https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/08/25/balkans-dont-believe-eu-anymore-albania-macedonia-rama-vucic/




The Balkans Don't Believe the EU Anymore


Benjamin Haddad, Damir Marusic

In the Western Balkans, a region that is best known for generating 
intractable-seeming crises, good news often goes underappreciated. On July 29 
in Skopje, North Macedonia, Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vucic, Albania’s 
Prime Minister Edi Rama, and North Macedonia’s Prime Minister Zoran Zaev 
convened a summit to announce the launch of Open Balkan, an initiative that 
aims to bolster regional economic integration. The three vowed to abolish 
border controls between their countries by January 2023.

The news has thus far been met with cautious encouragement. Regional economic 
integration is an end that all in the West support, Washington and Berlin both 
said in separate statements, and any efforts to achieve it are welcome. In 
private, however, there is more hesitation. European diplomats wonder if this 
effort could short-circuit the European Union’s established efforts at 
fostering regional dialogue and cooperation (the so-called Berlin Process) or, 
worse, create an alternative to EU accession.

In the Western Balkans, a region that is best known for generating 
intractable-seeming crises, good news often goes underappreciated. On July 29 
in Skopje, North Macedonia, Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vucic, Albania’s 
Prime Minister Edi Rama, and North Macedonia’s Prime Minister Zoran Zaev 
convened a summit to announce the launch of Open Balkan, an initiative that 
aims to bolster regional economic integration. The three vowed to abolish 
border controls between their countries by January 2023.

The news has thus far been met with cautious encouragement. Regional economic 
integration is an end that all in the West support, Washington and Berlin both 
said in separate statements, and any efforts to achieve it are welcome. In 
private, however, there is more hesitation. European diplomats wonder if this 
effort could short-circuit the European Union’s established efforts at 
fostering regional dialogue and cooperation (the so-called Berlin Process) or, 
worse, create an alternative to EU accession.

In a regional tour in July that took us to North Macedonia, Serbia, and 
Albania, we sensed optimism for this initiative among local policymakers and 
business leaders, strongly leavened with disillusionment with the stalled 
accession process among the political class. Albania’s Rama has been especially 
outspoken in public, likening it to the experience of being repeatedly left 
standing at the altar. “Enlargement has not stalled—it has stopped,” another 
leader lamented to us during a series of off-the-record conversations with 
regional officials. Betting on Europe is increasingly becoming a liability with 
jaded voters tired of hearing about unfulfilled promises.

The politicians are not wrong to despair. In 2003 at Thessaloniki, Greece, 
European leaders pledged to the countries of the Western Balkans that their 
ultimate future lies in the EU. Language about a “European perspective” for the 
region has made it into almost every relevant communique since, clung to by 
officials as a demonstration of seriousness and commitment by a bloc that has 
traditionally struggled to articulate a coherent foreign policy for its wider 
neighborhood. But political will has never kept up with the rhetoric. And 
support for enlargement among voters has largely collapsed across the continent 
since the admission of Croatia in 2013, with publics in Western European 
countries especially leeryof admitting more countries at the moment.

But the stall is about more than Europeans failing to live up to their pledges. 
In the last decade, the EU has faced a flurry of crises, from the financial 
shock of 2008 to the migrant crisis, the effects of which were exacerbated by 
the bloc’s own internal structural shortcomings. French President Emmanuel 
Macron, who spearheaded the effort toward a new, more stringent, and most 
importantly reversible enlargement methodology, is insisting on far-reaching 
reforms to existing European institutions before any new countries are admitted 
to the bloc. Meanwhile, concerns about organized crime are dampening support 
for enlargement in such countries as the Netherlands.

And to be fair, Europeans are not wrong to point to corruption and problems 
with the rule of law for the disappointing progress in talks. The 2020 
Corruption Perceptions Index ranks Serbia at 94th worldwide out of 180 
countries, Albania 104th, and North Macedonia 111th. The fact that EU members 
such as Hungary and Poland are backsliding on democracy, and that Bulgaria and 
Romania continue to struggle with high-level corruption almost a decade and a 
half since accession, is not exactly an endorsement for hastily admitting more 
members to the club.

Faced with such grim prospects, it’s notable that none of Open Balkan’s 
founders see their initiative as an alternative to EU accession but rather as a 
complement to existing processes. Vucic, Rama, and Zaev all stressed to us 
during our trip that the project’s goals were patterned on the European common 
market, especially in seeking to guarantee the market’s “four freedoms” (the 
free movement of goods, capital, services, and people). The memorandum of 
understanding signed at the recent summit pledges to make good on the promise 
of free movement of goods within six months, and on the free movement of people 
by Jan. 1, 2023. The point, they say, is to show tangible benefits to their 
citizens as soon as possible. Serbia in particular is facing a labor shortage 
and is keen to make it easier for Macedonians and Albanians to cross the border 
for work. In the longer term, none of the countries is big enough on its own to 
attract large, transformative investments from Western firms. A single market 
could prove much more tempting.

While the Open Balkan name explicitly suggests an invitation to others, the 
absence of Kosovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro at the Skopje summit 
was conspicuous. The three holdouts remain skeptical, arguing that the new 
initiative duplicates the development of a Common Regional Market that was 
agreed to by all six in Sofia, Bulgaria, last year as part of the Berlin 
Process. They fret that taking part in an initiative that wasn’t designed in 
Europe will impact their accession prospects, distant as they may be. This is, 
of course, not true. Europe’s door is, for the moment at least, equally closed 
to all. And though, as we noted above, both American and European leaders have 
concerns about the Open Balkan initiative, the deliberate ambiguity of their 
statements—voicing support for regional economic integration without specifying 
which vehicle is best to achieve it—also betrays genuine ambivalence on the 
matter.

The truth is that an initiative like Open Balkan will ultimately stand or fall 
on implementation. The recent meeting saw only one binding agreement pledging 
mutual emergency assistance actually signed, with the rest of the ambitious 
proposals to be fleshed out at lower levels of government in the coming months. 
The smart play at this point would be for the West to help the initiative 
succeed while ensuring that its pledge of openness to the entire region remains 
in place. Any honest account of the birth of the EU admits that it was itself 
the product of many concurrently running initiatives and bilateral agreements 
that over time coalesced into the arrangement they have now. The birth of a 
lasting order in the Western Balkans will likely be no different. The role of 
the West should not be to engineer and micromanage. Rather, it should keep the 
participants honest in delivering on their pledges, while at the same time 
keeping an eye on the big picture, ensuring that the outcome be as inclusive, 
functional, and indeed open as possible.

The bigger picture matters most of all. Coming on the heels of the breakthrough 
Prespa agreement between North Macedonia and Greece, initiatives like Open 
Balkan signal that something important, and indeed healthy, is happening on the 
ground: Local leaders are taking ownership of their fate and showing 
creativity. This needs to be embraced and encouraged. The EU in particular 
should take the opportunity to be more flexible. As it itself adapts to a 
changing world, it should start reimagining what its relationship with its 
near-abroad can look like. Perhaps concentric circles of deepening integration 
over time can take the place of a one-size-fits-all bureaucratic approach that 
has obviously ground to a halt.

Vucic used the recent summit as an excuse to publish an op-ed in a leading 
Serbian daily calling on his fellow Serbs to look to a hopeful future instead 
of marinating in long-standing hatred for Albanians. This is but the most 
recent manifestation of a thaw that has been building for more than a year now. 
As of this summer, Serbs represent the second-largest nationality visiting 
Albania’s beaches—a stunning figure given recent history. More positive 
surprises are possible, even likely, should a cycle of prosperity take hold.

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