IMPLICATIONS: In Summer 2003, in a move to rectify the mistake of leaving the South Caucasus outside the ENP, the EU appointed a Special Representative to the South Caucasus, the Finnish Diplomat and former co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group Mr. Heikki Talvitie. The Special Representative’s mandate is limited, however, and the distribution of duties among EU agencies and between them and the Special Representative is unclear. In the past, the interest of the individual member state holding the rotating presidency of the EU seems to have been a determining factor. Some states, such as Finland, Sweden and Greece, made the South Caucasus a priority on their agenda; others did not, taking away coherence in the EU’s approach to the region. The appointment of a Special Representative was thought to reduce this problem, which would nevertheless require a stronger mandate. In mid-June 2004, the EU is likely to reverse its exclusion of the South Caucasus from ENP. Instead of being literally a footnote, its is expected that the EU will include Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia into the main instrument of EU relations with its periphery. This is a welcome development, but questions remain as to whether this means a true EU engagement is forthcoming. In fact, the EU faces a host of problems in trying to formulate a policy toward the region. Firstly, the South Caucasus is likely to continue to be a backburner issue given the large issues looming over the Dutch presidency of the EU in the remaining half of 2004. The debate over the EU’s Constitution is likely to remain a major internal issue; while the question of whether to grant Turkey a date for accession talks could well dominate the EU’s external relations. Transatlantic and trade relations and the unrest in the Middle East and Iraq are other issues that rank higher than the South Caucasus in priority. Secondly, while trying to find a role for itself in the South Caucasus, the EU is entering a crowded scene. A host of multilateral organizations are already at work, whether successfully or unsuccessfully. Individual states, including EU member states, are other actors on the scene. Both member states and other organizations can pose diplomatic challenges to an increased EU role, especially in conflict resolution; the French role in the OSCE Minsk group illustrates both of these problems simultaneously. EU member states already form a large majority of the members in most international organizations active in the South Caucasus, including the Council of Europe, the OSCE, or NATO. In this context, the specific role that the EU as an organization could play remains to be determined; if not, the EU may only play a coordinating role among its member states within these other organizations with more specific mandates. Finally, the basic internal problem that the EU faces vis-à-vis this region has not changed: there is no driving force for the formulation and implementation of EU strategy or EU priorities in the South Caucasus. If both North Africa and the Western CIS have obvious sponsors within the EU, this is not the case for the South Caucasus. It is telling that the EU presidencies which have done the greatest impact on the region have been those of smaller EU members.
CONCLUSIONS: The inclusion of the South Caucasus in the European Neighborhood Policy is a positive development. Rather than being hailed as a success, however, it should be seen as an overdue correction of a strategic mistake. It now remains for the EU to outline a strategic vision for its relationship with the states of the South Caucasus and of its own role in that region. This process is likely to be gradual and unhurried. The EU is still in need to be thoroughly convinced that it is in the collective and individual interest of its members to engage with the South Caucasus. For a more coherent EU role to appear, a stronger institutional or national driving force within the union will likely need to emerge. Unless that happens, the great potential that the EU countries could potentially exercise to bolster the security and development of the South Caucasus – and thereby improve its own security – will remain unfulfilled.
AUTHOR’S BIO: Svante E. Cornell is Editor of the Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst and Deputy Director of the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute, Johns Hopkins University-SAIS, as well as Research Director of the Silk Road Studies Program, Uppsala University.