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Political Expert: Armenia Is Not Short Of Supporters In EU

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  • Political Expert: Armenia Is Not Short Of Supporters In EU

    POLITICAL EXPERT: ARMENIA IS NOT SHORT OF SUPPORTERS IN EU

    arminfo
    Wednesday, January 25, 14:40

    Armenia is not short of supporters in the European Union thanks
    to both the Diaspora organizations and other ways to involve EU
    institutions. The country's historical and cultural image looks
    relatively favorable in Europe. Marat Terterov, Director of the
    European Geopolitical Forum, political expert (Brussels), said in an
    on-line interview with ArmInfo.

    Interviews with experts and political figures from various countries
    for Armenian, Azerbaijani and Georgian mass media on the relevant
    problems of security and NATO's role in their resolution are organized
    within the project "Security of South Caucasus and NATO". The project
    of the "Region" Research Center (Armenia) is supported by the NATO
    Headquarters Public Diplomacy Division (Brussels).

    "As part of the Yerevan-Brussels Agreement of Partnership and
    Cooperation, Armenia has an opportunity to use various financial
    and other assistance projects coordinated by Brussels. EU is trying
    to more integrate Armenia into the European institutional space
    through the Association Agreement, documents on free trade or other
    instruments. I suppose these forms of cooperation will be continued,
    for most of these projects are part of compulsory inter-governmental
    agreements," Terterov said. The political expert believes that
    crisis in the Eurozone seriously affects the EU countries rather than
    their relations with the countries bordering with the Caucasus. It
    will have much serious impact on the EU than the countries like
    Armenia. Nevertheless, the crisis affects general sentiments in
    Brussels and perspectives leading the policy bodies in Brussels to
    certain pessimism. This means, he said, that Brussels will no longer
    try to increase the budget or establish new forms of institutional
    cooperation in the Caucasus. "I don't think, however, that the crisis
    will have any direct impact on the EU Eastern Partnership Project.

    Revision of the fiscal aid scales to the six partner-states involved
    in the Project is not possible either. The aid is already being paid
    by donor-states. But the crisis may have a negative impact in future,"
    Terterov said.

    The EU Eastern Partnership Project was initiated by Poland and
    Sweden and approved by 27 countries of EU at a summit in Brussels
    in December 2008. The program envisages considerable raising of the
    level of political cooperation, wide integration of former Soviet
    republics Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, Moldavia, Belarus and Ukraine
    into EU economy, increasing volumes of financial support to them and
    strengthening energy security. The program also envisages allocation
    of 600 mln EUR to these 6 countries by 2013. The Constituent Summit
    of the EPP was held on may 7 2009 in Prague.

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