Enter the EU's so-called eastern partnership deal, which EU foreign ministers debated today. As The Financial Times reported recently, "This is an initiative designed to draw six post-Soviet states - Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine - closer to the EU, without holding out an explicit promise of membership at some future date."
From the FT:
"As for the Eastern Partnership, it seems another example of how the EU often has its heart in the right place, while lacking the power, conceptual vision and unity of purpose to do what it aspires to do. If the partnership had been in place a year ago, it wouldn't have done much to affect the course of last August's Russian-Georgian war, or January's Russian-Ukrainian gas crisis, or Ukraine's present economic meltdown.
"All six states covered by the Eastern Partnership exist in the shadow of Russia, some more comfortably than others. The EU's offer of free trade deals, visa facilitation arrangements and seminars to improve understanding of EU laws simply does not match the military, political and economic influence that Russia can wield in the region. After all, one of the favoured six - Georgia - was in effect partitioned by Russia a mere six months ago, in spite of all the EU's protests, after Moscow's recognition of the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia."


