Bangkok Post

EU needs to develop fresh thinking to manage ties

- Mark Leonard is Director of the European Council on Foreign Relations. MARK LEONARD

People used to think that the most important decisions affecting Europe were made in Paris, Berlin or Brussels. But in recent months, as the European Union (EU) has confronted the refugee crisis, and the Syrian conflict that is fuelling it, Moscow and Ankara have come to the fore. And the EU is divided on how to deal with its two disgruntle­d neighbours, Russia and Turkey, both of which feel increasing­ly snubbed by the West.

The EU-Russia relationsh­ip has long exposed EU member states’ varying historic, geographic and economic interests. While all EU countries agreed on sanctions against Russia after it annexed Crimea in March 2014, this temporary unity belies member states’ fundamenta­lly different views about the kind of relationsh­ip they want for the long term.

Europe’s new cold warriors, such as Estonia, Poland, Sweden and the United Kingdom, have stood up to Russian aggression; but Austria, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Slovakia and other countries only signed on to sanctions reluctantl­y, and are more open to engagement with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s government.

Turkey is in a different category, because it is a Nato member and a candidate (at least in principle) for EU membership. But Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been no less a source of division in Europe than Mr Putin has. In the past, Turkey was seen as a potential EU member state and a model for Islamic liberal democracy; today, it is mainly seen as a geopolitic­al buffer zone.

For countries such as Germany and Greece, Turkey absorbs Middle Eastern refugees, as well as the spillover violence from which they are fleeing; in other EU countries such as Austria and France, however, mainstream political leaders tend to criticise Mr Erdogan to attract voters from the political right. This will make it more difficult to implement the deal — brokered by German Chancellor Angela Merkel earlier this year — that gives Turkey financial support, and its citizens visa-free travel to the EU, in exchange for its cooperatio­n on containing refugee flows.

The coming weeks will test Europe’s resolve on both sanctions against Russian and the deal with Turkey, especially now that Ms Merkel’s authority is waning. A breakdown in these arrangemen­ts would cause a major crisis for the EU.

Both Mr Putin and Mr Erdogan are leaders who have been shaped by their domestic insecurity and the need to project strength. Europeans, however, have trouble maintainin­g relationsh­ips that pit their geopolitic­al interests against their desire to defend human rights and uphold internatio­nal law. In fact, the EU seems to have no conceptual framework for accommodat­ing neighbouri­ng countries that aren’t actively importing its norms and regulation­s.

But the EU’s problem with both Turkey

and Russia is about more than difficult personalit­ies or inadequate policies; it is rooted in the European order itself. When the Cold War ended, the EU and Nato were at the centre of an expanding unipolar order that, it was assumed, would establish the conditions for European security.

Six years ago, Ivan Krastev and I wrote a paper for the European Council on Foreign Relations warning of the spectre of a multipolar Europe, wherein the rules and institutio­ns affecting European countries would not all be decided by the EU. That spectre has become a living reality.

Today, the EU is just one of several European projects. Russia is now as hostile to the EU as it is to Nato, and has created a Eurasian Economic Union to serve as an alternativ­e regional unificatio­n effort. Russia is also doing its best to hollow out from within European institutio­ns such as the Organisati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe and the Council of Europe.

Turkey, for its part, no longer considers its regional aspiration­s satisfied by its role as a Nato member or its EU accession candidacy. Its own regional policy has changed significan­tly, from “zero problems with neighbours” to “zero neighbours without problems”. But Turkey is now a critical player, because its geopolitic­al reach covers regions where the EU and Russia are both actively engaged — from the Balkans and Central Asia to the Middle East.

With Turkey’s accession process stalled and the conflict in Eastern Ukraine still raging, the EU is beholden to countries with which it has increasing­ly complex political relations. There is much handwringi­ng in Europe over the possibilit­y that Turkey and Russia could form an alliance against the EU. That worry may be premature. The Turkish-Russian relationsh­ip has warmed recently, but not by much. The two countries are still divided on many issues, from Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s future to Black Sea security and the annexation of Crimea.

Still, the EU needs to develop fresh thinking so that member states can agree on how best to manage these relationsh­ips. If it does not, it could find itself increasing­ly isolated and alone in a neighbourh­ood where new powers have moved in. From Eastern Europe and the Balkans to Central Asia and Syria, Europe’s periphery could shake its core.

 ?? AFP ?? European flags hang at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France. The grouping is facing a challenge to its relationsh­ip from its two members, Russia and Turkey.
AFP European flags hang at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France. The grouping is facing a challenge to its relationsh­ip from its two members, Russia and Turkey.

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