Ukraine and the European Union

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.

 This article or section needs to be updated.
Parts of this article or section have been identified as no longer being up to date.
Please update the article to reflect recent events, and remove this template when finished.
Ukraine

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
Ukraine



Other countries · Politics Portal
view  talk  edit

In 2004, the president of Ukraine, Viktor Yushchenko, said that Membership of Ukraine in the European Union is a strategic goal of his foreign policy. Yushchenko was elected mainly by citizens in the western, northern and central parts of Ukraine, that want stronger links with the European Union. Eastern parts of the country are also supportive of the integration into EU, however, to a lesser extent. It is not clear if or when Ukraine will join the European Union, nor is it an official candidate country as yet. Presidential Secretariat of Ukraine has set 2017 as the target year for Ukraine's entry into EU.

Most political factions in Ukraine advocate joining the EU and developing ties with western Europe. However, some in the EU are more doubtful concerning Ukraine's prospects. In 2002, EU Expansion Commissioner Günter Verheugen said that "a European perspective" for Ukraine does not necessarily mean membership within 10 to 20 years; however, it is a possibility. A Ukraine-EU Troika meeting in April 2004, on the eve of the newest wave of expansion, dealt a blow to Ukraine's European aspirations when the EU ministers failed to grant market economy status to Ukraine; however, this was before the success of the Orange Revolution there.

For the time being, Ukraine will most likely develop intermediate relations with the EU, as it is strongly backed by all major political forces in Poland, an EU member with strong historical ties with Ukraine (through the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth).

The Orange Revolution of late 2004 improved Ukraine's European prospects: Opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko hinted that he would press the EU for deeper ties and described a four-point plan: the acknowledgment of Ukraine as a market economy, entry in the World Trade Organization, associate membership in the European Union, and, finally, full membership.[1] In a similar way, the Ukrainian government asked Brussels to give Ukraine a more clear prospect for membership, saying that "The approved Action Plan reflects only the level of Ukraine-EU relations that we could have reached before the presidential elections in 2004"[2]

On January 13, 2005, the European Parliament almost unanimously (467 votes to 19 in favor) passed a motion stating the wish of the European Parliament to establish closer ties with Ukraine in view of the possibility of EU membership. Though there is still a long way to go before negotiations about EU membership can start, the European Commission has stated that future EU membership will not be ruled out. Yushchenko has responded to the apathetic mood of the Commission by stating that he intends to send an application for EU membership "in the near future" and that he intends to scrutinize Ukraine's relationship with the CIS in order to assure that EU integration is possible, and, if not, to make it possible. Several EU leaders have already stated strong support for closer economic ties with Ukraine, but have stopped short of direct support for such a bid. On March 21, 2005, Polish Foreign Minister Adam Daniel Rotfeld noted that Poland will, in every way, promote Ukraine's desire to be integrated with the EU, achieve the status of a market-economy country, and join the WTO. He also said, "At the present moment, we should talk concrete steps in cooperation instead of engaging in empty talk about European integration". Three days later, a poll of the six largest EU nations conducted by a French research company showed that the European public would be more likely to accept Ukraine as a future EU member than any other country that is not currently an official candidate.

In October 2005, Commission president José Manuel Durão Barroso said that the future of Ukraine is in the EU. On November 9, 2005, however, the European Commission in a new strategy paper suggested that the current enlargement agenda (Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia, and in the future the other ex-Yugoslavian countries) could block the possibility of a future accession of Ukraine, Belarus, and Moldova. Commissioner Olli Rehn said that the EU should avoid overexpansion, adding that the current enlargement agenda is already quite full.[3]

In March 2007 the EU and Ukraine started talks about a new "wider agreement", which be a free-trade-zone and a closer relationship in the questions of energy policy between the EU and Ukraine. EU is more skeptical for an offical agreement of EU-Membership of Ukraine. The commisisior for the EU Benita Ferrero-Waldner, said that the EU and Ukraine planed to have an agreement which will be based on the PKA.[4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ EUobserver article (subscription only)
  2. ^ EUobserver article (subscription only)
  3. ^ EUobserver article (subscription only)
  4. ^ EurAktiv: EU und Ukraine beginnen Kooperationsgespräche 6. März 2007 (German)

[edit] Literature

  • Anatolij Ponomarenko: "Die europäische Orientierung der Ukraine: Dekret des Präsidenten der Ukraine über die Strategie der Integration der Ukraine in die Europäische Union; Partnerschaftsabkommen zwischen der EU und der Ukraine". Zentrum für Europäische Integrationsforschung, Bonn 1999. 42 S. ISBN 3-933307-39-2 (German)
  • Dezseri, Kalman [ed.]: Economic and political relations after the EU enlargement : the Visegrad countries and Russia, Ukraine, Belarius and Moldov, Budapest 2004

[edit] External links


In other languages