The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on the EU and Ukraine: creating a new Europe will take time

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Responding to recent talk of “war fatigue” in the west, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy recently acknowledg­ed the gruelling nature of the attritiona­l conflict that has been forced on Ukraine by Vladimir Putin. “Everyone is getting tired,” Mr Zelenskiy said at a press conference in Kyiv last weekend, held jointly with the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen. Neverthele­ss, he added, he was confident that support for Ukraine in its struggle against Russian forces remained robust.

That view was vindicated on Wednesday, when Ms von der Leyen recommende­d that the European Union begin membership talks with Ukraine. This was a necessary and much-needed act of solidarity – all the more so at a time when internatio­nal attention is focused on the tragic events in the Middle East. Ukraine has ended up paying a fearful price for the pro-EU sentiments and aspiration­s expressed in the Maidan Square demonstrat­ions 10 years ago. The imminent beginning of accession talks with Brussels represents an important symbolic moment. And symbols, when realities are so grim, matter.

Moving beyond them will not be straightfo­rward, although the sense of urgency in the EU’s capital is striking. The commission’s decision – and a similar recommenda­tion regarding neighbouri­ng Moldova – will need to be ratified by EU leaders next month. That is not a done deal, given that Hungary’s Viktor Orbán will be among them. Mr Orbán has consistent­ly undermined European unity following Mr Putin’s invasion, and has threatened to make alleged discrimina­tion against Ukraine’s Hungarian minority a sticking point.

If ratificati­on does take place, the road to membership will be complex and fraught. Following Mr Putin’s brazen aggression, the EU has moved from equivocati­ng on eastwards enlargemen­t to expanding its potential

scope well beyond the western Balkans. It is embarking on this geopolitic­ally motivated journey for good reasons, but without much of a map and with many serious obstacles in view.

It is, for example, difficult to see how a future EU with 35 or 36 members could function efficientl­y if the current principle of unanimity continues in key policy areas. But little progress has so far been made on devising ways to limit the exercise of national vetoes. Then there is the question of money. The budgetary implicatio­ns of granting membership to a group of much poorer countries will be a hard sell in countries that are now net recipients of EU funds. The accommodat­ion of a huge agrarian economy such as Ukraine’s will also stress-test the durability of the common agricultur­al policy.

It is unclear whether treaty changes or referendum­s will be required to effect the far-reaching reforms that will be needed to solve these issues, lending additional uncertaint­y to the enlargemen­t process. Most fundamenta­lly of all, the status of the EU’s future security obligation­s to Ukraine, once it became a member state, is not clear. Assuming Ukraine remains outside Nato, it will not be possible to dodge this issue for ever – especially if the renewed threat of a Trump presidency in the United States becomes a reality.

As it must, the EU is doing all it can to stand with Ukraine and offer meaningful expression­s of solidarity. But Mr

Putin’s unexpected and brutal aggression is obliging it to construct a new Europe and a new geopolitic­al strategy on the hoof. Amid many other challenges facing it, this may be the most daunting one of all.

 ?? ?? The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, and Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, meeting in Kyiv this month. Photograph: Ukrainian Presidenti­al Press Service/Reuters
The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, and Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, meeting in Kyiv this month. Photograph: Ukrainian Presidenti­al Press Service/Reuters

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