On 18th November, the EU issued its “Review
of the European Neigbourhood Policy” which
seemed to garner a rather gushing and flattering response from the Ukrainian
Foreign Ministry.
“Since the
beginning of the ENP review the Ukrainian side took an active part in this
process promoting the necessity to single out the Eastern Partnership as a
separate dimension of EU policy with more ambitious instruments which would
suit better European aspirations of the Eastern European partners.
….we note
the readiness of the European Commission and EU High Representative to define
jointly with the partners the shape of the future relationship taking into
account particularities of bilateral relations with each of them.
It is
important that the reviewed ENP at last pays an additional attention to the
security dimension. Temporary occupation of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea
and Sevastopol by the Russian Federation as well as blatant Russian aggression
in Donbas highlight the need to elaborate efficient mechanisms for dealing with
security challenges which are common for the partner countries and the EU.”
All well and
good – Except there is very little in the way of vision in the revamped
and far more transactionally orientated review. The lofty goal of
prosperity is joined much more prominently by security and stability – but
whose interpretation of security and stability and how that may be achieved is
entirely open to question.
For a nation
such as Ukraine, the ratified Association Agreement already commits parties to
a cooperative and converging foreign and security policy under Article 7 of the
agreement:
Article 7
Foreign and security policy
1. The
Parties shall intensify their dialogue and cooperation and promote gradual
convergence in the area of foreign and security policy, including the Common
Security and Defence Policy (CSDP), and shall address in particular issues of
conflict prevention and crisis management, regional stability, disarmament,
non-proliferation, arms control and arms export control as well as enhanced
mutually-beneficial dialogue in the field of space. Cooperation will be based
on common values and mutual interests, and shall aim at increasing policy
convergence and effectiveness, and promoting joint policy planning. To this
end, the Parties shall make use of bilateral, international and regional fora.
The ENP
review almost entirely ignores the Russia question to the East (or problem
nations to its South) – giving the impression that not only does the newly
reviewed ENP lack a neighbourhood vision, but also that the EU is still without
a “Russia Strategy” (or any prickly “Nation X Strategy” to the south).
Geopolitics – or more precisely an EU geopolitical strategy – it appears,
does not play much of a part in the ENP review – nor it seems any EU CSDP to
which Ukraine is now treaty bound to cooperate and converge upon.
Without
labouring the point, there is in fact nothing within the policy review that is
new or indeed exciting for Ukraine – perhaps that is necessarily so with a
ratified Association Agreement to work from, and toward implementing. It
is difficult to imagine anything within a broad ENP policy review that is not
superseded and more focused in a bilateral agreement of the scale of the
EU-Ukraine Association Agreement.
The question
therefore is why the overly wax-lyrical response from the Ukrainian Foreign
Ministry when absolutely nothing changes for Ukraine? Such flattery is
meant to deceive, or such flattery is meant to curry favour within the EEAS in
Brussels? An excessive “diplo-love in” was necessary for what reason?
It all seems rather “over the top” for something that has now (almost)
past its “Sell Buy” date as far as Ukraine is concerned.
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