
Influential European online media resource, "New Europe", writes about
the EU`s concern about the Armenian plans to join the Customs Union.
The
unpredictable decision by Armenia`s President Serzh Sargsyan that
Yerevan will join a customs union with Russia has raised doubts over
Armenia`s EU integration path and caused concern in Brussels about
Europe`s relations with its eastern neighbours.
Armenia was
poised to sign a key political and free-trade deal with the EU at a
summit in November but both Russia and the EU have said countries can`t
have both.
Armenia`s decision prompted a planned debate and vote
at the European Parliament in Strasbourg this week on Russian pressure
on ex-Soviet countries to drop EU integration plans. MEPs were expected
to criticise growing Russian pressure on the EU`s eastern neighbours,
such as Armenia and Ukraine, not to seek to deepen economic and
political ties with the EU at this November`s Eastern Partnership summit
in Vilnius.
"I think it was bad news to see that Armenia was
falling into this and we have a growing concern about this," a
high-ranking official told New Europe in Strasbourg on 10 September. "I
think that we should rebuild a new strategy in order to regain the
Eastern Partnership influence of the European Union and not to lose more
possible and potential partners for the future," the official added,
calling for defending the European Union as a protagonist in the Eastern
Partnership.
Experts note that Armenia took the easy way out by
choosing to join the Customs Union and point out that Yerevan`s
political decision shows this country is interested in preserving status
quo in Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Azerbaijan.
On the other
hand, Azerbaijan, which has rich energy resources, plans to help the
European Union lessen its reliance on Russian gas and is seeking to
deepen its ties with Brussels, increasingly becoming a reliable and
predictable partner for the European Union.
Brussels indicated
its reluctance to accept Armenia`s offer to renegotiate a planned
Association Agreement with the EU. "In light of Armenia`s declared
choice to join the Customs Union it is difficult to imagine the
initialling at Vilnius summit in November of the Association Agreement
with Armenia as it had been negotiated," EU Enlargement Commissioner
Stefan Fuele said after talks with visiting Foreign Minister Edward
Nalbandian. "Based on the information we presently have, the
compatibility of obligations to the Customs Union with those under an
Association Agreement/DCFTA (Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area)
with the EU looks problematic," Fuele added in a statement.
Europe is also concerned by Georgia`s statement that Tbilisi may, in due course, also join the Russian Customs Union.
Speaking
on national TV on 4 September, Georgia`s Prime Minister Bidzina
Ivanishvili said: he is keeping a close eye on the Eurasian Union "and
we are studying it. At this stage we have no position at all. If in
perspective we see that it is in our country`s strategic interest, then,
why not? But at this stage we have no position at all", "New Europe"
quotes the Georgian Prime Minister.
/AzerTAg/