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TOL: A "Eurolife" For The East?

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  • TOL: A "Eurolife" For The East?

    A "EUROLIFE" FOR THE EAST?
    by Lubos Palata

    Transitions Online
    http://www.tol.cz/look/TOL/article.tpl?IdLa nguage=1&IdPublication=4&NrIssue=299&N rSection=2&NrArticle=20250
    Dec 10 2008
    Czech Republic

    The EU offers a new deal to the countries on its eastern frontier,
    and an implicit challenge to Russia.

    PRAGUE, YEREVAN, BAKU | You can't help but notice it. Whenever people
    in the post-Soviet region want to emphasize a product's quality,
    craftsmanship, reliability or luxuriousness they affix it with
    the prefix "euro." A newly reconstructed flat where everything is
    in good working order is said to have gone through a "euroremont"
    (read: a European-style redesign). A decent product is graced with
    the epithet "eurostandard." And when a politician wants to let it
    be known that he really does want to change things for the better,
    he describes his efforts as a "euroreform."

    In the eyes of Eastern Europeans, the European Union is a standard
    measure for quality - the quality of products, of democracy, of
    housing, of lifestyles. Not America or Japan, but Europe. Millions of
    Ukrainians, Georgians, Azerbaijanis and Belarusians dream of one day
    living as people do in the EU. Those who can afford it actually act
    on those dreams. Cities like Berlin, Vienna, Karlovy Vary and Nice
    are full of rich Eastern Europeans who have used the millions they
    made in the east to move west and live the "eurolife."

    It is entirely normal to find EU flags fluttering in front of
    government buildings in Chisinau, Tbilisi or Kiev. Only in Minsk,
    where Belarus' authoritarian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka holds
    court, is there a lack of EU flags, but even here the arrival of the
    EU standard may only be a matter of time.

    The EU flag already hangs alongside the Moldovan standard at municipal
    meetings in Chisinau. Photo: Chisinau.md

    DOES POST-SOVIET EUROPE BELONG IN EUROPE?

    The problem is that the EU doesn't want Eastern Europe. It is
    already having a hard time digesting the 12 new member-states -
    including 10 from the post-communist regions of East-Central Europe
    and the Balkans - that were added to the union in recent years. This
    difficulty is evident in the rejection of the European constitution
    and the difficulties surrounding the Lisbon agreement.

    The EU is not ready, in either a logistical or a strategic sense,
    for the unavoidable integration of the rest of the post-communist
    Balkans. Despite the fact that Turkey has had an association agreement
    with the EU for four decades, Turkish membership has been put on the
    back burner - to say nothing of other interested countries like Morocco
    or Israel. In the current situation, with the EU experiencing major
    internal tension as it searches for a functional decision-making model
    in the aftermath of its "big bang" enlargement into the post-communist
    region, there can be no serious talk of another expansion drive
    further eastward.

    Nevertheless, it is evident to most serious observers that the EU
    cannot completely overlook the region to its east, a fact that became
    all the more clear after France pushed through its (admittedly very
    vague) "Mediterranean project" earlier this year. A major catalyst
    for the EU's realization of the importance of its eastern frontier was
    the Russian invasion of Georgia and the resulting de facto annexation
    by Moscow of the breakaway Georgian regions of Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia. "We managed to stand up to Russia," Alain Lamassoure,
    the chief foreign policy adviser to President Nicolas Sarkozy, told
    me recently of France's stance. The Georgian situation apparently
    convinced Sarkozy, whose country has the EU presidency until the end
    of this year, of the necessity of bringing this eastern region closer
    to the EU.

    The EU can pull this off through an agreement with Russia or, if there
    is no other way, against Russian wishes. The EU's massive post-war
    material support for Georgia, amounting to hundreds of millions
    of euros, was linked to an array of agreements, such as a proposal
    for fast-tracking pacts on free trade zones. More importantly, this
    support represented a turning point in the stance of the 27-member
    union toward the East.

    The idea of an Eastern Partnership actually predates the Georgian
    situation. Poland and Sweden, supported by all the new post-communist
    member states, pushed for it as a counterweight to the Mediterranean
    union. But it was only after the invasion of Georgia, which led to at
    least a temporary cooling of relations with Russia, that the eastern
    project received any real support in Western Europe. Previously
    the Western European powers (with the notable exception of Britain)
    always viewed relations with Russia as more important than relations
    with other post-Soviet states.

    After Georgia, there was a significant shift. At the fall EU-Ukraine
    summit, Kiev was offered an association agreement of a qualitatively
    higher level than the proposed strategic partnership that has been
    the subject of renewed negotiations with Russia since November. The
    next logical step would be for the Eastern Partnership project to be
    fully launched, which would take place during the first half of 2009
    when the Czech Republic holds the rotating EU presidency.

    ASSOCIATION WITHOUT MEMBERSHIP

    In a prelude to Czech involvement, the European Commission officially
    launched the project on 3 December in Brussels. Six post-Soviet states
    are involved: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Ukraine, Belarus and
    Moldova. A special communiqué issued by the commission stated that
    the EU has an increasing level of responsibility for its partners,
    that it wants to help them deal with the political and economic
    challenges they face, and that it wants to support them in their
    efforts to secure closer ties with the EU. Benita Ferrero-Waldner,
    the European commissioner for external relations, said recently that
    the time has come for opening a new chapter in the EU's relations
    with its eastern neighbors. The situation in Eastern Europe and the
    southern Caucasus has an impact on the security and stability of the
    EU, she said, and the EU's policies toward countries in those regions
    should be active and clear.

    At the same time, Brussels accompanied the announcement of this
    project with offers of association agreements, which it aims to
    sign with each of those countries provided certain conditions are
    met. The association agreements would be preceded by the creation of
    zones of free trade between the EU and the countries of the Eastern
    Partnership, which would not only open up the common European market
    to those countries' products but but would fully open those eastern
    markets to European exports.

    Association agreements are generally the first step toward full union
    membership. Such agreements were signed by all the post-communist
    states that, more than a decade later, became EU members. But the EU
    is not offering this promise of membership to the countries of the
    Eastern Partnership.

    Some countries, such as Ukraine or Georgia, would like to hear such
    a promise; others, such as Armenia or Azerbaijan, are not looking for
    one, at least for the time being. "There are many other directions in
    which we can go," a high-ranking Azerbaijani diplomat said recently
    in Baku. I heard similar words in neighboring Armenia this past
    September. "Everybody is trying to be a player here: Russia, Turkey,
    Iran, the European Union. We have always tried to be in between and
    to have our own, Armenian interests," Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister
    Arman Kirakosyan told me.

    All the countries of the Eastern Partnership face huge problems. Four
    of the six are in a state of war or semi-war. Moldova has no control
    over the so-called republic of Transdniester on its territory, Georgia
    is in a similar situation vis-a-vis Abkhazia and South Ossetia,
    and Azerbaijan does not control the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh
    or an extensive area around it, which is occupied by neighboring
    Armenia (or, as Yerevan would have it, by the separatist Republic
    of Nagorno-Karabakh).

    The level of democracy varies from the stability of Moldova, through
    the relative chaos of Ukraine and the problematic Armenia and Georgia,
    all the way to the authoritarian calm of Azerbaijan and Belarus. "There
    are worse kinds of governments than that of an enlightened monarch,"
    Czech Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg said with respect to the
    Azerbaijani version of "democracy."

    Out of this group of countries, only Azerbaijan can be described as an
    economic success story. Belarus and Ukraine have displayed a certain
    economic stability, and liberal reforms have brought visible progress
    in Georgia. But Armenia and, especially, Moldova belong to the most
    economically devastated parts of the former Soviet Union. The current
    financial crisis and its accompanying effects on the global economy
    could have a terrible effect on all of these countries, including
    Azerbaijan, which has been successful because of its oil and natural
    gas industries.

    RUSSIA'S SPITEFUL STANCE

    For the Czech Republic, the official inauguration of the project with a
    summit in Prague this spring will be - along with the EU-America summit
    to be attended by new U.S. President Barack Obama - a high point of the
    country's six-month EU presidency. But the main battle is not yet won,
    despite official support for the project from the European Commission
    and despite a deal with French President Nicholas Sarkozy that saw him
    agree to back the Eastern Partnership in exchange for being permitted
    to continue serving as the head of the Mediterranean union. There is
    ongoing disagreement over the most essential element: financing.

    Russia sees the Eastern Partnership as another project aimed
    at competing with its influence in the post-Soviet bloc, and it is
    pushing back in response. Germany, whose foreign policy is spearheaded
    by the extraordinarily Russia-friendly Foreign Minister Frank-Walter
    Steinmeier, has indicated that it will not agree with tripling aid
    to the Eastern Partnership countries by 350 million euros in 2010-1013.

    Germany partially shares Russian fears that were recently expressed
    in an article in the Moscow daily Kommersant: "Moscow, which has
    to a significant degree been the object of the EU's eastern policy
    (especially under the EU presidencies of Germany and France), will
    be thrown overboard under the Czech EU presidency in favor of an EU
    external policy aimed at the East."

    The Czech presidency (which will be followed by a Swedish presidency
    with the same outlook) will face a tough fight in this area because
    the Eastern Partnership truly represents a significant shift in the
    EU's line on Russia. It will mean standing up to Russia in Eastern
    Europe. Or at least offering itself beside Russia as an alternative
    for the post-Soviet countries - a choice between life according to a
    "Russian standard" or a "eurostandard."

    Lubos Palata is the Central and Eastern European editor for the Czech
    daily Lidove noviny and a contributor to the Polish daily Gazeta
    Wyborcza and the German monthly German Times.

    --Boundary_(ID_tPaxWumgehD1XeYv2Ffevg)--
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