislation adopted since this chamber’s November election have only stoked the virulent anti-Ukrainian passions of Russia’s state media and senior ministers.
But some analysts said Thursday’s legislation meant that crucial links that tied Moscow and Kiev over the past two decades have been ruptured for many years to come.
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