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Kosovo puts stablility in Europe back on
EU agenda
By Wolfgang
Petritsch
Kosovo’s declaration of independence has put stability
in the Western Balkans back on Europe’s agenda.
Unless the European Union acts quickly, the whole region could slide
backwards, with dire social, economic, and security consequences.
The EU needs a comprehensive regional approach, focusing on the remaining
steps that would lead each country towards membership.
The Western Balkans – a term used only since 1999 – comprises Albania,
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia (FYROM), Montenegro, Serbia, and
Kosovo, with a combined population of roughly 22 million.
Economic developments in the region are promising, with almost all its
economies posting high growth, fueled by increasing industrial output and
exports.
Inward investment is steadily rising, as business seems to believe that the
remaining political and security challenges – the possible negative effects
of post-independence Kosovo and Bosnia’s malaise – will be overcome sooner
rather than later.
Much work has already been done to re-establish and improve regional
relations.
The EU-led Stability Pact for South Eastern Europe has since 1999
successfully stimulated regional cross-border cooperation, for the first
time since the breakdown of Yugoslavia.
Energy, transport infrastructure – roads, railways, and waterways – and
crime prevention have all benefited.
The Stability Pact has now been transferred to local control, re-emerging as
the Sarajevo-based Regional Cooperation Council, ready to develop regional
and multilateral standards for its members.
The recently revived Central European Free Trade Agreement (CEFTA) is meant
to be the main regional engine for trade and business generally, and will
adhere both to WTO rules and the parties’ obligations towards the EU.
Similarly, the South-East European Cooperation Process is one of the
relatively new regional organisations that contribute to candidate and
potential candidate countries’ preparations for EU membership, providing the
first genuine region-wide policy forum, where both EU members and candidates
participate.
But these bodies must not be seen as substitutes for the far more
comprehensive accession process, which only the EU itself can initiate.
And yet, despite the region’s favourable prospects and relatively small
size, the union has been slow in doing so.
Certainly, the pace of candidate countries’ approach to the EU depends on
the speed of their reforms.
And Europe, with the vital support of the United States, worked hard to stop
the carnage of the 1990s and subsequently to help rebuild the Balkan
countries.
But the EU has so far failed to prepare the Western Balkans for accession,
in line with its leaders’ promise at their Thessaloniki summit in 2003 to
admit the Western Balkan states when they meet the EU’s standards.
That promise was not a matter of charity; the Balkans would add value to the
EU.
To be sure, the EU’s lengthy internal crisis over the proposed constitution
was a major distraction, and damaged the EU’s reputation in the Balkans.
Let us hope that the new Reform Treaty will help to reassure the critics and
pave the way for a new – and more robust – phase of integration.
If not, one would have to ask what had happened to the European spirit of
the 1970s and 1980s, when countries such as Greece, Portugal and Spain,
which had just emerged from dictatorship and civil unrest, were welcomed
into the European community of democratic states.
Political decisions taken then were far more risky than those at hand in the
Balkans, and the Greek and Iberian success stories demonstrate the wisdom of
the courageous decisions taken at that time.
What about today? The most recent EU members, Bulgaria and Romania, are both
in the Balkans and both are examples of countries with special needs.
While the EU at first took their accession negotiations a bit too casually,
it subsequently decided to continue monitoring the two countries even after
accession in order to ensure that they develop the effective administrative
and judicial systems that are an obligation of membership.
The EU must learn from this experience to develop an accession strategy for
the Western Balkans, whose development has been delayed by a complex
post-conflict transition process.
Their special needs should be taken into account in any new EU approach,
giving them hope while mitigating the fallout from Kosovo.
It is in Europe’s interest as much as it is in the interest of the region to
accelerate the integration process.
A reinvigorated accession process would contribute to the EU’s
consolidation, both territorially and politically, while strengthening its
role in its wider neighbourhood – the Mediterranean, the Middle East, and
around the Black Sea.– Project Syndicate
Wolfgang Petritsch is Austria’s UN-ambassador in Geneva. He was
previously the EU’s special envoy for Kosovo, its chief negotiator at the
Kosovo peace talks in Rambouillet and Paris and the International High
Representative in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
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