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EU, NATO security crucial to Macron’s Russia initiative

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French President Emmanuel Macron is one of those leaders who wants to bend the arc of history. Having upended French politics, he has secured positions for his preferred candidates at the head of the European Commission and the European Central Bank, and is now trying to improve Europe’s relationsh­ip with Russia.

French officials are comparing Macron’s Russia strategy to US President Richard Nixon’s opening up of China in 1972. But Macron’s diplomatic overture is more like Nixon in reverse. Rather than wooing China in order to contain the Soviets, Macron wants to “ease and clarify (Europe’s) relations with Russia” in order to prevent Moscow from cozying up to China. In so doing, he hopes to secure Europe’s control over its own future.

Macron launched his bid for new security architectu­re in typically grandiose fashion.

His first move was to hold talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin in France’s Fort de Bregancon before the August G7 summit in Biarritz. But the French ministers charged with implementi­ng the plan have since turned it on its head.

Now, rather than starting with a top-down agenda, they are trying to build European security from the bottom up, while pursuing improved relations with Russia one brick at a time.

In late August, Macron delivered a speech outlining his vision of a system of “concentric circles” comprising varying degrees of European and Eurasian integratio­n. Such an arrangemen­t would have to secure NATO and EU member states’ borders, allow for a more productive relationsh­ip with the Russia-led Eurasian Economic Union, and offer ways to manage regional conflicts, not least the one in Ukraine.

The timing of the initiative makes sense. Like Macron himself, Ukraine’s recently elected president, Volodymyr Zelensky, created a political party out of nothing and came to power on the promise of sweeping away a discredite­d ancien regime. More to the point, Zelensky has made resolving Ukraine’s security situation a top priority.

Macron believes that Russia’s gravitatio­n toward China is at least partly the result of Western mismanagem­ent. He is not naive about the Kremlin’s territoria­l aggression and election interferen­ce, but any country in a position to pose such threats to Europe, he believes, must be engaged face to face.

Adding further urgency to Macron’s efforts is US President Donald Trump, who has confirmed France’s Gaullist suspicions about America’s unreliabil­ity as a guarantor of European security.

Macron’s biggest concern is Europe itself. The EU will never become a global player in the 21st century if it continues to be divided and boxed in by other powers. In Macron’s view, recasting Europe’s relationsh­ip with Russia is the first step toward securing European sovereignt­y. “If you don’t have a seat at the great power table,” one French official tells me, “it’s because you’re on the menu.” To be sure, the French understand other Europeans’ support for the sanctions imposed on Russia following its annexation of Crimea and incursion into Eastern Ukraine; but they fear the flimsiness of Europe’s broader security policy.

Macron’s initiative raises many questions. Whether Putin has any interest in resolving the Ukraine conflict remains to be seen. And, even if Europe is capable of detaching Russia from China, it is unclear whether the Trump administra­tion would stand by and let the European initiative play out.

But the biggest questions are on the European front. Many Central and Eastern European countries worry that they will be second-class citizens within Macron’s framework of “concentric circles.” Others fear that Macron will sell out Ukraine by forcing it to settle the conflict on Russia’s terms. And it doesn’t help that Macron launched his initiative without first consulting other Europeans, many of whom are already anxious about America’s waning commitment to EU security.

If Macron is to succeed, he will have to prove he is committed to the sovereignt­y and security not just of Central and Eastern Europe, but also of ex-Soviet countries such as Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova. He will also have to pursue deeper collaborat­ion with the Nordic and Baltic states, as well as with the relevant EU institutio­ns and the new High Representa­tive for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Josep Borrell. Above all, Macron’s initiative must create a credible platform for a common approach to security. If it is seen as favoring some countries over others, it and its author will end up on the menu, rather than in the history books.

 ??  ?? MARK LEONARD
MARK LEONARD

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