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EU gives glimmer of enlargement hope for South Caucasus states

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  • EU gives glimmer of enlargement hope for South Caucasus states

    EU Observer, Belgium
    July 28, 2006

    EU gives glimmer of enlargement hope for South Caucasus states
    28.07.2006 - 14:34 CET | By Andrew Rettman


    EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - EU member states have agreed to insert subtle
    pro-enlargement wording into so-called action plans governing future
    relations with South Caucasus countries Georgia and Armenia, as
    regional tensions simmer over Georgian police action in the breakaway
    region of Abkhazia.

    The EU action plans - set to be adopted in October - are now likely
    to carry the phrase that "The EU takes note that [these countries]
    have expressed their European aspirations" with member states'
    ambassadors finally coming to agreement after "some discussion" on
    Thursday (27 July).

    The meaning of the wording is open to debate, with a Finnish EU
    presidency official saying "It's not that sensitive. I mean we are
    not talking about enlargement. It's semantics. You can ponder whether
    the aspirations refer to EU membership or European values in the
    metaphysical sense."

    But diplomats from the South Caucasus states are reading the text as
    a step toward ever-closer EU integration with a potential target of
    membership 10 to 15 years from now. "This simply means that Armenia
    respects European values in the political and economic sphere," an
    Armenian diplomat said. "But membership is our ultimate goal."

    Western European public opinion has turned against enlargement,
    especially in the Netherlands and France, following the no-votes on
    the EU constitution last year.

    Ukraine is currently battling to get the phrase "the EU recognises
    the European aspirations" of Kiev into its draft partnership
    agreement with the EU for 2007 and beyond. Commenting on the South
    Caucasus wording, an EU diplomat said "That's not any commitment, but
    it's the minimum the EU could do."

    The draft action plans also allow Georgia and Armenia the option to
    formally "align themselves" with "some" future EU statements on
    common foreign and security policy topics, despite objections from
    the French ambassador that this could lead to cherry-picking and loss
    of coherence on EU foreign policy issues.

    Azerbaijan - the third South Caucasus country currently negotiating
    an action plan with the EU - was not included in the "aspirations"
    and foreign policy alignment discussion because it did not request to
    have either clause in its action plan text.

    The South Caucasus is an important energy route for future gas and
    oil pipelines from the Caspian Sea basin to the EU, with a so-called
    "trojka" of high-level European Commission and EU presidency
    officials planning to go to the region to conclude the action plan
    deal in October.

    Abkhazia shooting stops
    Meanwhile, the Georgian ambassador in Brussels - Salome Samadashvili
    - said shooting has stopped in the Kodori Gorge in the breakaway
    Georgian region of Abkhazia, but added Georgian police officers on
    Friday captured five more rebel fighters and will stay in the area
    "for some time."

    Georgian police entered the gorge on Tuesday to unseat local militant
    leader Emzar Kvitsiani and reinstall Abkhazian local government
    officials after their 12-year long exile in Tbilisi. "Kvitsiani was
    running the gorge as a personal fiefdom, extorting money and goods
    from local people," the Georgian ambassador said.

    Tbilisi has pledged it remains committed to a peaceful resolution of
    the Abkhazia conflict, but separatist leaders in the Abkhazian
    capital of Sukhumi broke off talks with Georgia on Friday while
    Russian general Valery Yevnevich - who has "peacekeeping" troops in
    the zone - has warned his soldiers will fire back if attacked.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan are monitoring the situation, with Baku giving
    full support to Tbilisi's "anti-terrorist operations" on its own
    "sovereign territory." The EU has not so far officially reacted to
    the Kodori operation - which left one woman dead - but Brussels is
    "concerned" about potentially worsening instability in its Black Sea
    neighbourhood.
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