Of course Russia represents a huge market for EU goods, and it is also a
source of much oil and gas. It is also a big and important country,
which has had good and improving relations with the EU of late. But it
is not obvious that Russia is taking the EU seriously, or that the EU
has used the 'strategic partnership' with Moscow to make any 'strategic'
progress on issues the EU cares about.
Although the relations are at their best for many years, EU
member-states seem resigned to Russia remaining messy, undemocratic and
unco-operative for the foreseeable future. Adopting a wait-and-see
attitude, the EU risks neglecting a number of challenges it faces in its
neighbourhood and in its relationship with Russia itself.
Let's wait-and-see ...
The EU's official policy remains to remould Russia in the European
image, working within four discreet 'spaces' (economy, security &
justice, research, education & culture and external security). At
the same time, there is now a pan-EU consensus that the state of
democracy in Russia is unlikely to improve in the foreseeable future and
that corruption is too entrenched to fight.
When meeting the Kremlin officials, the EU diplomats continue to
mention human rights and the democratic deficit, but they do so quietly
and without much conviction. Most EU member-states have adopted an
agnostic attitude to Russia's topsy-turvy domestic politics, and their
focus in Russia is to win orders for business back home, often at the
expense of other Europeans. As one European diplomat put it, "the EU is
now dealing with Russia as it does with China."
Ironically, this 'agnostic consensus' is emerging at the time when
most EU members report an improvement in atmospherics in their bilateral
ties with Russia. Poland and Lithuania are working hard to get rid of
the 'New Cold Warriors' label and put their relations with Moscow on a
more positive footing. At the EU level, the Europeans seem less divided
than before: negotiations of a new framework agreement with Russia are
on hold not because of numerous vetoes by individual member states (as
it was in the past), but because the EU is waiting for Russia to join
the World Trade Organisation.
... with no results.
These good atmospherics between Moscow and the member states,
however, mask the continued lack of unity within the EU. While a few
years ago there was an appetite to bridge the divisions between
different EU member-states and to speak to Russia with one voice, today
most Europeans seem content with extreme bilateralism in their ties with
Moscow, and no longer cherish the ambition to forge a coherent, pan-EU
approach.
This attitude is doing little to advance the EU's strategic
objectives in the region: to help create a ring of democratic, secure
and prosperous states in its neighbourhood, including in Russia. The EU
is struggling to make progress on a long list of issues, be they
connected to trade, security or democracy.
A free trade agreement with Russia remains a distant prospect, while
the country's investment climate remains notoriously corrupt and marred
by red tape.
In the area of security, the EU remains one of the main targets for
refugees from Russia, who form the second biggest group of
asylum-seekers in the EU, larger than those from Somalia, Iraq or
Kosovo, with numbers rising.
And while most EU diplomats agree that the prospect of a visa-free
regime with Russia is one of the few issues where Moscow is the sole
demander, the EU lacks the appetite to use it to push Russia to bolster
its porous border management and encourage sweeping reforms in law
enforcement in the same way as in the western Balkans, or Ukraine and
Moldova.
Europe is also struggling to nudge its neighbour towards anything
more than pro-forma co-operation on resolution of the protracted
conflicts in Eastern Europe and South Caucasus. These continue to pose
security risks for the EU, scar the everyday lives of the population in
the disputed areas, and hinder the region's economic and social
development.
And although the EU and Russia are now 'partners for modernisation',
Moscow vocally opposes the deal between Ukraine and the EU on deep and
comprehensive free trade, despite the fact that such an agreement would
be a huge boost to the modernisation of Ukraine's economy. By
recognising the results of the rigged presidential elections in Belarus
in December last year, Moscow continues to frustrate the EU's efforts to
strengthen democracy in the neighbourhood.
What next?
As long as Russian leadership remains defensive about its chosen
political model and suspicious of Western motives, the EU's ability to
change the thinking in Moscow will be limited. But there are things the
EU can do to strengthen its hand: the current goodwill between Russia
and the member states presents an opportunity for the EU to move its
relations with Moscow beyond the lowest common denominator.
The EU needs to use the current good weather with Russia to advance
its interests and press harder on issues it cares about. One of the few
things the Russian leadership came to grips with in the aftermath of the
economic crisis was the understanding that the country's economy is
profoundly dependent on the EU.
And while the Russian leadership may be trying to charm China for
geopolitical reasons, the Russian society is firmly looking westwards.
Using the robust economic base of its relations with Russia to expand
the political and security fibre of this bond would be a smart strategy
for the EU. Improving coordination is the first step.
At present the embassies compete against one another to secure more
trade with Russia; they do little to address political issues jointly,
either ignoring them or leaving them to the EU delegation in Moscow
(which, without clear support from member states, cannot be effective).
Of course, the Kremlin will respond with vitriol – but the widespread
assumption that this would ruin the EU's business relationship with
Russia does not hold up.
The case in the point is trade between the US and Russia, which is
growing as the US Congress debates possible visa sanctions on officials
involved in the death of the lawyer Sergei Magnitsky.
There are some positive signs already: in 2010, Berlin tried to
leverage its robust relations with Russia to advance the settlement of
the conflict in Transnistria. While that initiative is yet to bear the
fruit, member states would err to dismiss it. What the initiative needs
is more unity and support behind Germany's steps, not the scepticism it
was met with from most EU capitals.
The EU should adopt a similar approach in Georgia and at minimum,
push Moscow to adhere to the ceasefire agreement it signed in 2008.
While it will take longer for the member states to coin a coherent and
strategic vision for the EU's overall relations with Russia, remaining
silent on issues that matter to the EU's own security is not the way
forward either.
Going beyond business as usual with Russia will be more difficult at a
time when the EU is becoming increasingly introverted, and shaken by
the eurozone crisis, ongoing unrest in the southern neighbourhood and
debates about the usefulness of the Schengen zone.
Failure to act will gradually diminish the EU's influence not only in
Russia, but also in its neighbourhood, reducing the EU to a business
partner for semi-authoritarian regimes. No matter how navel-gazing the
EU currently is, few would find such prospect attractive.
Jana Kobzova is a Russia expert at the European Council on Foreign Relations think-tank in London
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