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ANKARA: Could The South Caucasus Join The EU?

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  • ANKARA: Could The South Caucasus Join The EU?

    COULD THE SOUTH CAUCASUS JOIN THE EU?

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Aug 28 2013

    AMANDA PAUL
    [email protected]

    Today, all three South Caucasus countries, Armenia, Azerbaijan and
    Georgia, aspire to have closer ties with the West through deepening
    cooperation with Euro-Atlantic institutions.

    While we have witnessed with Georgia that NATO membership can be put
    on the table, delivery is far from guaranteed. When it comes to the
    EU, all three countries are taking steps to further integrate both
    politically and economically. With the US having rolled back its
    interest in the region, which may further diminish in the aftermath
    of its Afghanistan withdrawal, the EU is of increasing importance
    for this region, though this was not the case only a short time ago.

    During the 1990s, the South Caucasus hardly figured on the EU's radar,
    with the EU being preoccupied with the bloody Balkan war and the
    changing situation in its Eastern neighborhood following the collapse
    of the Soviet Union. However, over the last decade or so, the EU has
    become increasingly visible. The EU offers an interesting alternative
    to the relations these nations have had with their large and powerful
    neighbors -- Russia, Iran and Turkey, all three of which have left a
    negative footprint one way or another on one or more of the countries.

    The EU has no such baggage, making it well-placed to engage with the
    region -- and with societies in the three states desiring the sort
    of change the EU achieved in Eastern Europe and the Balkans.

    All three countries are part of the EU's European Neighborhood Policy
    and Eastern Partnership. All face many difficult challenges and are
    presently looking for different sorts of relations with the EU.

    Georgia and Armenia are on track to sign association agreements and
    trade agreements at the end of this year. To get to this point they
    have had to carry out EU demanded reforms as well as hold free and
    fair elections. Georgia's end goal is EU membership; Armenia, having a
    particularly close -- but often not very comfortable -- relationship
    with Russia (not least related to security) has been more muted over
    how it sees its future with the EU, although clearly deeper ties with
    Brussels allow Yerevan an alternative to Russia and Iran, with no
    strings attached. Yet while Yerevan continues to cite a multi-vector
    foreign policy in the long term, this is not sustainable. As Armenia
    has moved closer to Brussels, Russia has become more vocal about its
    discontent. Azerbaijan's situation is slightly different, as relations
    remain dominated by energy and with Baku not yet in a position to
    finalize an association agreement. Yet the Azerbaijan-EU relationship
    is increasingly one of interdependence and not simply a case of the
    EU needing Azerbaijani gas; Azerbaijan also needs the EU market.

    Moreover, much of Azerbaijani society is keen for further EU engagement
    both in terms of supporting democracy building and taking on a greater
    role for the solution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Armenia.

    While today none of the countries are in a position to apply for
    EU membership, I believe this day will come. Georgia is already
    requesting a membership perspective. While the EU does not give out
    membership perspectives easily, by doing so it would support the
    European aspirations of Georgian society, thereby making it easier
    for Georgia's political elites to push through difficult reforms.

    Georgia has been the lead actor in the Europeanization of the South
    Caucasus. In due course, this Europeanization will bring increased
    security, prosperity and stability to a region that is presently very
    volatile. Many of the tools the EU used in the Western Balkans could
    also be replicated in the South Caucasus.

    The question as to where the EU's borders will eventually end remains
    unanswered. I believe it may be the South Caucasus; if Georgia and
    then later Armenia and even Azerbaijan adhere to EU criteria they
    should be accepted as candidate countries. After all, where else does
    Georgia belong, if not in Europe? While this end may not be welcome
    to some, particularly Russia, is it not our responsibility to help
    bring security, peace and stability to a small and vulnerable country
    if it has shown the will-power to fulfill the relevant criteria?

    http://www.todayszaman.com/columnistDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=324805

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