Diplomats voice caution about complex process as Ukraine war triggers wave of applications for membership
Maia Sandu, president of Moldova. Her country’s application is expected to be discussed at an informal summit of the EU’s 27 heads of state and government in Versailles next week © Dumitru Doru/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Henry Foy and Sam Fleming in Brussels 9 HOURS AGO
Georgia and Moldova submitted formal applications to join the EU on Thursday, piggybacking on a move by Kyiv to seek fast-tracked entry into the bloc in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The wave of applications from the former Soviet republics
presents a major challenge for the EU as it seeks to signal solidarity with
Kyiv but at the risk of making empty promises to candidate countries and
stirring up one of the union’s most divisive issues.
There are deep divisions inside the EU over enlargement as a
concept. Some, mainly eastern, member states see expansion as a means to
stabilise the region, while others fear that applicant members lack the
economic clout, democratic values and rule of law credentials to maintain
unity.
The desire of the three countries to speed up the entry
process will also heighten demands from already existing applicant countries,
especially those in the Western Balkans that have been waiting for as long as
18 years just for a membership timeline.
The topic of enlargement was “extremely sensitive”, said one
senior EU official, cautioning against knee-jerk decisions “that will create
new parameters and have strong implications for the union”.
“Some member states are pushing for accession [for Ukraine]
as soon as possible, others are a bit cautious and some are a bit sceptical
given the context,” the official added.
Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s president, formally applied
for EU membership this week as his army sought to hold off an invasion from
more than 100,000 Russian troops. Moldova and Georgia formally followed suit on
Thursday.
All three are members of the EU’s Eastern Partnership
programme and have association agreements with the bloc, granting preferential
trade access among other benefits.
On Wednesday Georgia’s president told the Financial Times
that the EU needed to speed up its membership process to shield the country
from possible Russian aggression, noting that the EU’s lack of clarity on
Ukraine’s admission may have encouraged President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of
the country.
Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia’s applications are expected to
be discussed at an informal summit of the EU’s 27 heads of state and government
in Versailles next week.
“Enlargement is the elephant in the room,” a second EU
official said of the EU’s desire to assist primarily Ukraine but also Moldova
and other countries affected by Russia’s war.
EU leaders have publicly encouraged Ukraine in its bid for
membership of the union — among them Ursula von der Leyen, the European
Commission president, who said on Sunday that the country was “one of us” and
that she wanted it in the EU.
However, the process of gaining EU membership is laborious
and complex, and is not down to the commission’s president.
Following an application, the Council must decide whether to
request an opinion from the commission about the country, which advocates of
Kyiv, Tbilisi and Chisinau’s applications hope can be delivered in an
accelerated timeline, rather than as long as 18 months as normal.
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All 27 member states would then need to unanimously grant
the country candidate status, paving the way for accession negotiations.
Officials in Brussels warned that such a process would take
years. And if new applications were to be fast-tracked, the risk is that
countries in the Western Balkans that have been waiting for decades would feel
sidelined.
There are already five candidate countries whose
applications have been in progress for years — Albania, the Republic of North
Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Turkey. Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo are
seen as potential candidates.
While the messages of support are warranted, “some people
are getting carried away” and signalling things that the EU will be unable to
deliver in a rapid manner, said one EU official familiar with enlargement
discussions this week.
This week the European parliament added to the push for
Ukraine to gain candidate status, while insisting this should be granted “on
merit”. Pedro Marques, a Socialist MEP, said that the commission should perform
its assessment quickly, adding that it was important to “respond to this
European ambition positively”.
But he said the parliament’s resolution was specifically
focused on Ukraine and the particular position it is in. When asked about other
candidates, he observed that “we have a number of countries already in the process
of accession for a number of years and we have frustrated the ambitions of some
of these countries to which we have promised the possibility to come to the EU
— particularly North Macedonia and Albania”.
https://www.ft.com/content/4bf864d8-95ae-4d95-82b3-9b2c9eee845d
Georgia to apply 'immediately' for EU membership
https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20220302-georgia-to-apply-immediately-for-eu-membership
Georgia vows to 'immediately' apply for EU membership
https://www.dw.com/en/georgia-vows-to-immediately-apply-for-eu-membership/a-60992224
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