'Wind of change' in Europe as path to EU opens for Ukraine
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[June 23, 2022]
By Philip Blenkinsop and Marine Strauss
BRUSSELS (Reuters) -European leaders will
formally accept Ukraine as a candidate to join the EU on Thursday, a
bold geopolitical move triggered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine but a
reminder that the 27-nation bloc will need a major overhaul as it looks
to enlarge again.
"History is on the march," European Union chief executive Ursula von der
Leyen said ahead of a two-day summit that will kickstart the EU's most
ambitious expansion since welcoming Eastern European states after the
Cold War.
"I am not just talking about Putin's war of aggression," she said. "I am
talking about the wind of change that once again blows across our
continent. With their applications, Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia are
telling us that they want change."
Although it will take Ukraine and Moldova years - and perhaps more than
a decade - to qualify for membership, the Brussels summit decision will
be a symbolic step that signals the EU's intention to reach deep into
the former Soviet Union.
"This is like going into the light from the darkness," Ukraine's
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Wednesday, welcoming the bloc's
expected green light.
Russian President Vladimir Putin says his "special military operation"
launched in Ukraine in late February was partly necessitated by Western
encroachment into what Russia characterises as its rightful geographical
sphere of influence.
While Ukraine and neighbouring Moldova are expected to be welcomed into
the EU's waiting room on Thursday, Georgia will be given "a European
perspective" but told it must fulfil conditions before winning candidate
status.
"Today the EU is sending a message of solidarity to the people of
Ukraine that you belong to the European family, that you belong to the
EU ... and you will get candidate status," Irish Prime Minister Micheal
Martin said as he arrived at the summit.
BALKAN FRUSTRATION
Behind the triumphant rhetoric, however, there is concern within the EU
about how the bloc can remain coherent and united as it continues to
enlarge.
"In a historical moment, we must give a strong signal to Ukraine,"
Belgium's Prime Minister Alexander De Croo said. But he added: "It does
not mean Ukraine will join the EU quickly, it will take time."
After starting in 1951 as an organisation of six countries to jointly
regulate their industrial production, the EU now has 27 members that
face complex challenges from climate change and the rise of China to
today's war on their own doorstep.
Reticence over enlargement has slowed progress towards membership for a
group of Balkans countries - Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, Montenegro, North
Macedonia and Serbia - whose leaders will meet their EU counterparts in
Brussels on Thursday morning.
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy speaks during a special
meeting of the European Council at The European Council Building in
Brussels, Belgium May 30, 2022. Kenzo Tribouillard/Pool via REUTERS
A lack of progress on milestones to entry into the
club has led to such a sense of disillusionment that the leaders of
Albania and Serbia briefly considered not attending the meeting.
They agreed eventually to make the journey, but Albanian Prime
Minister Edi Rama said as he arrived at the summit: "Welcome to
Ukraine, it's a good thing to give candidate status, but I hope the
Ukrainian people will not have much illusions about this."
A draft of the summit statement seen by Reuters showed that EU
leaders will again give "full and unequivocal commitment to the EU
membership perspective of the Western Balkans."
But Ukraine's fast track to formal candidate status has only served
to increase their feeling of being sidelined, which carries the risk
for the EU that Russia and China extend their influence into the
region.
"The more the EU doesn't give a unified and a clear sign to the
Western Balkans, the more other malign factors will use that space
and that vacuum," Kosovo President Vjosa Osmani said in a hint to
those concerns.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has said that the EU must "reform its
internal procedures" to prepare for the accession of new members,
singling out the need for key issues to be agreed with a qualified
majority rather than by unanimity.
The requirement for unanimity often frustrates EU ambitions because
member states can block decisions or reduce them to the lowest
common denominator.
Despite waves of crises that have rocked the EU in recent years,
from a wave of migration and Britain's exit from the bloc to the
rise of nationalism and tensions over standards of democracy, the
bloc remains popular.
According to a survey by the EU's parliament, nearly two-thirds of
Europeans consider membership of the EU a "good thing", the highest
result in 15 years.
Still, leaders know that public discontent is mounting over a spike
in inflation and an energy crisis as Russia tightens gas supplies in
response to Western sanctions, and these economic concerns will be
hotly debated on the second day of the summit.
(Additional reporting by Francesco Guarascion, Jan Strupczewski,
Charlotte van Campenhout and Sarah Marsh; Writing by John Chalmers
and Ingrid Melander)
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