Netherlands’ tight fist now chokes Ukraine’s EU
bid
As EU heads meet in Versailles, the Dutch lead a
coalition against Zelenskyy’s request for membership.
BY DAVID M.
HERSZENHORN
March 10,
2022 4:30 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/netherlands-ukraine-eu-membership-zelenskyy-putin/
VERSAILLES,
France — The Netherlands is once again leading a charge of frugal countries at
a major European Council summit, but this time it’s not common debt the Dutch
are blocking but generosity of spirit toward war-ravaged Ukraine’s bid to join
the EU.
As EU heads
of state and government gather at Versailles to discuss Russia’s war in
Ukraine, Kyiv’s hastily-submitted membership application will be near the top
of the agenda.
With his
country facing invasion and bombardment, Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy late last month pleaded for immediate admission under “a new special
procedure.”
“Our goal
is to be together with all Europeans,” he said, adding: “I’m sure it’s
possible.”
But Dutch
diplomats, at the direction of Prime Minister Mark Rutte, have thrown up
obstacles to granting Ukraine status as a candidate country, or even to making
references in the leaders’ statement to Article 49 of the EU treaties, which
lays out the accession process, according to Dutch, Ukrainian and other EU
diplomats and officials.
Arriving at
the summit in Versailles, Rutte said that it was premature to discuss Ukraine’s
application but that there was consensus in Western Europe against any special
acceleration of the normal process.
“This is a
year-long procedure; we have to look at what we can do in the short term,”
Rutte said, adding: “All the countries in the western part of Europe that I
speak to, say that you shouldn’t try to have an express train, a fast-track
procedure or accelerated accession process. But the question of whether you are
for or against membership for Ukraine is not an issue at this point.”
Dutch
diplomats did not deny their country’s stance but insisted that Germany and
other countries shared their position as well as the Netherlands’ view that any
reference to Article 49 and formal membership for Ukraine would further provoke
Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Putin,
however, has shown that he alone decides when he feels provoked — lashing out
on the basis of a web of conspiracy theories that he has spun for years,
divorced from reality about the West and its role in Ukraine.
The Hague’s
position has delivered a particularly painful sting, given that 196 Dutch
citizens died when Russian-backed separatists shot down a civilian passenger
jet, Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, over eastern Ukraine in July 2014.
It also
follows a nonbinding referendum in 2016 in which Dutch voters opposed a
political association agreement between Ukraine and the EU. That campaign
against the association agreement was led by far-right politician Thierry
Baudet, who was later found to have financial ties to Russia.
Since the
invasion, Baudet has continued to support Putin, one of the few European
political figures to do so. “Putin is right,” Baudet wrote on Twitter last
week. “The West IS behaving like a bandit.”
He said that NATO, the EU, and U.S. should stop escalating the fight
with Russia and “accept neutrality” for Ukraine.
The Dutch
parliament ultimately ratified the association agreement in May 2017, as well
as a trade agreement with Ukraine. Since then, Kyiv has made steady, if at
times slow, progress on reforms demanded by Brussels, including anti-corruption
initiatives and overhauls of its banking and energy systems.
On March 1,
with bombs falling and Russia’s full-scale invasion underway, Ukraine’s finance
ministry made a $292 million coupon payment on a Eurobond with a 7.75 percent
interest rate and maturity date of September 2022. A senior EU official pointed
POLITICO to the payment as evidence of Ukraine’s commitment to meet its
obligations.
On
Thursday, as EU leaders began arriving at Versailles, Ukrainian officials were
reeling from the latest failed ceasefire negotiations in Turkey, and they
reacted with fury over the Dutch position on EU membership
“So, the
Dutch having almost killed the association agreement because of their
‘tolerance’ towards Russian stooges now are ready punish Ukraine — people in
war with Russia — for the second time, killing the hope,” a senior Ukrainian
diplomat said.
Ukrainians
often point out, accurately, that during their Maidan Revolution of 2013-2014,
in which tens of thousands protested for months in support of the political and
trade agreements with the EU, they became the only people who have ever died
under the EU’s blue and yellow flag. And Putin has stated repeatedly that his
invasion was based heavily on Ukraine’s westward trajectory, particularly its
stated aspiration to join NATO.
“The
message is very simple: The main players in the EU need to wake up,” the senior
Ukrainian diplomat said. “They groomed the monster and they should take the
responsibility now to stop the war and get Ukraine in.”
One
Brussels-based diplomat familiar with The Hague’s position said that Rutte,
holding fast to his pragmatic instincts, is more interested in helping
Zelenskyy immediately rather than EU membership which would help in the distant
future.
The
immediate support means military assistance, money and aid for Ukrainian
refugees fleeing the country. “Everybody in their emotion is concentrating on
one issue which will take 20 years,” this diplomat said. “And it’s not going to
help Zelenskyy today.”
As of now,
the draft leaders’ statement notes that Ukraine’s application is under review
and awaiting an opinion from the European Commission. “Pending this and without
delay, we will further strengthen our bonds and deepen our partnership,” the
draft statement says. “Ukraine belongs to our European family.”
Poland and
Estonia have led the campaign in favor of granting Ukraine quick membership to
the EU. And European Council President Charles Michel proposed a compromise
text that would make reference to Article 49, but the Netherlands insisted that
it also make reference to a thicket of other treaty provisions related to the
membership process.
Officials
have noted that new member countries must comply with the EU’s legal “acquis”
which runs to some 88,000 pages.
A day
before Zelenskyy’s plea for immediate membership, European Commission President
Ursula von der Leyen had raised Kyiv’s hopes saying in a televised interview:
“They are one of us and we want them in,” she told the Euronews TV channel.
EU
ambassadors on Monday formally transmitted Ukraine’s membership application to
the Commission for its opinion, fast-tracking a process that normally takes
months.
Diplomats
said that while technically there is no existing process for instant admission,
in the EU anything is possible if the 27 heads of state and government express
unanimous support.
“True, fast
track is not existing in our regulations,” said one EU diplomat in favor of
admission for Ukraine. “However, if there is a political will then everything
can be done.”
Jacopo Barigazzi contributed reporting.
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