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Tbilisi: Evaluating EU Policies In South Caucasus

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  • Tbilisi: Evaluating EU Policies In South Caucasus

    OP-ED: EVALUATING EU POLICIES IN SOUTH CAUCASUS

    Civil Georgia, Georgia
    March 13 2015

    Jos Boonstra and Laure Delcour / 13 Mar.'15 / 16:47

    The European Union (EU) is reviewing its European Neighbourhood Policy
    (ENP), launched in 2003 and last reviewed in 2011. The Arab spring
    and continued unrest in several of Europe's southern neighbours, plus
    recent EU-Russia tensions over Ukraine, demand a serious overhaul of EU
    policies in its neighbourhood. Even though a complete change of course
    is unlikely, through a recent 'green paper' the European Commission
    has launched a consultation - both in-house and externally - about
    the ENP, including its policy for the six East European and Caucasus
    countries - the Eastern Partnership (EaP) - with a view to reviewing
    'the principles on which the policy is based as well as its scope and
    how its instruments should be used'. This article will focus on the
    EU's relations with the three South Caucasus countries of Armenia,
    Azerbaijan and Georgia.

    Time for a Reality Check

    Launched in 2009, the EaP has offered new opportunities for South
    Caucasus countries to develop their relationship with the EU. On a
    bilateral basis, the main accomplishment of the EaP in the region has
    been the conclusion of an Association Agreement (AA) including a Deep
    and Comprehensive Free-Trade Areas (DCFTA) with Georgia. Moreover,
    all three countries are aiming for (albeit at different speeds) visa
    liberalisation, which also requires substantial reforms in key areas
    such as migration management or the fight against corruption.

    With the EaP, the EU has emerged in the South Caucasus as an agent
    for domestic change (at least in Georgia, to some degree in Armenia
    and to a much lesser extent in Azerbaijan). But EU-inspired change
    has its limits, as the EU is only as influential as South Caucasus
    states allow it to be. Reforms often remain shallow and local elites
    carefully calculate the high short-term costs against longer-term (and
    vaguer) benefits. At the same time, by making its AA/DCFTA offer the
    main bilateral 'take-it-or leave-it' package, the EU has put itself
    in a difficult situation. So far, no plan B has been developed for
    countries that seek deeper relations with the EU but not AA or DCFTA.

    The EaP's multilateral track is also in need of revision as it is
    incapable of handling the growing differences between South Caucasus
    countries in their relationships with the EU. At the political level,
    the work of the multilateral track is affected by regional tensions and
    conflicts. For instance, the work of the EaP's parliamentary dimension
    (Euronest) has often been paralysed by divergences between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan. Standard bilateral European Parliament Delegations with
    South Caucasus (or East European) countries would be more practical
    as is already the case with Moldova, Ukraine and soon Georgia.

    At the technical level, thematic 'platforms' are mainly EU-driven
    and their content primarily reflects EU concerns. The platform on
    economic integration is a blatant example of this. The emphasis
    on approximation with EU trade regulations is relevant to Georgia,
    but less so to Armenia and Azerbaijan. Other platforms (for example,
    on democracy, good governance, and stability) also inspire uneven
    interest among the three partners.

    However, the multilateral track does offer a useful framework for
    representatives of the three EU partners to meet. Regional tensions
    and conflicts feed into high-level meetings, but thematic platforms
    and panels provide fora where officials from Armenia, Azerbaijan,
    Georgia and East European states can discuss their respective reform
    experiences. In addition, the non-governmental formats (the Civil
    Society Forum, the Business Forum) have fostered contacts between
    South Caucasian societies. Meanwhile, the EaP's six flagship projects
    - from integrated border management to environmental governance -
    need careful evaluation. Fruitful projects should be continued and
    strengthened, while those that have not produced results after five
    years should be either reformed or scrapped.

    The Way Ahead

    It is in the EU's interest that the Caucasus becomes a stable and
    democratic region. But the EU has little influence to make this happen
    without two currently missing ingredients: a much more substantial
    engagement on security challenges and a clear finalite for its Eastern
    partners. The Russian authoritarian model will keep traction as it
    pretends to solve the short-term worries of some of these states
    and to safeguard the incumbent regimes. At the very least, the EU
    should be ready to fully support those countries that do opt for
    in-depth political and economic reforms. Such an approach would not
    prevent the EU from setting democracy and human rights benchmarks
    with authoritarian states such as Azerbaijan.

    The EU should also increasingly focus on linking EU member-state
    societies to those of the South Caucasus. This requires shifting
    its policy paradigm from narrow legal and technical approximation to
    broader societal integration, for instance through people-to-people
    contacts. Europe's attractiveness remains high - also in Armenia
    and Azerbaijan - and in the long run will be more influential than
    short-sighted Russian propaganda. Civil society cooperation, visa
    liberalisation policies, and support to educational exchanges have
    been overshadowed by the EU's focus on AA/DCFTA negotiations. However,
    societal links should be turned into both a key priority in current
    relations and a basis for a deeper long-term partnership.

    The EaP sought to help stabilise the EU's South Caucasus neighbours
    but lacked a security component from the outset. Neither a harder
    security posture from the EU, nor success in settling protracted
    conflicts in the South Caucasus (without Russian involvement and
    agreement), are on the table. The current EU engagement in security
    matters is largely confined to the Common Security and Defence
    Policy (CSDP) border monitoring mission in Georgia (EUMM) and the
    participation of an EU Special Representative in the Geneva talks
    between Georgia and Russia. Besides stepping up EU engagement through
    NATO and the Organisation for Security Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
    at the Minsk talks concerning Nagorno-Karabakh, there is little more
    the EU can do. Specific Caucasus security strategies by the EU would
    seem overambitious since member states - for a variety of reasons -
    will likely not support heavier involvement in the region's security.

    Nonetheless, the region's protracted conflicts remain volatile and
    inflammable.

    However, the EU could more strongly support the reform of the
    security sectors of those countries willing to engage, for instance
    by assisting in reforming partners' police, border guards, judicial
    systems, and democratic oversight mechanisms. This should be possible
    in Georgia (and already undertaken to some degree), and it could be
    worthwhile to investigate such options with Armenia and Azerbaijan,
    perhaps by linking it to confidence building measures between both
    adversaries. Furthermore, there are elements of security sector
    reform (SSR) in the EU's visa liberalisation policies with Caucasus
    countries as these affect some aspects of the police, border guards
    and judicial systems; this can potentially be an entry point for
    broader SSR engagement.

    The EU cannot fix the Caucasus region, but it can have a positive
    bearing on its development, provided that it can design a clearer and
    firmer long-term vision. The EU should seek to play a responsible and
    more active security role in the South Caucasus by being prepared
    for further problematic relations with Russia, and being ready to
    cope with a shifting, complex, and uncertain domestic and regional
    environment. Also, the EU will need to adopt a more flexible bilateral
    approach complemented by renewed multilateral cooperation formats
    via the EaP. Last but certainly not least, given its attractiveness
    to South Caucasus societies, the EU should place societies and
    people-to-people contacts at the core of its policies in all three
    countries.

    This article is based on a longer document entitled 'A broken region:
    Evaluating EU policies in the South Caucasus', FRIDE Policy Brief 193
    (28 January 2015), published under the Cascade project.

    About the authors: Jos Boonstra is head of the Eastern Europe,
    Caucasus and Central Asia programme at FRIDE Laure Delcour is
    scientific coordinator and research fellow of the EU FP7 Cascade
    project at the Fondation Maison des Sciences de l'Homme

    http://www.civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=28128

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