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Eastern Partnership: Eurointegration or Drive East?

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  • Eastern Partnership: Eurointegration or Drive East?

    Eastern Partnership: Eurointegration or Drive East?


    en.fondsk.ru
    Ð?rbis Terrarum
    24.03.2009
    Viktor BEGER

    The joint Summit of the EU and the six CIS countries invited to the
    Eastern Partnership will convene on May 7, 2009. No other EU program
    started to materialize as promptly ` the Eastern Partnership has been
    proposed by Poland and Sweden on May 26, 2008, that is, less than a
    year ago.

    Around the Project

    On various occasions Ukrainian politicians said that Ukraine would be
    the locomotive of the program, get a chance to become the regional
    leader, and make efforts to benefit maximally from the EU policies in
    the financial sense. Speaking at a diplomatic rout on January 27
    President Yushchenko said: `In 2009 we will finally sign the
    association agreement to which we have been going for such a long
    time. We are oriented towards practical results. This pertains, first
    of all, to `the four freedoms' - the unrestricted transit for people,
    products, money, and services'. The range of freedoms is available to
    the EU countries. Or, rather, they should have been available to all
    of them - for example, Germany and Austria are going to remove
    restrictions on workforce migration from the 12 EU novices only in
    2011.

    As for the transit of products, money, and services, the energy market
    is a vivid example of the current situation. When the EU countries
    decided to introduce a common energy market in 2006, it transpired
    that the energy sector was overly regulated in 17 of its member
    countries.

    Quite a few problems with Belarus are yet to be resolved to put the
    program fully on track, though the principal position of the EU is
    that the Eastern Partnership must be of equal and non-discriminatory
    character for all of its members.

    Commenting on the positive effect of the Eurointegration since the
    2000, Moldovan President V. Voronin asked: `What is the point of
    creating an alternative CIS under the EU control? It looks like a
    circle around Russia'. The question was asked in February. Early this
    March the answer ic of Moldova K. Mizsei, and the idea was quite
    intriguing ` he opined that the Eastern Partnership would be not a EU
    project by a joint project of the EU and the CIS countries.

    When the Eastern Partnership was discussed by the foreign ministers of
    the EU countries on March 16, the EU openness was given priority over
    the democracy and human rights problems in some of the countries
    invited, as otherwise they would be likely to get drawn into the orbit
    of influence of other centers of force. In particular, Brussels
    decided to suspend the sanctions imposed on Mensk. Estonian foreign
    minister U. Paet said the EU had to give the Belorussian people a
    chance, or otherwise the pressure from Russia would be growing. His
    Finnish colleague A. Stubb remarked that for 12 years the EU had been
    relying on the sanctions policy, and it became clear that the road led
    nowhere, while the recently introduced greater openness resulted in
    changes in Belarus, though not to the desired extent.

    Attention should be paid to the fact that the EU Rule of Law
    initiative is being implemented in the framework of the European
    Neighborhood Policy since May, 2007 in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
    Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. The Eurasian Competitiveness
    Program for Central Asia was also launched in 2009 in the framework of
    the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development ' OECD (18
    of the 30 members of the organization are EU and 26 - NATO
    countries). The objective of the program is to promote the economic
    development and political stability in the countries of Central Asia.

    Europeanization has spread far beyond the confines of Europe. From the
    standpoint of its membership the Eastern Partnership is identical to
    what is termed the security vacuum in the US.

    The security vacuum as interpreted by the Heritage Foundation
    encompasses Georgia, Azerbaijan, Ukraine, and Moldavia, the countries
    which do not associate their future with Russia, whereas NATO and the
    EU keep their doors shut. In January, 2009 the Heritage Foundation exp
    e EU were unable to do anything specifically for the security of
    Georgia, Azerbaijan, Ukraine, and Moldavia. The situation is described
    as the security vacuum. On the one hand, the countries do not want to
    join the organizations led by Russia, on the other ` they are denied
    integration into other blocs (F. Starr).

    Since the Eurointegration of the countries invited to the Eastern
    Partnership is closely related to the Euro-Atlantic integration, the
    claim made by former Czech President V. Havel that upon NATO's being
    joined by Ukraine and Belarus its border would be identical to that
    between Russia and the two countries can be seen in a new
    light. Essentially, Havel deepened the idea concerning Russia once
    expressed by Czech Foreign Minister K. Schwarzenberg - that in certain
    cases a red line should be drawn past which the EU should make no
    concessions.

    It is highly indicative that the Ukraine ` NATO 2009 Plan which
    combines skillfully the European and Euro-Atlantic integration in no
    way mentions Ukraine's involvement in the Eastern Partnership.

    The arrangements preceding the creation of the Eastern Partnership
    reveal another important aspect of the matter ` all the programs are
    tightly inter-related, but `the level of the political interaction'
    and the results of `the energy security efforts' are likely not to
    measure up to the EU expectations related to Europe's `eastern and
    southern drive' (the US Department of State has a remarkable ability
    to invent names for geopolitical offensives) unless the energy-rich
    Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan participate.

    The Meaning of the Eastern Partnership for Ukraine

    The Eastern Partnership is planned as an informal alliance having no
    permanent administration, with two summits to be held annually. Its
    members are offered the opportunity to move on towards the EU
    independently so that the process would not be impeded by the
    differences in their individual development levels. The key spheres of
    the cooperation are democracy, good governance and sta n with the EU,
    the energy security, and the contacts between citizens on the
    individual level. Brussels reiterates that the EU is not going to act
    as a donor regardless of circumstances and that the economic
    assistance to the Eastern partners will be contingent on their
    compliance with their obligations, the rates of progress in individual
    countries, and several dozen Eurointegration progress indicators, as
    well as on the state of the cooperation in certain sectors of the
    economy.

    The relations between the EU and the partners will be regulated by
    bilateral agreements. The loudest measures are the visa regime
    liberalization and the prospects for visa-free travel in the long run,
    the countries' joining the energy cooperation treaty or signing
    memorandums on energy security, the creation of free trade zones
    jointly by the EU and the partners or ` even better ` among the
    Eastern partners.

    The intensity of the efforts aimed at formulating the Eastern
    Partnership program was due to the urgency of the energy security
    problems faced by the EU, the financial crisis, and the need to
    integrate the revenues generated by the transfer of manufacturing to
    non-EU countries rather than to the interest in advancing democracy,
    the rule of law, and the respect for human rights. The program is
    synchronized with the evolution of the US policy concerning the EU and
    the post-Soviet Republics.

    On January 12, 2009 the EU Council of Ministers for Transportation,
    Communications, and Energy examined urgently the current state of the
    European gas supply. On January 26 the EU Council of Ministers for
    General Issues made specific decisions, planning to overhaul the whole
    foreign strategy in the energy sphere.

    The priorities set (and backed by a Euro 3/5 bn budget confirmed by
    the European Parliament in March-April) included the Southern gas
    corridor, the network of natural gas liquefaction terminals, the
    linking of the Baltic region to the energy networks of West Europe,
    the Mediterranean energy ring, the North-South energy axis (the in

    c power networks of Central and South East Europe), and the offshore
    energy network in the North Sea (the industrial-scale wind energy
    production).

    The Budapest Summit focused on Nabucco convened on January 26 (the
    Southern energy corridor). The list of participating countries
    included Turkey, Germany, Austria, Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, the US,
    Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Iraq, Egypt, and Georgia.

    Attempts to attract Russia to Nabucco failed and on March 16 Gazprom
    turned down the offer to join the project.

    It is well-known that not the EU but the US is credited with launching
    the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzerum pipelines. The EU
    will use its negotiating powers to help organize the summit on the
    Trans-Caspian pipeline. Both the availability of the fuel for the
    pipelines and the control over Nabucco depend on the extent to which
    the EU and the US can influence the suppliers and transiters of the
    energy resources. The EU will not deal with the problem of supplies
    from Iran, which seems to be through with laying the groundwork for
    the cooperation with India and China (a gas deal between Iran and
    China was penned a few days ago).

    There are no coincidences in politics. The EU will discuss the future
    of Nabucco in Prague on May 8 ` the next day after the meeting on the
    Eastern Partnership - with representatives of Georgia, Kazakhstan, and
    Turkey attending the meeting.

    What is being offered to the Eastern Partnership countries in terms of
    the energy security? They are proposed to sign long-term treaties with
    the EU on energy supplies and transit, to integrate their energy
    infrastructures on the regional level, to integrate the energy markets
    of Ukraine and the EU upon the modernization of the oil and gas
    network, to make the energy sector of Azerbaijan compatible with that
    of the EU while integrating the corresponding infrastructures, to
    reform Belorussia's energy sector and to organize the energy transit
    cooperation between the latter and the EU.

    Neither the GUAM aspirations nor the ius, and Kyiv energy summits
    aimed at creating the Baltic-Black Sea-Caspian energy space and the
    Eurasian oil transit corridor are reflected in the above. Could it be
    because the initiatives were lobbied by the US, Poland, and Lithuania,
    and Yushchenko was nominated as the key figure to promote them? Or,
    perhaps, the reason is that when the summit held in November, 2008 in
    Baku was attended by the leaders of Azerbaijan, Poland, Lithuania,
    Latvia, Estonia, Ukraine and the delegations from Greece, Bulgaria,
    Italy, Turkey, Hungary, Switzerland, the US, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan,
    Kazakhstan, and the European Commission, the forum's declaration was
    endorsed by everybody except for Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, and only
    Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Lithuania, Turkey, and Poland agreed to
    cooperate in the framework of the Eurasian oil transit corridor?

    Clearly the EU is not inclined to create the transit corridor
    bisecting Europe along the meridian or the East European regional
    metrology center. It is not in the interests of the EU to construct a
    regional energy pump aimed not so much at ensuring Europe's own energy
    security as at economically benefiting Ukraine, Belarus, Poland,
    Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia. In any case the passage on the
    importance of the Odessa-Brody-Gdansk pipeline and the support for its
    construction was dropped from the EU communique on the Eastern
    Partnership.

    The modernization of Ukraine's gas transit network seems to be the
    country's only project related to the EU energy security which has a
    chance to survive. Clarity can be expected after the March 23 Brussels
    conference on investments in the modernization of the Ukrainian gas
    pipelines. Will the pragmatic EU dish out Euro 2.5 ` 5 bn for the
    cause? This is likely under the condition erased from EU communique on
    the Eastern Partnership that pipelines of the Eastern Partnership
    countries should be jointly managed or owned by suppliers, transiters,
    and buyers of the energy resources.

    Conclusions

    The Eastern Partnership agenda will be domin U of Ukraine, Moldavia,
    Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Belarus but by passing the control
    over the resources of the countries to the EU. The program of the
    Eastern Partnership shows that the EU intends to focus on its own
    problems related to energy security, labor market, and the benefits of
    free trade zones based on the sectoral cooperation with particular
    countries.

    The Eastern partners will ` under certain circumstances ` increasingly
    push for the `old Europe's' meeting their demands. The situation plays
    in the hands of the US, opening to it the opportunity to bisect Europe
    along the meridian and to create centers of influence over the EU,
    mainly in the energy sphere. The US will also be able to take
    advantage of the situation to downscale the cooperation between the EU
    and Russia and to minimize Russia's influence in the post-Soviet space
    both in Europe and in Asia.

    The plans of the current Ukrainian administration to turn Ukraine into
    a regional leader and a political, military or some other center and
    to put to work the country's strategic geopolitical location originate
    not so much from the hope to boost its own development as from their
    readiness to subordinate it to other players. The implementation of
    the plans will irreversibly convert Ukraine into an instrument of the
    US strategy in Eurasia.
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