Fraught At The Frontiers: Why Europe Is Losing Faith In Its Most Suc

FRAUGHT AT THE FRONTIERS: WHY EUROPE IS LOSING FAITH IN ITS MOST SUCCESSFUL POLICY
By Daniel Dombey And George Parker

Financial Times (London, England)
December 13, 2006 Wednesday
London Edition 1

Fraught at the frontiers: why Europe is losing faith in its most
successful policy EU ENLARGEMENT: European Union leaders are under
pressure to address popular anxieties about expansion but any move
to apply the brakes could be disastrous for those waiting to join,
write George Parker and Daniel Dombey

Jean Monnet, one of the European Union’s 1950s founding fathers,
foretold that in a globalised era, size would count. "Our countries
have become too small for the world . . . measured against America
and Russia today and China and India tomorrow," he once said.

Europe’s leaders have since sought to expand the EU in line with this
vision. But enlargement, often cited as the club’s most successful
policy, has become a political liability. Tomorrow, at a summit in
Brussels, the EU’s member governments will clash over how much further
– and how quickly – the Union can extend to the east.

The debate will raise questions about what it means to be European
and whether the EU can carry on growing without grinding to a halt
or further alienating its citizens. The outcome and tone of the talks
will have hard-edged consequences: is it going to become even tougher
for candidates to join the club?

Senior EU officials say this is a dangerous moment. If the bloc sends
out negative signals to future members, what consequences could it
have for reformers in Turkey, the politically unstable Balkans or
former Soviet republics such as Belarus or Ukraine? The world has a
stake in the message that comes out of Brussels.

The end-of-year summit gives European leaders a chance to take stock
of the club’s "big bang" expansion of May 2004, which saw it expand
from 15 to 25 members. By the time Bulgaria and Romania join on New
Year’s day, the EU will have taken in 10 former communist countries and
increased its population to 490m, almost half as big again as the US.

So what went wrong with the latest enlargement? The simple answer is:
not very much. While some western European countries, including Britain
and Ireland, experienced unexpectedly high levels of immigration from
Poland and other new member states, economic studies say the migrants
filled skills shortages.

Indeed, the creation of a mobile pool of labour – giving Europe’s
economy some of the flexibility taken for granted in the US – seems
to have played a role in pushing EU economic growth above 2.5 per
cent, outstripping America. Unemployment across the bloc has at last
started falling.

While there has been political instability in central Europe and
Poland has proved an awkward partner, 10 dynamic new member states
are being integrated. Europe is using its "soft power" to spread
democratic and economic transformation and stability. Even France,
the most vocal advocate of slowing the pace of enlargement, has in
an official paper called this ambitious reunification of east and
west Europe a "remarkable success".

Yet this week’s summit takes place against a backdrop of public
anxiety, typified by fears that western companies will relocate jobs
and production to the east and that cheap eastern workers will take
jobs in the west. A Eurobarometer poll this year found that only 45
per cent of EU citizens want to see other countries join, a proportion
that falls to less than one in three in France, Germany, Luxembourg
and Austria.

Concerns about the pace of enlargement were cited by both French and
Dutch voters as reasons for their rejection of the EU’s proposed
constitutional treaty in 2005. Sergey Stanishev, Bulgaria’s prime
minister, admits the atmosphere has soured. He says: "Enlargement is
a great success story for Europe but has been very badly communicated."

To allay public concerns, some European politicians want the EU to
agree its final political borders now, arguing that the club risks
getting so big it will no longer be able to act. "A Europe without
borders will become a subset of the United Nations," Nicolas Sarkozy,
the French centre-right presidential candidate, has said. Wolfgang
Schussel, Austria’s chancellor, argues that former Soviet-bloc
countries such as Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia and Armenia should be
told now to forget about full membership and develop other forms of
partnerships with Europe instead.

Most advocates of a "final borders" strategy also share the view of
Mr Sarkozy and Mr Schussel that the line should be drawn west of the
Bosphorus, excluding 80m largely Muslim Turks, whose European destiny
will dominate summit headlines. "We have to say emphatically who is
a European and who is not," Mr Sarkozy has said.

Mr Sarkozy’s proposal would have legal teeth because of an existing EU
treaty declaration that says: "Any European state . . . may apply to
become a member of the Union." If it meets the club’s political and
economic rules and its human rights standards, it should be able to
join, although it needs unanimous support from existing member states:
each has a veto. Defining what is a "European" country is therefore
both vital and elusive. Only once has the EU denied membership to
an applicant country on such grounds, when in 1993 Morocco was told
that it "was not a European country", in spite of its historic and
cultural links.

Europe’s eastern boundaries are notoriously imprecise. Geographically
the continent’s boundary is usually put at the Urals – a huge post
was once erected on the main trail across the mountains to mark
the boundary with Asia, a poignant sight for prisoners en route to
Siberia. Turkey’s prospects for EU membership have been acknowledged
since 1963, in spite of the vast majority of its land mass being in
Asia. Cyprus was admitted in 2004, in spite of its being only 150
miles from Syria and 500 miles from the European continent.

Olli Rehn, the EU’s enlargement commissioner, argues that the term
"European" combines geographical, historical and cultural elements.

"This cannot be condensed into a simple timeless formula – it is
subject to review by each succeeding generation," he said in a recent
policy paper. But even supporters of fixing Europe’s final borders
admit that this will not be possible this week. Instead they are
looking for other tools to "master" – or slow – the accession process.

European diplomats say the summiteers will agree on at least one
key point: the EU should honour its commitments to Turkey and
Croatia, which have started membership talks, and to the countries
of the western Balkans, whose membership aspirations are officially
recognised. But one ambassador admits the club is "split down the
middle" over the pace at which membership talks with Turkey and the
Balkan states should proceed, or indeed whether they will ever end
in success.

France, the Netherlands and Austria are among those who want to define
the EU’s "absorption capacity", including whether an expanded Union
can deliver the deeper integration envisaged by Monnet. It would
also look at the impact of enlargement on the Union’s budget and
its institutions.

Mr Rehn prefers to talk of "integration capacity", a phrase that he
argues applies equally to the candidate country and the Union itself.

But he insists it should not become a new "condition" for entry, a
view supported by pro-enlargement countries such as Britain, Spain,
Italy, Sweden and Poland.

This is likely to be the subject of skirmishes at the Brussels
summit. Paris wants the European Commission, as the executive arm, to
conduct fuller impact assessments and to take more account of political
developments and public opinion during the entry negotiations. "What
they are trying to do is build up an armoury of tools to stop any
enlargement they don’t like," says one senior EU official. France also
has a "nuclear weapon" to halt future expansions: each new member
after Croatia will be able to join only if French voters say Yes in
a referendum.

But France is not alone in wanting to increase political control
over enlargement. The Netherlands has been particularly vocal,
while Austria and other neighbours in what is dubbed in Brussels the
"Habsburg bloc" have concerns over Turkish accession. "The pace of
enlargement depends on the absorption capacity of the Union and not
only on the preparations of the candidate country," says one French
official. In Paris they talk of putting a "pilot" in the cockpit,
to reassure people that someone is in control of enlargement.

That position is seen as "ironic" in Brussels, where officials argue
it was French President Jacques Chirac himself who put the process
on autopilot when he insisted that Bulgaria and Romania should be
guaranteed entry by 2008 at the latest, regardless of whether they
were ready, so that the two, both linguistic affiliates, could inject
a dose of Francophonie into the latest expansion.

Dutch officials meanwhile say that although Europe has a strategic
interest in extending membership into unstable regions, that has to be
balanced against the risk of enlargement creating instability inside
the Union. That could take the form of a breakdown in integration or
the rise of xenophobic political parties in the west.

There is also wide support for the idea that future expansion can
take place only after the EU has updated its institutions – a task
that involves reviving parts of the stalled constitutional treaty. A
painful review of the club’s budget, including the farm subsidy regime,
is also seen as essential.

The problem for potential EU members is that these all appear to be
hurdles over which they have no control. The message seems to be:
you can meet all the criteria but, if the EU has not sorted out its
budget, or its constitution, or if public opinion is hostile, then
you cannot come in. "Of course, that is the conclusion some member
states will take from the summit," says one EU diplomat. "Others
will argue that all of this is blah, blah, blah and there are no new
conditions. The truth is probably somewhere in between."

Whatever the final summit text, equally important will be the political
signal sent to the countries in Europe’s waiting room. It is unlikely
to be positive. Turkey’s refusal to open its ports to shipping from
Cyprus, a 2004 entrant, will result in its membership talks being
partially suspended.

Although Mr Rehn points out that some parts of the negotiations can
continue, there will be some at the summit who believe or hope these
will never be concluded. Mr Rehn fears the negative mood, whether
expressed in the legalese of a summit communique or by the likes of
Mr Chirac in closing press conferences, will also send a message to
others – including the 25m people of the western Balkans – thattheir
path towards the Union isuncertain.

With Kosovo’s future status due to be determined next year, Mr Rehn
argues Europeans have a "major responsibility" for providing stability
in the region – including keeping open the possibility of membership
for countries such as Serbia and Bosnia.

Matti Vanhanen, the Finnish prime minister and summit host, as
his country holds the EU’s rotating presidency, had also hoped to
insert a line into the communique hinting that the door was still
ajar for other future members, but he was rebuffed by a number of
member states. But does this mean that Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova,
Georgia and Armenia – and possibly Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan – will
be denied their claim to be "European" for ever? AsMr Rehn notes,
different generations have different perspectives.

Napoleon Bonaparte, whose imperial ambitions stretched well beyond
the eastern limits of today’s EU, also took a wider view. Brooding in
exile on St Helena, he wrote: "I wished to found a European system,
a European code of laws, a European judiciary. There would be but
one people in Europe."