Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

As war rages, EU looks to expand

Albania calls for action as admission of 6 nations has stalled

- SAMUEL PETREQUIN AND LLAZAR SEMINI Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Dusan Stojanovic of The Associated Press.

TIRANA, Albania — The war in Ukraine has put the European Union’s expansion at the top of the agenda as officials from the Western Balkans and EU leaders gather today for a summit intended to reinvigora­te the whole enlargemen­t process.

The EU’s executive commission has repeatedly promised Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia that they have futures within the bloc. But the progress of the six nations toward getting there stalled in recent years.

As the war in nearby Ukraine rages, Albanian Prime Minister and summit host Edi Rama called for the EU to turns its words into action.

“You need the Balkans — Western Balkans — as much as the Western Balkans need the EU,” he said in an interview with The Associated Press. “We have to face the future more and more together.”

The EU last admitted a new member — Croatia, which is also part of the Balkans — in 2013. Before that, Bulgaria and Romania joined in 2007. With the withdrawal of the United Kingdom in 2021, the EU now has 27 member nations.

Although divisions among them on the pace of accession talks and some complicate­d bilateral issues remain, EU officials think it’s more crucial than ever to make clear the six Western Balkans nations belong in the European family so they don’t turn in frustratio­n toward Russia or China instead.

“Enlargemen­t policy is among the top three priorities of EU leaders,” EU Commission­er for Neighborho­od and Enlargemen­t Oliver Varhelyi said during a visit to Belgrade, Serbia’s capital, last week. “The only real long-term solution for peace, stability and prosperity is EU membership.”

EU leaders agreed in June to make Moldova and Ukraine candidates for membership and said Georgia would be eligible for candidacy once the country met some goals defined by the European Commission.

A month later, the EU started membership negotiatio­ns with Albania and North Macedonia following years of delays. Bosnia moved a small step closer on its path to join the powerful economic bloc when the commission advised member countries in October to grant it candidate status despite continuing criticism of the way the nation is run.

Kosovo has only started the first step, with the signing of a Stabilizat­ion and Associatio­n Agreement. It said it would apply for candidate status later this month.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g insisted last week that supporting Moldova, Georgia and Bosnia was crucial in the context of the war. Stoltenber­g noted that Bosnia, where Russian interferen­ce and ethnic tensions long have created political instabilit­y, is “important for stability in the whole of the Western Balkans.”

But the problem for the countries-in-waiting is that the EU has not deemed their economies and political institutio­ns ready for integratio­n into the EU’s single market of open trade and Western democratic ideals.

“None is close to joining the EU,” said Luigi Scazzieri, a researcher at the Centre for European Reform, a think tank based in London. “They must all overcome substantia­l hurdles to meet the Copenhagen criteria, which define the EU’s standards on strong democratic institutio­ns, a functionin­g market economy and the ability to take on the obligation­s of membership.”

Discussion­s at today’s meeting in Albania’s capital, Tirana, are also expected to focus on the negative effects for energy and food security from Russia’s war in Ukraine. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen already announced financial support to help countries in the Western Balkans cope with shortages and higher prices.

A bitter dispute between Serbia and Kosovo, a former Serbian province that declared independen­ce in 2008, remains a great concern for the Western powers ahead of the summit. Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic had threatened to boycott the gathering to protest a recent political appointmen­t by Prime Minister Albin Kurti of Kosovo.

Vucic changed his mind Monday, saying he and his associates agreed it would be better if he attended to argue for Serbia’s interests. He said he expected to face “pressure” to recognize Kosovo and to impose sanctions against Russia but that he would explain Serbia’s positions during several meetings with EU leaders in Tirana.

Although Serbia’s representa­tives voted in favor of different U.N. resolution­s condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Vucic has refused to explicitly condemn Moscow. His country has not joined Western sanctions against Russia over the war.

 ?? (AP/Andreea Alexandru) ?? People cross the Martyrs of the Nation Boulevard, decorated with Albanian and EU flags as well as portraits of personalit­ies who made a contributi­on to the advancemen­t of the European Union on Monday in Tirana, Albania.
(AP/Andreea Alexandru) People cross the Martyrs of the Nation Boulevard, decorated with Albanian and EU flags as well as portraits of personalit­ies who made a contributi­on to the advancemen­t of the European Union on Monday in Tirana, Albania.

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