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Has COVID-19 dented the EU’s credibility in the Balkans? | Bruegel


Aliénor Cameron

13-16 minutes

  _____  

Muddled initial reactions to the COVID-19 crisis tarnished the EU’s image in 
the Western Balkans. Europe should not take for granted the extent of its 
influence over its backyard in the face of Chinese and Russian charm offensives.

The European Union’s soft power 
<https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/08/20/the-rise-and-fall-of-soft-power/> , 
largely stemming from the attractiveness of its model, could be impaired by 
COVID-19. The EU’s external influence is strongest in countries that seek to 
emulate the EU and eventually become members, principally today in the Western 
Balkans: Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and 
Serbia.

However, the lack of solidarity among EU countries in the first weeks of the 
COVID-19 crisis response, the closing of borders that left many people stranded 
and the apparent lack of concern for the needs of the region dented the EU’s 
image in the Balkans.

The EU’s shaky initial response towards its neighbours in south-east Europe did 
not help improve perceptions. It initially banned exports of medical supplies 
to them, and even though this step was subsequently corrected 
<https://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/press/index.cfm?id=2132>  it left an 
impression of abandonment. Though the EU reprogrammed and topped 
<https://www.reuters.com/article/us-eu-balkans/eu-offers-more-aid-membership-to-balkans-in-riposte-to-china-russia-idUSKBN22I00N>
  up ongoing assistance to help these countries meet crisis needs, it did not 
include them in its own crisis recovery package. As a result, the credibility 
of the EU’s outreach to the region, already eroded by apparently  endless 
membership talks and enlargement fatigue, seems to have been further dented.

Competition from China and Russia to win hearts and minds in the Balkans

On the pretext of tackling the public health and economic crisis, Balkan  
countries  have relapse 
<https://freedomhouse.org/report/nations-transit/2020/dropping-democratic-facade>
 d into authoritarian rule, despite EU pro-democracy prodding.

COVID-19 has encouraged China and Russia, already active 
<https://warsawinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Russias-Hybrid-Warfare-in-the-Western-Balkans-Warsaw-Institute-Special-Report.pdf>
  in the Balkans, to try to fill the widening geopolitical gap by offering 
assistance and investment as well as negative reporting, fake news and 
disinformation aimed at the EU. Pro-Russian media portray 
<https://euvsdisinfo.eu/sputnik-srbija-narratives-fuel-east-west-division-in-western-balkans-nato-report-fiinds/>
  EU assistance as a belated effort to catch up with Russian and Chinese 
support. Storylines 
<https://euvsdisinfo.eu/eeas-special-report-update-short-assessment-of-narratives-and-disinformation-around-the-covid19-pandemic-updated-23-april-18-may/>
  include rumours of the EU’s imminent collapse because of its failure to deal 
with the pandemic, the Union’s selfishness in its external actions, and its 
exploitation of the crisis to advance its own interests. By contrast, these 
sources portray Russia and China as the only trustworthy powers in the crisis, 
and as saviours who helped Italy and Serbia while the EU dithered.

Statements from political leaders in Serbia reinforce this narrative, building 
on longstanding government claims that the country benefits from close links 
with China and Russia as well as the EU. President Aleksandar Vučić called 
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P42OrsA045M>  European solidarity “a fairy 
tale” and said that China was the only country able to provide substantial aid 
to Serbia in the crisis. Posters of President Xi Jinping and Chinese flags were 
displayed prominently in Belgrade for several weeks. Images of Prime Minister 
Ana Brnabić meeting 
<http://www.mod.gov.rs/eng/15843/jedanaest-aviona-dopremilo-medicinsku-pomoc-iz-ruske-federacije-15843>
  the first of eleven Russian planes carrying supplies were broadcast live on 
Serbian television.

Media monitoring by the CRTA <https://crta.rs/en/>  
<about:reader?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.bruegel.org%2F2020%2F06%2Fhas-covid-19-dented-the-eus-credibility-in-the-balkans%2F#_ftn1>
 [1] shows that between March and May 2020, Serbian news articles about China 
became much more positive and articles about the EU rather more negative 
(Figure 1). Serbian state television regularly presented the EU in a negative 
light, while depicting China and Russia positively.

But reactions have differed 
<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2020/04/16/how-has-eus-financial-assistance-to-the-western-balkans-been-allocated-thus-far/>
  across the Balkans. Some countries, particularly Kosovo, have been less 
euphoric about aid from China and Russia and more appreciative of EU and United 
States assistance. Albania remains the most pro-EU country in the region, 
despite economic support from China 
<https://sinopsis.cz/en/are-we-real-friends-albania-china-relations-in-the-xi-era/>
 . At the peak of the epidemic, Albanian prime minister Edi Rama went to see 
off the plane carrying 30 Albanian doctors to Italy and gave a speech in 
Italian, stating “We don’t abandon a friend in need”. Italian Prime Minister 
Giuseppe Conte thanked him for it and Albanian aid to Italy was widely covered 
by Italian media 
<https://www.repubblica.it/esteri/2020/03/29/news/coronavirus_medici_albania_italia-252593099/>
 . Nonetheless, Euroscepticism 
<http://www.tepsa.eu/tepsa-explainer-euroscepticism-in-albania/>  in Albania is 
growing and a vocal minority has been diffusing anti-EU messages during the 
COVID-19 crisis.

Despite the EU’s longstanding engagement as principal backer of the Western 
Balkans, the EU has some way to go before becoming the region’s favoured 
partner in collective perceptions.

Despite the EU’s longstanding engagement as principal backer of the Western 
Balkans, the EU has some way to go before becoming the region’s favoured 
partner in collective perceptions. The International Republican Institute’s 
March 2020 poll 
<https://www.iri.org/sites/default/files/final_wb_poll_deck_for_publishing_1.pdf>
  in the Western Balkans (excluding Albania) found that respondents had a range 
of perceptions of their country’s economic ties with foreign countries. A 
majority of Serbian respondents identified China and Russia as their state’s 
main economic partners while most Kosovan respondents cited the US and Germany. 
In Bosnia and Herzegovina, North Macedonia and Montenegro respondents were 
split between identifying western countries, China, Russia and Turkey as their 
most important economic partners.

Nonetheless sentiment towards different foreign partners is not deeply rooted. 
Figure 2 shows the path which respondents think their country’s foreign policy 
should follow. Montenegrin respondents are the most convinced about 
strengthening ties with the EU and the West. In Serbia, 43% of respondents 
favour a pro-EU and pro-Western policy course, while 46% favour balanced or 
pro-Russian policies. Half of respondents had a favourable opinion of China, 
except in Kosovo where the rate was 14%. In Serbia, 85% of respondents had a 
favourable attitude towards China, versus only 63% towards Germany.

EU assistance to the Balkans

The EU announced 
<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2020/04/29/eu-announces-e3-3-billion-in-support-for-western-balkans/>
  a €3.3 billion assistance package for the Western Balkans on 29 April. It 
involves support from the Commission and the European Investment Bank for 
emergency needs, recovery and reconstruction. Figure 3 gives the breakdown of 
the support package and its distribution by country.

This announcement came on the eve of a long-planned EU-Western Balkans Summit, 
held by video conference on 6 May 2020. The summit declaration 
<https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/press/press-releases/2020/05/06/zagreb-declaration-6-may-2020/>
  included an unusual rebuke: “The fact that (EU) support and cooperation goes 
far beyond what any other partner has provided to the region deserves public 
acknowledgement.” President Vučić responded to this and other critical remarks 
<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2020/04/21/borrell-it-is-funny-how-only-china-receives-billboards-of-gratitude-in-serbia/>
  from EU leaders by recognising 
<https://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics.php?yyyy=2020&mm=05&dd=06&nav_id=108442> 
 EU efforts. EU Council President Charles Michel acknowledged Serbia’s 
assistance to Italian residents and aid to other Balkan countries.

Besides financial assistance, the EU included the Western Balkans in its scheme 
for the joint procurement of personal protective equipment and ‘green lane 
<https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_20_777> ’ border 
crossing arrangements, designed to ensure that any checks and health screening 
of transport workers do not cause delays of more than 15 minutes – a crucial 
measure given that 83% of the region’s exports 
<https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/infographics/western-balkans-economy/>  go 
to EU countries, much of which is transported by road 
<https://ec.europa.eu/transport/themes/international/enlargement/western-balkans/transport-community_en>
 . The Commission has announced for later in 2020 a longer-term economic and 
investment plan needed to tackle decades of under-investment 
<https://www.wbif.eu/>  in infrastructure, an area in which China is 
particularly active. The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, not 
an EU institution, intervened rapidly after the onset of the epidemic with 
additional funds 
<https://www.ebrd.com/news/2020/ebrd-boosting-finance-and-reform-support-to-help-western-balkans-fight-coronavirus.html>
  for rescue, reconstruction and recovery.

The EU has accompanied its assistance with a narrative of solidarity with the 
region. In announcing the €3.3 billion package, the Commission president 
commented <https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_20_777> : 
“We have a special responsibility to assist in this pandemic our partners in 
the Western Balkans, as their future clearly lies in the European Union.” 

But this formulation is wearing thin as membership remains an elusive goal. 
There was disappointment 
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/enlargement/news/eu-and-western-balkan-leaders-reaffirm-ties-in-veiled-response-to-china-russia/>
  in the Balkans that the May summit did not give a stronger signal. Key words 
– such as enlargement – were missing from the final declaration, and Balkan 
countries had to make do with the vaguer term perspective, which has been used 
for the past two decades. ‘Improvements 
<https://ec.europa.eu/neighbourhood-enlargement/countries/package_en> ’ in the 
accession process are more about keeping cautious member states on board than 
about making membership credible to the population of the region. The EU’s long 
delayed decision 
<https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/press/press-releases/2020/03/25/council-conclusions-on-enlargement-and-stabilisation-and-association-process/>
  in March to open membership talks with Albania and North Macedonia was a 
positive step, though no starting date was fixed and Albania faces additional 
hurdles. After eight years of such talks with Montenegro and nearly seven with 
Serbia, there is little prospect of any new member joining within the 
foreseeable future.

Recommendations

If the EU wishes to recover its influence in the Balkans following COVID-19, it 
needs to fine tune both incentives and conditionality. This means conveying to 
the region a deeper sense of attachment and inclusion and identifying new ways 
to involve Balkan citizens in European institutions and programmes. The scale 
of financial assistance should match the ambitious goal of integrating the 
region progressively into the EU. In exchange, Balkan leaders must establish 
unequivocally democratic forms of government, improve governance, fight 
corruption, and provide a convincing demonstration of reconciliation and 
engagement with neighbours and minorities.  

If the EU wishes to recover its influence in the Balkans following COVID-19, it 
needs to fine tune both incentives and conditionality.

The Balkans should be fully included in the EU’s ‘green recovery’ and efforts 
to build a digital single market. The likely shift towards partial decoupling 
from China and the reshoring of jobs to Europe could create new opportunities 
for Balkan countries, with their competitive labour markets, geographic 
proximity to the EU and prospects of eventual EU membership. The EU should work 
with aspirant countries to improve their investment climates and make their EU 
membership prospects more credible. The EU should make the Balkans a priority 
region for its new initiative  
<https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_20_1006> to fight 
disinformation related to COVID-19.  

In a break with precedent, the EU could consider a new two stage accession 
process 
<https://www.robert-schuman.eu/en/european-issues/0560-the-challenges-and-constraints-facing-a-geopolitical-commission-in-the-achievement-of-european>
  to provide encouragement to reformers in the region and convince EU 
governments that future members will not repeat the kind of rule-of-law 
backsliding witnessed in Hungary and Poland. In a first stage, candidate 
countries would be brought progressively into the single market and gradually 
given the benefit of structural funds, provided they demonstrate commitment to 
democracy and the rule-of-law. When they have established a convincing track 
record and completed membership negotiations successfully, they could graduate 
from this new form of probationary membership to full membership. This idea 
could be explored in the Conference on the Future of Europe 
<https://www.europeansources.info/record/conference-on-the-future-of-europe-2020-2022/>
 , which the German government intends 
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/news/future-of-europe-conference-part-of-germanys-eu-presidency-agenda/>
  to relaunch in the second half of 2020 under its presidency, after 
postponement because of COVID-19. 

Enhanced assistance for recovery and reconstruction following the epidemic 
could provide an opportunity to reinforce conditionality, while emergency and 
humanitarian assistance remain needs-based. Conditionality should relate to 
sound economic management, social and economic necessities, shared policy 
goals, democracy and the rule of law. 

A February 2019 paper 
<https://www.researchgate.net/publication/332550617_The_impact_of_EU_conditionality_in_Bosnia_and_Herzegovina_A_case_study_of_the_EU's_2014_initiative>
  (that focused on Bosnia-Herzegovina but whose conclusions are relevant to the 
region as a whole) suggested that such conditionality could apply to EU 
assistance under the EU’s forthcoming Economic and Investment Plan 
<https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/IP_20_777>  for the 
Western Balkans and to the EU’s Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance 
Programme <https://ec.europa.eu/regional_policy/en/funding/ipa/>  (IPA) for 
2021-2017, as well as macro-financial assistance.

The EU’s credibility as a soft power player with countries around the world 
depends on demonstrating its effectiveness at safeguarding basic values within 
the Union and in its own backyard. This hinges as much on perceptions as on 
objective measures taken.

The EU’s credibility as a soft power player with countries around the world 
depends on demonstrating its effectiveness at safeguarding basic values within 
the Union and in its own backyard. This hinges as much on perceptions as on 
objective measures taken. In the Balkans, the negative impression of the 
initial COVID reaction will require time to be corrected: initial bans on 
exports of masks and protective equipment, disorderly border closures without 
consultation, and a general sense that each European country looked after its 
own rather than fellow Europeans. First impressions count and can only be 
overcome through concrete achievements bringing tangible benefits to the 
population. A greater effort should be made to monitor and counter 
disinformation in this region. Despite Chinese and Russian efforts, the Balkans 
remain basically western-oriented, though this should not be taken for granted. 
Enhanced incentives accompanied by rigorous conditionality would strengthen the 
EU’s credibility and make a major contribution to recovery and reconstruction 
in the region.

Despite Chinese and Russian efforts, the Balkans remain basically 
western-oriented, though this should not be taken for granted. Enhanced 
incentives accompanied by rigorous conditionality would strengthen the EU’s 
credibility and make a major contribution to recovery and reconstruction in the 
region.

 
<about:reader?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.bruegel.org%2F2020%2F06%2Fhas-covid-19-dented-the-eus-credibility-in-the-balkans%2F#_ftnref1>
 [1] CRTA (Center for Research, Transparency and Accountability) is an 
independent, non-partisan civil society organisation committed to developing 
democratic culture and civic activism in Serbia through monitoring and 
oversight of higher institutional and public officials’ accountability. Their 
media monitoring is not available to the public.

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