Analysing international policy processes and Lithuania’s role in them
Bulletin Jun 17, 2022

EU membership perspective for Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia: Mapping the risks of a non-candidacy option

Summary

Ensuring a concrete perspective of EU membership for Ukraine, as well as for Moldova and Georgia, should be a strategic security objective for the logic of future EU enlargement. The destabilization of the security context requires European decision-makers to realize the geopolitical urgency of extending the prospects of enlargement to the more “Europeanized” and “Europeanizable” neighbors to the east – Ukraine, Moldova, and Georgia (also “trio”).

“Europeanizable” despite hurdles

The “trio” has been implementing advanced associated agreements with the EU since 2014. This generation of international agreements resembles the Association and Stabilization Agreements, used as instruments of EU accession towards the countries of the Western Balkans. As a result of the association agreements, Ukraine, Moldova, and Georgia (the “trio”) are engaged in legal approximation and de jure transition to the EU normative base like their Balkan peers, but without a European perspective. In the period from 2010 to 2017, the “trio” had to work hard to implement the measures of the visa-free regime based on strict conditionality and facing highly sensitive issues (such as the adoption of anti-discrimination legislation [1]). They managed to do so despite a hostile environment, fueled by Russia-driven disinformation activities, unlike Western Balkan nations that faced a less demanding approach from the EU and unobserved Russian pressure. As in the case of the visa liberalization process, the “trio” showed political determination to implement the association agreements even during attempts by oligarchic groups to sabotage certain reforms and during coexistence between pro-EU and Russia-oriented political parties.

Secure EU candidate status to avoid strategic risks

The “opinion” that the European Commission will present to the EU Council on June 23-24, based on the EU accession questionnaires that the “trio” completed in April-May, must take into account three main aspects. First, from a local perspective, the “trio” showed the ability to implement reforms, even without guaranteed access to pre-accession funds like the Western Balkans. Obviously, the quality of the reforms could improve due to the monitoring mechanism that the EU currently applies to the candidate countries (the Western Balkans and Turkey). Second, also with regard to the internal situation, the democratic setbacks in the “trio” (referenced to Georgia) should not be used as a justification for not offering candidate status. The democratic institutions of the Western Balkans have developed unevenly before and after the receipt of the candidature, serving as a mechanism for Europeanization, democratization, and reform. The granting of candidate status is strictly a political decision to be taken by the EU, which as a rule is not based solely on adequate performance. Furthermore, with the principle of “staged-accession” [2], the new candidate states may be exposed to multidimensional conditionality, which if applied rigorously and smartly both in the “trio”, the Western Balkans and in Turkey (eventually “EU 10 Candidate States”), can help counter oligarchic influence, systemic and political corruption, and institutional dysfunctions. Third and last, the regional security environment demands a strong signal from the EU of its geopolitical engagement with like-minded states in the eastern neighborhood, while pro-EU forces can ensure commitments and implementation of reforms. Otherwise, if the non-candidacy is the result of the recommendation of the European Commission and the final decision of the EU Council in June, the pro-Russian or Eurosceptic political forces and public narratives can spread and increase the competitiveness of the populations in the “trio” countries.

Three options for the “trio”: what is at stake?

The EU institutions and member states must make a strategic decision on the accession prospects of Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia. The current alignment of circumstances, through the costs paid for Ukrainian resistance to Russian aggression, has created a unique “window of opportunity” for eastward enlargement. Applicants for candidate status (the “trio”) and the EU must treat the situation as something exceptional and worth taking advantage of. Now, it seems that the former shows a real and unequivocal interest if it is judged by a certain degree of reluctance observed at the EU level.

There are three offers for the “trio” that can be derived from the EU decision (on June 23-24) as follows:

  1. EU candidate status. This is the most favorable option that implies a series of advantages for the reform of the “trio”, by doubling the pressure of conditionality in exchange for both macro-financial assistance and compliance with the criteria for EU membership. This also allows access to pre-accession funds, now allocated to the Western Balkans and Turkey. If “staged accession” is applied, the accession negotiations will include more “safeguard clauses” to prevent unprepared countries from advancing on the path to the EU accession, preventing a repeat of the “Hungarian” case among future members states. In this case, the “most reforms” and the “most qualitative” will prevail.
  2. Potential EU candidate status. This represents a limiting option, which comes with some national image costs in the “trio”. In this case, the EU is supposed to develop specific conditions to go from “potential candidacy” to “EU candidate status”, pointing out “key priorities” and reforms respectively. The latter will have a clear time frame for key reforms for final candidate status. However, the time frame will be shifting and anchored in performance, resembling the causality of conditionality during the visa liberalization and macro-financial assistance reform agenda. Inevitably, the “trio” states will be unable to benefit much from the EU’s pre-accession funds. Additionally, they will be grouped with Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo, which are associated with dysfunctional states or internationally unrecognized entities. In this case, a new wave of Eurosceptic (Georgia, Ukraine) and pro-Russian (Moldova) sentiments could find fertile ground.
  3. The European perspective. The risky option would be to confirm an EU perspective without offering a clear “candidate status” or a less favorable “potential candidate status”. Consequently, the Association Agreement will continue to be implemented, extending to new areas of deeper integration related to green energy, digital transition, market integration, border management, security etc. The future of bilateral relations will be unclear and will require further political negotiations, with hybrid approaches linking the existing status quo (association agreements) with elements of candidate status. As a result, access to EU funds will be occasional caused by emergencies and in limited volumes, as in previous years. [3] Offering only the European perspective, it is inevitable that Ukraine and Georgia will see flashbacks to the 2008 NATO summit in Bucharest, when the two countries’ perspective of membership was rejected. This could reinforce Euroscepticism and anti-Western views in certain segments of their societies. Acknowledging the EU perspective would be a leap forward from the recognition of EU aspirations that the “trio” has today through the association agreements. However, this could end up with pro-EU sentiments tamed by and/or fueling Russian and Eurosceptic propaganda, undermining the “trio’s” strategic orientation towards the EU in the long term.

In conclusion, the EU and member states should seriously consider the opportunities and other positive implications of granting EU candidate status to the “trio” and the range of risks associated with the limited options of candidacy or non-candidacy (as detailed in the Table below).

Table. Map of the opportunities of EU membership status and the risks of non-candidacy: green = the most favorable option; orange = the limiting option; red = the risky option

Footnotes

[1] Axyonova V, Cenuşa D, Gawrich A. International Negotiations and Domestic Change in the EU’s Eastern Neighborhood: Deconstructing Antidiscrimination Reforms in Moldova. East European Politics and Societies. 2022;36(2):378-398. doi:10.1177/0888325420968911, https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0888325420968911

[2] https://www.ceps.eu/ceps-publications/a-template-for-staged-accession-to-the-eu/

[3] Denis Cenusa, Post-2022 EU Assistance to Eastern Neighbours: Old Practices, New Trends and the Implications of Russian Military Aggression against Ukraine, 2022, https://www.gpyr-projects.online/en/2022/04/29/post-2022-eu-assistance-to-eastern-neighbours-old-practices-new-trends-and-the-implications-of-russian-military-aggression-against-ukraine/

Associate Expert at the EESC and Research Fellow and PhD student at the Institute of Political Science at the Justus Lybig University of Giessen, Germany, researching global governance and the resilience of countries in the EU neighbourhood. He has published extensively between 2015 and 2021 on European integration, EU-Russia interaction, good governance and energy security in Eastern Europe. Mr Cenusa is also an Associate Expert at the Moldova think tank Expert-Grup, where since 2015 he has been coordinating a SIDA-funded joint project with the Centre for European Policy Studies in Brussels on Sakartvel, Moldova and Ukraine.