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Disquiet On The Eastern Front

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  • Disquiet On The Eastern Front

    DISQUIET ON THE EASTERN FRONT

    European Voice
    October 3, 2013

    The European Union's plans for closer ties with its eastern neighbours
    are coming under strain because of strong-arm tactics by Russia,
    writes Andrew Gardner

    The European Union is stepping up diplomatic activity in its eastern
    neighbourhood in a bid to reassure Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia of
    its support in the face of anti-EU pressure from Russia.

    This week, member states' ambassadors for security and political
    affairs have been in Georgia and Moldova. Karel De Gucht, the European
    commissioner for trade, spent yesterday in Ukraine (2 October). Last
    week, the members of the Council of Ministers working group for the
    Eastern Partnership visited Ukraine.

    All three countries hope to initial or sign significant trade and
    political agreements with the EU at a summit of the EU's Eastern
    Partnership in Vilnius on 28-29 November.

    Diplomats and officials say that although the increased diplomatic
    activity is partially explained by the need to prepare for the Vilnius
    summit, the visits come in response to a request from Catherine
    Ashton, the EU's foreign policy chief, for member states and the EU
    institutions to increase their visibility in the region. The purpose
    is to reassure each of the countries of the EU's support in the face
    of pressure from Russia.

    Ashton's request follows Russia's success in persuading Armenia to
    announce that it would join the Eurasian Customs Union, rather than
    complete an already negotiated free-trade agreement with the EU. While
    the EU is seeking new ways to revive relations with Armenia, Russia's
    diplomatic coup effectively reduced the activity of the EU's Eastern
    Partnership programme to just three countries. The EU's relations
    with Belarus have barely developed in many years, while relations
    with Azerbaijan have languished, aside from trade in energy (see box).

    Russia has restricted imports both from Ukraine and Moldova - in
    Ukraine's case, explicitly making a link with the country's bid
    for a trade deal with the EU. Russia explained its ban on Moldovan
    wine exports on alleged impurities, but the European Commission
    indicated last week that it believed the move was political. The
    Commission suggested that the EU should open its market to Moldovan
    wines immediately "to ease some of the difficulties the Republic
    of Moldova is experiencing with its wine exports to some of its
    traditional markets".

    Viorel Ursu of the Open Society European Policy Institute in Brussels
    says that "Russian pressure has united theMoldovan political elite
    around the European agenda". In Ukraine too, political parties have
    shown similar unity to date.

    But EU officials are less confident about Georgia, where they perceive
    a change of tone by candidates of various stripes in the presidential
    election campaign, towards advocacy of closer ties with Russia. There
    has not been a corresponding mood shift among the electorate. The
    EU's fear is that Russia has been lobbying or pressuring politicians
    (see page 11).

    An EU official admitted that the EU had not expected Russia to exert
    so much pressure ahead of the Vilnius summit. The EU is now preparing
    a range of scenarios should Russia squeeze its neighbours again,
    but it also intends to reach out to Russia more in the coming weeks.

    The main message that officials and national politicians will
    be asked to convey is that the EU is not engaged in a geopolitical
    battle with Russia. They will argue that the EU's planned trade deals
    with Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia would benefit Russian businesses,
    by improving the business environment.

    Beyond that, the EU is holding out the very long-term prospect of a
    free-trade bloc emerging between the EU and Russia. Russia's President
    Vladimir Putin has himself in the past proposed the "creation of a
    harmonious economic community stretching from Lisbon to Vladivostok".

    While disavowing the notion that the EU is engaged in a geopolitical
    struggle, EU officials also stress the significance of the Vilnius
    summit. One well-placed source told European Voice that "if Vilnius
    comes off, history will judge Vilnius as one of the most important
    milestones in the history of this continent".

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