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In 'Crisis Of Multiple Crises,' Is EU Doing Too Little To Help Eastern Neighbors?

In Ukraine, Andrew Wilson says, the economic crisis makes the country's political crisis worse, while the political crisis makes it very difficult to summon the will to implement the necessary measures demanded by the IMF to deal with the crisis.

June 17, 2009
It has been just over a month since the European Union attempted to draw six post-Soviet neighbors -- Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Armenia -- closer to its orbit with its Eastern Partnership program. But a new report by the European Council on Foreign Relations blasts the EU for what it calls its "complacent" and "long-term" strategy in the region, and warns that without fast action to engage the eastern neighbors, Europe could risk another "August surprise" with Russia -- in Moldova, Ukraine, or once again in Georgia. Andrew Wilson, a coauthor of the report, spoke to RFE/RL correspondent Ahto Lobjakas from London.

Andrew Wilson
RFE/RL: In your report, you suggest that the EU appoint a political troubleshooter for Ukraine. Is it possible that there is such a figure who could make a difference in Ukraine's ongoing political crisis?

Andrew Wilson:
Nobody can help the Ukrainians if they don't want to help themselves. There have been previous attempts to broker a political settlement by outsiders, including by representatives of the European People's Party. So ultimately, if the Ukrainians don't cooperate with or listen to a mission, then so be it. But the evidence is, I think, that they would. It certainly worked in 2004.

But of course it has to be a mission with a high enough profile, led by a current or former politician with sufficient prestige, and they have to arrive with sticks and carrots. But Ukraine still needs a package of economic assistance, most vitally. It needn't necessarily be on the table, but Ukraine also has problems with hosting the 2012 soccer tournament, and of course it wants to build on the March agreement on upgrading its pipeline system.

RFE/RL: Your report says efforts to resolve the tensions between Moscow and Tbilisi have to be stepped up, and that monitoring efforts should be a part of that. But the EU's monitoring mission, as it stands, is confined to the Georgian side. Is it possible that a restricted EU presence will only end up enforcing the status quo?

Wilson:
Even though the mission isn't particularly active, and its geographical reach is extremely limited, it is a deterrent to renewed military action by both sides, or either side. It's not a perfect deterrent, but the mere fact of the mission's presence would be a factor in anybody's calculation.

Moreover, if Russia has effectively vetoed the UNOMIG mission in Abkhazia -- because of a long-standing argument about the words "in Georgia" in the name of the mission -- and will soon have to withdraw from Abkhazia, then the international presence in Georgia is getting smaller when it needs to be at least stable or getting bigger.

Now, the report didn't argue that the mission is a success in terms of activism or crisis management. It's not that type of mission. But its simple presence is an advantage of sorts.

RFE/RL: What kind of realistic leverage does the EU still have in terms of dealing with Russia's stance on Abkhazia and South Ossetia?

Wilson:
The EU has some general leverage, not that it necessarily uses it well. And there are some particular factors specific to the region.

The first and most important general point is that I think there are signs that Russia -- although it has no intention whatsoever of rescinding its recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia -- is somewhat nervous of the precedent that that recognition set for the rest of the region. So it may be prepared to row back -- not necessarily in Abkhazia or South Ossetia, but in other places.

Russia wants to get its proposals on a new European security architecture off the ground. That requires EU cooperation.

Abkhazia and South Ossetia themselves are, of course, very different in terms of patterns of local incentives. Abkhaz nationalism was traditionally anti-Georgian, but there are some signs that the locals are becoming uneasy with the prospect of becoming a Russian oblast or republic in the longer term, whereas of course that factor isn't really present in South Ossetia.

And the Abkhaz obviously wish to develop their relations with Turkey and with the diaspora in Turkey, some of whom are wealthy and could play a positive role in building investment. And the fate of the nearby Sochi Olympics could be decided in and around Abkhazia. First in terms of the general politics of the Olympics, and the potential for a boycott. And secondly in terms of practicalities of preparation, that the Sochi Olympic organizers are taking a lot of stone from Abkhaz beaches and riverbeds, and there's kind of local unease and even opposition to that.

So there are both general and particular factors that the EU can use. But of course that isn't the same thing as saying it has a strong position on the ground. Russia's position is strong to the extent of de facto control.

RFE/RL: Do you think the declaration adopted [June 15] by EU foreign ministers that promises Moldova talks on an association agreement in return for a series of reforms is enough to ensure that Moldova's future will be with Europe, not with Russia?

Wilson:
Hmm. Well, here you have quite a difficult process to manage over the next couple of months. Elections are declared for July 29. Voronin, it seems, wants quite a specific bargain -- in terms of some of the political changes suggested by the EU, he would probably want movement toward visa-free. Whereas the EU is offering general progress on the association agreement, with much less specific wording on visa-free travel.

The question of an economic package, though, may be key, with the Moldovan economy both suffering badly and likely to be much more of an issue in these upcoming elections than it was in the spring, given that so much of the economic pain was postponed until after the elections. Plus Voronin may rock the boat by if he carries on depicting the opposition as a threat to stability and national identity.

Russia, of course, was extremely intimate with Voronin, and offered him a lot of political resources in the last election and can be expected to do so again. The aim should be to get Moldova to row back from the kind of extreme crackdown that it had been imposing in the month or so after the election.

We have to be realistic. Moldova isn't sort of going to move West overnight. I mean the danger really is forestalling a more decisive tilt toward Russia. But again, the EU has cards to play if it plays them well.

RFE/RL: The report puts a lot of emphasis on the danger of the failed economies in the neighborhood. Are the roots of these problems really economic, or are they more fundamentally political?

Wilson:
The neighborhood's problem is the confluence of the two. Moldova is a classic example. The original crisis after the original elections this year was, of course, entirely political -- about the conduct of the elections themselves. But the crisis has since developed an economic aspect.

In Ukraine, it's chicken and egg. The economic crisis makes the political crisis worse; the political crisis makes it very difficult to summon the will to implement the necessary measures demanded by the IMF to deal with the crisis on their terms.

Belarus arguably is the opposite of Moldova -- the economic problems came first. It's been Belarus's increasingly desperate need for resources and hard cash that has prompted its foreign policy overtures to the EU.

So each state is different, but what is common to the whole region is a crisis of multiple crises -- I mean, you have ongoing crises of weak statehood, the global financial crisis, crises caused by Russian pressure. So what's unique to the neighborhood is the way that those problems very often interact.

RFE/RL: You say the EU should work with Russia and support its security architecture proposals. But do you not worry that such statements may spark worries in Tbilisi and Chisinau that the EU is selling out and may ultimately abandon its support for the principle of territorial integrity and other issues that are so important to the Eastern neighbors?

Wilson:
Because of the interaction of all these problems, it will take great skill to combine a variety of approaches to solve them. To an extent, the EU has to cooperate with Russia in terms of practical politics, in terms of what can be negotiated through the EU's decision making.

And of course the [Eastern Partnership] region is totally unlike the accession states of the 1990s. Russia is a power in the region, like it or not. Russia uses that power for good and ill. The EU should concentrate on opposing the occasions when Russia's role is punitive or destructive.

There is also a problem with the Obama administration's current "reset" politics, that politicians in Eastern Europe think that there is a danger of policies being decided over their heads, via some kind of grand bargain between the West and Russia, or via this European security treaty process. That's why we recommended a listening tour of the region [when Sweden assumes the EU presidency in July].

I mean, that would have many virtues in terms of basic political intention, in terms of political theater, as it were. But it would also help feed the security concerns of the six Eastern neighborhood states into this debate about [Russian President Dmitry] Medvedev's so far very broad but potentially interesting security treaty proposals.

And after all, most of the thorny issues and potential stumbling blocks in the EU-Russia relationship are in Eastern Europe. So there can't be a good relationship unless those problems are solved, and they can only be solved via greater Eastern European participation in the process.
This forum has been closed.
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Comments page 1 of 2
by: Luke from: Canada
June 29, 2009 00:16
I believe the European Union should offer weak democracy countries in Europe (former Soviet Republics) a chance to be come a free, and prosperous country.

The modern day Russia is no different from the old USSR, still the old former communist politicians in government.

Moldova, Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia should be offered membership to the EU. Russia still interferes with internal affairs despite the fact they are independent with some pro western governments with exception of Belarus. The "Eastern Partnership" does not offer the democratic governments of Moldova, Ukraine, Georgia an incentive to continue on a path of more open democracy.

by: Konstantin from: Los Angeles
June 28, 2009 23:47
Read, "Jo", Stalin's speach in Postsdam,
Instead of who grabb what - "Opa! Opa!",
Croatia for Georgian lands, for Europa?
Georgian land for breed Russians damn?
Do you think, "Jo", we all are dupas?

Konstantin.

by: Konstantin from: Los Angeles
June 27, 2009 01:37
Here is coming from US J., "Opa! Opa!",
Saving from Stalin's speach all Europa!
Stalin's last speach-stand of "Postsdam",
Against Russ-Brit annexing Europe, damn,
And wait "Nurberg", Russian SS, dupa!

Konstantin.

by: alaverdi
June 26, 2009 19:27
Joseph Jughashvili was born in Georgia, but he became Stalin In Russia.
Georgia has no fault in Joseph's birth But Russia has full responsibility promoting the man of cruel intention to highest position in the country.
Georgia did not promote Lenin, Stalin & Putin - Russia did.

by: J from: US
June 20, 2009 16:22
Waste of money and effort. It would be logical for EU to focus on the Balkans (Serbia, Croatia) rather than far off lands like Georgia. Nothing says Europe like Joseph Jughashvili-Stalin!

by: Zoltan from: Hungary
June 20, 2009 11:22
The EU and the whole idea of Eastern Partnership will not prevail until the EU is undetermined to pledge these states membership.

There is no other solution. There is no second class membership in pseudo organizations such as the Estarn Partnership.

Europe is only one and a country being European should be inside the EU.

The EU must acknowledge their aspirations and offer them membership if they do their homwork and qualifie and become eligible for membership.

This is a long way in case of Hungary it was 14 years. This means Ukraine and other eastern countries could join the bloc not sooner than 2020. Then why do we afraid of such a futuristic pledge?

by: Konstantin from: Los Angeles
June 18, 2009 19:39
First of all, Sephia Karta,
(Not necessary because of name
"Kortu"), truth burned and maimed,
Quin let Khrutchev the New Charter:

Burn all History books, print a lie,
Smear "bad" Stalin and non-Russians,
Glory to "good" Russia and Prussia,
Floating World with Imperial spies.

It is why many, like you, wander -
What this guys, that hiding under,
Are talking about? Putin's voices?
No truth but little hiding mouses?

Europeans are not same in the West,
They also different - it's a bluff,
By German Cousin Emperors to quest
For World domination, a nazi staff.

Built once by the ethnic Georgian
Iberians, married local Europeans,
Joined after the North Caucasians
And Georgia, and Fins and Baltics,
Ukraine came, Skifians-Sarmatians.

Who is more European than Ukraine,
And Georgia, and Baltics and Fins?
Lying Russia aggressors-hulligans?
There is less difference among us,
Than us and the Russian barbarians.

One thing is true, human condidtion
Deteriate when Russia squze nations
As Russia brings to CIS abomination,
CIS could face the Russian invasion.

If you betray us, you are the next!

Konstantin.

by: CJP from: Saskatoon, Canada
June 18, 2009 01:42
Much of this interview is correct, however, again it must be stressed that the EU must acutally recognize Ukraine, Georga, etc..as European. The lack of this has been a problem for years. The EU always remains just slightly abrest from these regions because Ukraine, Georgia,Belarus etc..are viewed as regions with values and norms that are not European. Its true they may be slightly different, however, these regions and people are European. Why not use a simple carrot that states, we welcome you in Europe as Europeans; work to build stable relationships from this point.

by: Jeff Mowatt from: UK
June 17, 2009 17:07
They had an opportunity

http://www.european-citizens-consultations.eu/uk/proposal/2012

by: sephia karta from: Padua, Italy
June 17, 2009 10:57
What a pleasure to read an interview with someone who understands the subtleties involved in all these processes.
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