Das Schwarze Meer als Epizentrum der Nachbeben des EU-Erdbebens

DISCLAIMER: Die hier aufgeführten Ansichten sind Ausdruck der Meinung des Verfassers, nicht die von Euractiv Media network.

In diesem neuen Policy Brief vertritt der CEPS-Forscher Michael Emerson die Auffassung, dass die Nachbeben der gescheiterten Verfassungsreferenden zur EU-Verfassung in der Schwarzmeerregion am stärksten spürbar sein werden.

The author describes how Bulgaria, Romania, Turkey, Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia were the first hit by the tremors. But he traces its effects further than that, up the Danube basin to Belgrade, across the Caucasus to Armenia and Azerbaijan, and last but certainly not least up to Russia. For all the states that have been espousing long-term EU membership aspirations – including all of the above, except Russia –the author recommends they take time out for a reality check. For Russia, which had not anticipated this upset in the EU, it may be interpreted not so much a time for a rethink, as an encouragement not to have a rethink. For these states (in different degrees), there is a new question of strategic importance and the name of the game has changed. Emerson is keen to explore whether the EU’s hugely successful political conditionality machine and gravitational powers of attraction, as evidenced in its recent enlargement, can continue to operate with some variant model of virtual, functional membership? Or, if not, he asks whether the prospects for the deepening and consolidation of democracy in these regions are going to be seriously prejudiced? 

To read the paper in full, visit the Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS) website.

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