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ICG: Conflict Resolution In The South Caucasus: The EU's Role

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  • ICG: Conflict Resolution In The South Caucasus: The EU's Role

    CONFLICT RESOLUTION IN THE SOUTH CAUCASUS: THE EU'S ROLE

    International Crisis Group
    March 21 2006

    International Crisis Group new report

    Tbilisi/Brussels, 21 March 2006 (International Crisis Group Press
    Release - website) - To guarantee its own security, the EU must become
    more engaged in resolving the conflicts in the South Caucasus lest
    they ignite into full-fledged wars in Europe's neighbourhood.

    "Conflict Resolution in the South Caucasus: The EU's Role", the latest
    report from the International Crisis Group, examines the EU's efforts
    to address tensions over Nagorno-Karabakh, Abkhazia and South Ossetia,
    and points out how the EU can do more.

    "Greater engagement is a challenge Brussels has only just begun
    to address", says Sabine Freizer, Crisis Group's Caucasus Project
    Director. "There have been a few promising steps, but there is a long
    way to go".

    Thus far, others have taken the lead in promoting conflict settlement
    in the region, but over a decade of negotiations led by the UN in
    Abkhazia, and the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe
    (OSCE) in Nagorno-Karabakh and South Ossetia, have not produced
    comprehensive peace agreements. With its reputation as an "honest
    broker", access to a range of soft and hard power tools, and the lure
    of greater integration into Europe, the EU has a greater role to play,
    and offers added value to compliment the UN and the OSCE.

    To avoid instability on its borders, the EU seeks a ring of
    well-governed countries around it. It is further interested in the
    South Caucasus to ensure access to Caspian oil and gas, develop
    transport and communication corridors between Europe and Asia, and
    contain such threats as smuggling, trafficking and environmental
    degradation.

    As the EU is unlikely to offer membership to Georgia, Armenia and
    Azerbaijan any time soon, it must identify innovative means to
    impose conditionality on its aid and exercise influence. European
    Neighbourhood Policy Action Plans are being finalised. These offer
    a chance for the EU to enhance its role especially if the peaceful
    resolution of the conflicts are defined as commitments.

    The new EU Special Representative should observe ongoing negotiations
    for the Abkhazian, South Ossetian and Nagorno-Karabakh conflicts. The
    Commission has allocated significant funding to rehabilitation in
    South Ossetia and Abkhazia. It should assess how it can start doing
    more in and around Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "The EU is trying to define its role in a new neighbourhood which is
    neither at war nor at peace", says Nicholas Whyte, Director of Crisis
    Group's Europe Program. "If the EU fails to implement its strategic
    vision for a secure neighbourhood, its credibility in the region, and
    generally vis-a-vis Russia and the U.S., will suffer. More troublingly,
    if the South Caucasus conflicts continue to deteriorate, the EU may
    find itself unprepared for responding to wars among its neighbours".
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