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  • Eastern Partnership - Vessel Rocking From Side To Side Even Before I

    EASTERN PARTNERSHIP - VESSEL ROCKING FROM SIDE TO SIDE EVEN BEFORE IT STARTS ITS VOYAGE

    AN.Net
    04.05.2009 15:38 GMT+04:00

    One of the European Union's great strengths is its ability, as a
    prosperous, democratic community of like-minded states, to export
    political and economic stability to its neighbors. This strength
    will be put to the test on Thursday when the EU launches its "Eastern
    Partnership", an initiative to forge closer ties with six ex-Soviet
    states between the bloc's eastern border and Russia, The Financial
    Times reports.

    The Eastern Partnership, conceived by Poland and Sweden in 2007,
    covers Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine. It
    is an improvement on the EU's redundant "European Neighborhood Policy",
    a 2004 project that absurdly grouped eastern European neighbors with
    places such as Libya, Syria and the Palestinian Authority.

    Nonetheless, the Eastern Partnership is a vessel rocking from side
    to side even before it starts its voyage. It appears unlikely that
    Alexander Lukashenko and Vladimir Voronin, presidents of Belarus
    and Moldova respectively, will bother to show up in Prague for the
    launch. Nor, it seems, will this week's summit be graced with the
    presence of all 27 EU national leaders.

    Russia, the ghost at the feast, poses another problem. All six
    ex-Soviet states were under the Kremlin's thumb for most of the 20th
    century. No sooner had the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 than foreign
    policy theorists in Moscow dubbed the area Russia's "near abroad".

    In the age of Vladimir Putin and Dmitry Medvedev, Russia's prime
    minister and president, the preferred concept is that of a "privileged
    sphere of influence". In other words, Russia, like a Siberian guard
    dog, sees the Eastern Partnership as an attempt by some 27-headed
    terrier to encroach on its patch.

    A third issue concerns what is on offer for the six eastern states. On
    the face of things, it is not money. Under current proposals, the
    program will raise EU assistance to the region to a meagre â~B¬600m
    ($796m, £534m) from a previously agreed â~B¬250m in 2010-13.

    However, this criticism is misplaced. Through the International
    Monetary Fund, the EU is helping to arrange emergency loans for
    countries such as Armenia, Belarus and Ukraine to survive the global
    financial crisis and recession. From the recipients' point of view,
    of course, this may reinforce the perception that the IMF, not the
    Eastern Partnership, is where the action is.

    Far more damaging to the EU's image in the six states are the bloc's
    travel policies - what Tomas Valasek, an analyst at the London-based
    Centre for European Reform think-tank, calls "the expensive and
    gratuitously complicated visa application process". When the European
    Commission suggested in December that EU governments should aim to
    remove all visa requirements, protests came from Germany and other
    western European countries.

    As a result, EU leaders dropped the idea in March, replacing it
    with an almost meaningless offer of simplified visa procedures,
    on a case-by-case basis and as a long-term goal.

    The Germans and others take the view that it is inconceivable to extend
    visa-free travel to countries such as Ukraine or Moldova as long as
    they are significant sources of prostitution, drug traffickers and
    illegal workers and migrants. This attitude offends Belarus, which
    believes it has a good record on suppressing illegal migration.

    One alleged weakness of this partnership is that it makes no promises
    - even vague promises - that the six states will one day be welcome
    to join the EU. It is a tempting argument, but there is a risk of
    over-simplification.

    For example, Ukraine sees its future clearly in the EU, but the
    governments of Azerbaijan or Belarus do not. Each of the six states
    presents distinctive challenges. The best course for the EU is to draw
    them all as close as possible by means of free trade and visa-free
    travel, and - in the sole case of Ukraine - to make an explicit
    promise of eventual EU membership.
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