Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

European Union: Wider still and wider

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • European Union: Wider still and wider

    European Union: Wider still and wider

    The Guardian - United Kingdom; Jun 15, 2005

    The vision of a European Union smoothly spreading its blessings and
    extending its membership to a larger and larger circle of nations has
    been one of the casualties of the French and Dutch referendums. The
    prospect of an ultimate union of up to 40 nations, spreading perhaps
    as far as the Caucasus, is now clouded, with European governments so
    timorous about expansion that they appear to have agreed to excise
    all but the vaguest mention of it from the joint statement they will
    produce at the end of this week's summit. Divided though they were
    over expansion, they had neverthless agreed on it sufficiently to
    alienate a public opinion in most of the older member states which
    wanted either to proceed with it more slowly or not to embrace it at
    all. Membership for Turkey, in particular, may have been an issue
    which tipped the balance for voters in France and the Netherlands.
    European leaders are now inevitably going to have to reassess their
    plans and timetable for negotations with prospective new members.

    There are difficulties in dealing with all of the three very
    different categories of potential members, not least because in each
    of them a quite different array of interests and prejudices operates.
    The easiest in principle is south-eastern Europe, with Romania and
    Bulgaria already due to join in 2007, Croatia waiting hopefully, and
    the other Yugoslav successor states expected ultimately to follow.
    This is more completion than expansion, filling in a gap within
    the map of united Europe, in the case of Romania and Bulgaria,
    and foreclosing any return to war, in the case of former Yugoslavia.
    Romania and Bulgaria, as with earlier candidates, have to meet certain
    conditions, and there could be a brief delay. The greater problems,
    not helped by prevarication and procrastination by the EU, are in
    former Yugoslavia, with Kosovo's status uncertain, and the legacy of
    the war far from overcome elsewhere. But, after the traumas of the
    1990s, most Europeans will not need convincing of the sense of using
    membership to bring stability to the Balkans.

    More difficult, and more distant, is the question of membership for
    the Ukraine (and Belarus, if political change comes in that country)
    because there is a distinct divergence between most western members
    of the union and most eastern ones, with the latter much more drawn
    to the idea of taking Russia's immediate neighbours quickly into the
    European orbit. Anxiety about Russia, in other words, is the key to
    the motives both of applicants and those most likely to welcome them.
    That anxiety weakens as you move west, and public opinion varies
    accordingly. Georgia and Armenia are even more far flung and, after
    the referendums, truly remote possibilities.

    Most difficult of all is Turkey, and not only because anti-Turkish
    sentiment was so clearly a factor in the French and Dutch votes. The
    deeper problems are the degree of ambivalence on both sides, and
    the likelihood that in the long negotiations due to begin in October
    there will, over the years, be just too many occasions for friction
    and worse. Jacques Chirac has probably committed any future French
    government to a referendum on Turkish entry. It is ironic that a
    move intended to take the Turkish factor out of the decision on the
    constitution failed in that purpose, but has instead laid a landmine
    which could go off with disastrous effect in the future. Turkish
    support for entry has already dropped somewhat since the referendums,
    and nationalist resistance to some of the EU's demands and standards
    has stiffened. The lesson of Turkey is not that Turkish membership is
    a bad idea - that is a different argument - but that in a Europe which
    is fed up with being told rather than persuaded, you must convince
    before you act, and not the other way round.
Working...
X