EU leaders are to pledge support but are likely to stop short of offering fast-track EU membership to Ukraine when they meet for an informal summit in Paris on Thursday (10 March), according to a draft statement, seen by EURACTIV.
“Russia’s war of aggression constitutes a tectonic shift in European
history,” the draft of the main Versailles declaration of EU leaders
prepared for the summit is to say.
Ten days ago, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy submitted an official request
to allow his country to gain ‘immediate’ membership under a special
fast-track procedure as it defends itself from a Russian invasion.
Ukraine signed its association agreement with the EU after mass
street protests in 2014 overthrew Russia-backed president Viktor
Yanukovych, who had sought to revive closer ties with Moscow and put an
end to his country’s rapprochement with the EU.
The European Council has asked the European Commission to prepare an opinion, the so-called “avis,” as to the country’s readiness to open negotiations.
A separate statement on the Russian aggression against Ukraine,
however, is set to tone down Kyiv’s expectations for a EU candidate
status.
Although its latest version notes that “Ukraine belongs to our
European family”, a step forward to previous versions, it falls short of
substantial commitments of candidate status.
“Pending this and without delay, we will further strengthen our bonds
and deepen our partnership,” EU leaders prepare to say according to the
draft.
At the eve of the summit, EU ambassadors were unable to agree on the
wording of the statement, with a split between those wanting more
ambitious language on the country’s chances vis a vis Western European
resistance to it.
Bulgaria, Croatia, Czechia, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania,
Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia have already taken a position,
favouring an immediate accession perspective for Ukraine.
Although EU leaders will offer words of strong support to Ukraine to
make clear its future lies with the EU, instead of membership they are
set to discuss boosting Kyiv’s links to the EU single market and to
Europe’s energy grid under ideas for enhanced partnership or
“association plus plus”, an EU senior official told reporters ahead of
the summit.
Any statement or declaration mentioning Article 49 (referring to EU enlargement) in relation to Ukraine would be “a bridge too far”, the official said.
“Leaders are unlikely to offer Ukraine candidate status, it is more
likely that there will be more cooperation within the association
agreement,” a second EU official told reporters.
“Offering more would be impossible now because this is a country that
is now engulfed by war, partially under Russian occupation, and maybe
at some point even completely under occupation,” the official said.
“Offering more is impossible because this is a country that is now
engulfed by war, partially under Russian occupation, and maybe at some
point even completely under occupation.”
They also said that despite pressure from the Eastern European
countries, granting Ukraine any fast-track access to the bloc could
create problems with other applicants such as Georgia or Moldova – which
are not even mentioned in the draft declaration although they both
applied just shortly after Kyiv – and those already in the waiting room,
like North Macedonia, Albania, Montenegro or Serbia.
Some EU diplomats, however, note that offering EU candidate status to
Ukraine would offer a clear “European perspective”, giving the country
the hope to fight off the Russian aggression, while not making any firm
commitments to accept Ukraine in the future.
“Let’s not be too dogmatic, Turkey has had candidate status since
more than two decades and is nowhere near membership, so what are we
talking about here,” one EU diplomat told EURACTIV.
“Everyone very well knows the process to full membership could take
forever, so it would not harm us in any case but it would mean the world
to a country that is on the verge of ceasing to lose everything,” the
diplomat added.
EURACTIV
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