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EU/Russia: Union Wants To Prevent Another Crisis With Moscow

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  • EU/Russia: Union Wants To Prevent Another Crisis With Moscow

    EU/RUSSIA : UNION WANTS TO PREVENT ANOTHER CRISIS WITH MOSCOW

    European Report
    September 9, 2008

    Drawing the first lessons from the Georgian crisis, the EU wants to
    strengthen its presence on its oriental border and in the Caucasus
    in order to prevent a new Russian offensive. During their informal
    Council (Gymnich), on 6 September in Avignon, EU foreign ministers have
    expressed the need for Europe to anticipate the next crisis, as Moscow
    is increasing its pressure in the region. "The EU must be ready to
    prevent another crisis," said Bernard Kouchner, the French minister in
    charge of the EU Presidency. Ministers also gave unanimous support to
    an international inquiry to determine responsibilities in the Georgian
    crisis, as proposed by German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

    In Avignon, at least ten ministers have expressed the need for Europe
    to be more present in the region in order to avoid the reopening
    of frozen conflicts'. They proposed to sharpen Europe's permanent
    diplomatic presence in the region and multiply high level visits there
    in order to balance Russia's influence. The objective is to have a
    more proactive strategy to prevent Moscow from imposing its view in
    some hotspots, such as Nagorno-Karabakh or Transnistria. "We need a
    global approach to the region: we should address all the different
    crises together rather than in isolation," said Alexander Stubb, the
    foreign minister of Finland in charge of the OSCE Presidency. The
    distribution of Russian passports in Crimea or Moscow's proactive
    policy in Moldova concern Europeans.

    Against this backdrop, the EU has decided to speed up its efforts to
    set up an Oriental partnership', as proposed by Poland and Sweden last
    spring, in response to the French Mediterranean Union plan. Benita
    Ferrero-Waldner, the European commissioner for external relations,
    will present a first set of proposals during the autumn instead of
    spring 2009, as it was originally planned.

    The EU will soon appoint a special envoy for Georgia but it is
    still reflecting on the profile of this new actor. Some suggest the
    appointment of a high profile figure such as former German Foreign
    Minister Joschka Fischer, while others would prefer a more diplomatic'
    figure that would leave more influence to Javier Solana, the EU's
    diplomatic chief.

    The European Commission is also preparing an aid package to support
    the reconstruction of Georgia. It will focus on rebuilding houses
    of civilians who fled from their home during the conflict, said
    Ferrero-Waldner. She said that destruction was less severe than first
    thought. In 2008, the Commission's financial support to Georgia will
    amount to E100 million, according to the commissioner. "We are not
    going to allow Georgia to be strangled economically," warned David
    Miliband, the UK's foreign secretary.

    However, the meeting in Avignon confirmed that sharp differences remain
    among member states over the interpretation of the Georgian crisis and
    what the EU's strategy should be towards Russia. Several countries,
    led by the Baltic states, called for a tougher line against Moscow,
    recalling that Georgian villages "were still burning at the time we
    speak". They argued that the opposition to Georgia's NATO membership,
    expressed by France and Germany last spring during the summit of the
    Atlantic Alliance in Bucharest, had given a free hand to Moscow in
    the region. "Discussions were frank, sometime even harsh," admitted
    Kouchner at the end of the Gymnich. But several member states, such
    as Italy, Portugal, Greece or Luxembourg, insisted on the need to
    keep communication channels open with Moscow. "We must normalise
    our relations with Russia as soon as possible," said Luis Amado,
    the Portuguese minister.

    But ministers were keen on insisting publicly on their unity, bearing
    in mind that their differences would further undermine Europe's
    diplomatic influence. "Nobody talked about sanctions against Russia,"
    said Jean Asselborn, the foreign minister of Luxembourg. Drawing
    lessons from the past, one minister underlined the need to avoid the
    repetition of the scenario of the Iraqi crisis in 2003 when Europe
    had been totally sidelined because of its internal divisions. "We
    have committed ourselves to maintaining European unity," said Kouchner.
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