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  • How Much Can The EU Expand?

    HOW MUCH CAN THE EU EXPAND?
    Andrei Konurov

    en.fondsk.ru
    12.12.2008

    It is not necessarily true that no news is good news. The same
    day foreign ministers of NATO countries made the final decision
    to postpone extending the NATO membership plan to Georgia and
    Ukraine the European Commission unveiled the Eastern Partnership
    Project. Currently the initiative proposed by Poland and Sweden in
    March, 2008 is materializing at a fast pace. No doubt, the motivation
    for the rush largely stems from the war in South Ossetia, and Europe
    is quite open about this aspect of the matter.

    The camp of Ukrainian President V. Yushchenko must be happy about
    the developments. Some media already feature comments claiming that
    the Eastern Partnership will replace the European Neighborhood Policy
    allegedly regarded as a failure by the EU and that the new partnership
    will be much broader in terms of its proportions and future. The
    opinion, though, is likely to reflect the wishful thinking not
    uncommon among the media brethren. The European Commission indicated
    clearly that the Eastern Partnership is an integral part of the
    same old European Neighborhood Policy and any steps to be made in
    the framework of the former entirely fit within the confines of the
    latter. Essentially, the same things are given new names, but even
    this is not the core of the matter.

    The thrust of the European Commission's new document is that for
    the post-Soviet Republics - Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, Belarus,
    Ukraine, and Moldova - the Eastern Partnership is by no means going
    to be a stepping stone to the EU membership. At the moment, the EU
    has no unfilled vacancies, obviously.

    Presenting the plan European Commission President José Manuel
    Barroso said unequivocally that at present the EU is not in the
    position to promise admission to anybody. Though the document
    reads that the Eastern partners got drawn closer to the EU thanks
    to a series of its successful expansions, the configuration which
    emerged as the result of the expansions is loaded with problems. The
    EU grew into a heterogeneous alliance of 27 countries having widely
    varying socioeconomic development levels, and in its current shape
    it clearly lacks cohesion. New expansions, if any, are going to be
    highly selective. No expansions for their own sake will follow in
    the foreseeable future. For example, though Turkey and Croatia are
    official EU candidates, their cases remain undecided. Brussels does
    not quite perceive the Balkan Slavs as absolute Europeans and harbors
    strong reservations about Turkey.

    --Boundary_(ID_bf+wnbgduT7RD7SXUy0WWg)--
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