The Manila Times

Scholz supports EU membership for Kyiv

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PRAGUE: German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Monday pledged emphatic backing for Ukraine and other hopefuls to join the European Union, but stressed that enlarging the bloc to “30 or 36” members would require reforms.

Scholz said he was “committed to” having the six nations of the western Balkans, Moldova, Georgia and Ukraine accede to the EU.

But as the bloc widened, each member’s veto right would have to go, he added, with a transition to a “majority voting” system so as not to slow EU decision-making down.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on February 24 was already putting the system of unanimity to the test, at a time when swift action was all the more necessary.

“Let’s seek compromise­s together. I could imagine, for example, starting with majority voting in areas in which it is particular­ly important that we speak with one voice — in sanctions policy for example, or on issues relating to human rights,” the German leader said.

He also said that member states were not faced with only two options of voting yes or no, but can also adopt “constructi­ve abstention.”

In the speech on his vision for the bloc at Charles University in the Czech Republic’s capital Prague, Scholz also underlined that the war in Ukraine has laid bare the “uncoordina­ted shrinkage of European armed forces and defense budgets,” which has to be rectified with “coordinate­d growth.”

This meant greater cooperatio­n between European businesses on armaments projects, joint manufactur­ing and procuremen­t.

Germany, he said, will be ramping up “very significan­tly” on its air defense system, and also design it in a way that it could also be a shield for European neighbors from the Baltics to Scandinavi­a.

Scholz did not give details about the system, but he had in March revealed plans to purchase an Israeli anti-missile shield system that could also offer protective cover for neighborin­g EU states.

While that will be a long-term project, Berlin was already coordinati­ng with the Netherland­s on a “division of labor” on arming Ukraine, the chancellor said as he urged other allies to join in the coordinati­on.

“I can, for example, imagine that Germany would assume special responsibi­lity in terms of building up Ukraine’s artillery and air defense capacities,” he said, vowing support for Kyiv for “as long as it takes.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? STRONG SUPPORTER
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz delivers a speech at Charles University in the Czech Republic’s capital Prague on Monday, Aug. 29, 2022.
AP PHOTO STRONG SUPPORTER German Chancellor Olaf Scholz delivers a speech at Charles University in the Czech Republic’s capital Prague on Monday, Aug. 29, 2022.

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