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Europe to carve new role in world affairs through "ring of friends"

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  • Europe to carve new role in world affairs through "ring of friends"

    Associated Press Worldstream
    October 20, 2004 Wednesday 11:23 AM Eastern Time

    Europe hopes to carve new role in world affairs through "ring of
    friends"

    ROBERT WIELAARD; Associated Press Writer

    BRUSSELS, Belgium


    The 25-member European Union - now comprising eight ex-communist
    nations and considering membership for Muslim-dominated Turkey - is
    busily crafting a "Wider Europe" as well. It would stretch far beyond
    the EU's formal borders and aim to lock a diversity of nearby lands
    into democracy and good neighborly relations through tailor-made
    programs of trade and assistance.

    But the blueprint for a "ring of friends" making Europe's
    neighborhood safe, secure and prosperous comes with complications:
    There is Israel and its nuclear ambiguity and security morass.
    Russia, Ukraine and Belarus show creeping authoritarianism. Libya may
    be emerging from the cold, but it is still a dictatorship. The
    Balkans remain a scary doorstep.

    In many ways, however, this may be the very point.

    The EU's outreach program to sometimes dangerous places beyond its
    borders marks a dramatic shift in Europe's perception of how it can
    play a key - perhaps central - role in world affairs: The strategy is
    one of exploiting economic clout to both achieve influence on the
    world stage and shape the rim of Europe. Perhaps Europe might even
    school America - and its many Euro-cynics - in the merits of
    persuasion rather than force.

    "We want to strengthen the instruments available to us to become a
    dynamic protagonist in the world. The EU has a leading role to play
    in securing human rights and democracy," said Austrian Foreign
    Minister Benita Ferrero-Waldner, who is set to take over as the EU
    external relations commissioner on Nov. 1.

    If the United States has in the post 9/11 era become ever more
    willing to use its overwhelming military might as a stick to bring
    nations into line, the EU appears to be awakening to the possibility
    that the lure of "Old World" good life can be a comparably persuasive
    carrot in provoking change in areas of chaos and repression.

    To see that go-softly approach in action, consider Turkey.

    A decade ago, the notion that outside interference might succeed in
    convincing Turkey to implement meaningful democratic reforms,
    dismantle a system of judicial repression based largely on torture,
    curb the power of a military that had dominated society for decades,
    and loosen state control over the economy would have seemed remote.

    But those objectives have largely become a reality. And the reason,
    of course, is the strict conditions - based on human rights as well
    as fiscal soundness - that Europe imposed on Turkey to win even a
    prospect of EU membership.

    In economic terms at least, Europe is a genuine superpower.

    The EU's enlargement last May added 75 million consumers, creating a
    single market of 450 million people, compared to 420 million for
    NAFTA - the countries of the North American Free Trade Agreement. Its
    total GDP - [euro]8,800 billion (US$11,017 billion) in 2003 -
    outstrips, by today's exchange rate, that of the United States -
    [euro]8,787 billion (US$11,000 billion).

    It is already the world's biggest trader, home to one of the world's
    most sought-after currencies and - defined as a single unit - is the
    world's biggest donor, spending more than [euro]500 million a month
    in assistance projects on all five continents.

    In the decades following World War II, Europe clamored for the need
    for multilateralism in world affairs as a balance to U.S. might,
    while relying heavily on the U.S. nuclear umbrella to nurture
    standards of living that would eventually become the envy of the
    world.

    Now, however, there are signs it's hoping to offer a serious
    alternative to American influence in world affairs.

    One prominent scholar, Robert Kagan - author of "Of Paradise and
    Power," a widely acclaimed analysis of trans-Atlantic alienation -
    believes the divergences are deep, and threaten to be lasting.

    "On major strategic and international questions today, Americans are
    from Mars and Europeans are from Venus: They agree on little and
    understand one another less and less," Kagan writes in the opening of
    his book.

    By Nov. 2, the EU hopes to have deals with Ukraine, Moldova, Morocco,
    Tunisia, Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian Authority under its "New
    Neighborhood Policy." Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Egypt, Georgia,
    Lebanon, Libya, Syria and Tunisia are next.

    In some cases the relationship is new; in others, like that of
    Israel, it amounts to an expansion of existing association
    agreements.

    The aim is, where needed, to steer neighbors toward more democracy,
    sounder economic policies, sensible defense spending, respect for
    minorities, sustainable development and peaceful settlement of ethnic
    disputes.

    Their reward: More aid, trade, regular political consultations and -
    importantly - easy access to the EU market of 455 million consumers.

    "We must never forget European integration is not about milk quotas
    and customs duties," says Guenter Verheugen, the EU commissioner for
    expansion matters. "It is about peace, stability and prosperity..."

    Negotiations with the first seven candidates have gone fairly well,
    except for Israel, which complains the EU uses the bonanza of trade
    and aid to simply grab a more prominent role in the Mideast peace
    process. Long wary of what it considers pro-Arab views in Europe,
    Israel wants the EU to continue to play second fiddle to the United
    States in Middle Eastern diplomacy.

    Russia, meanwhile, has brushed aside any suggestion of being part of
    multi-nation deal, insisting on special treatment that would reflect
    its image of itself as a global power.

    The EU has proposed an alternative "strategic partnership" with
    Russia that focuses on four areas: Trade and investments, cooperation
    in law enforcement and nonproliferation issues, settling border
    disputes with EU members Estonia and Latvia and visa-free travel for
    Russians in Western Europe. The EU and President Vladimir Putin hope
    to sign the accord Nov. 11, though prospects are uncertain.
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