eurasiareview.com<https://www.eurasiareview.com/29122025-western-balkans-and-european-union-group-enlargement-as-strategic-response-to-crisis-of-credibility-and-geopolitical-uncertainty-analysis/>
Western Balkans And European Union: Group Enlargement As Strategic Response To 
Crisis Of Credibility And Geopolitical Uncertainty – Analysis
IFIMES
14–18 minutes
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The initiative put forward by the President of the Republic of Serbia, 
Aleksandar Vučić, proposing the group accession of Western Balkan countries to 
the EU, and presented at a recent meeting with Ursula von der Leyen, President 
of the European Commission, and António Costa, President of the European 
Council, has reopened a fundamental question at the heart of European policy: 
does the EU have a clear and consistent strategy for the Western Balkans?

This initiative is neither a political experiment nor an attempt to bypass 
European criteria. Instead, it seeks to restore the strategic rationale of 
enlargement, which has yielded stable and long-term results at pivotal moments 
in the Union’s history. The core of the proposal is not about “easing” 
membership, but about acknowledging that a fragmented, bilateral and 
indefinitely protracted process is losing credibility – both among the citizens 
of the Western Balkans and within the broader geopolitical context.

Group enlargement – a forgotten yet proven European model

Group enlargement is not a historical anomaly, but a well-established practice 
applied at decisive strategic junctures. The most prominent example is the 2004 
enlargement round, when the EU admitted ten states simultaneously, 
predominantly from Central and Eastern Europe. In effect, this amounted to “9.5 
states”, as the northern, Turkish-administered part of Cyprus lay outside the 
scope of the acquis communautaire. That round of enlargement brought 
approximately 70 million people into the Union, while the Western Balkans today 
comprise around 16 million inhabitants, underscoring that the region’s 
demographic scale cannot reasonably be considered a barrier to integration.

In 2025, migration from the Balkans reached an estimated 500,000 young people 
annually, driven primarily by economic pressures and security concerns. Group 
enlargement offers a potential avenue to address this trend by advancing 
economic integration and opening access to the EU labour market.

Under a negotiated group enlargement scenario (2028–2030), all candidate 
countries would join the EU in a single wave. This would bolster the Union’s 
credibility in the region, increase public support for membership by 20–25%, 
stabilise local economies by generating estimated annual GDP growth of 2–3%, 
and improve the effectiveness of regional cooperation by 30–50% through joint 
infrastructure and trade projects.

[https://www.eurasiareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/a-212.jpg]<https://www.eurasiareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/a-212.jpg>Socioeconomic
 scenarios for the Western Balkans

The 2004 enlargement decision was guided by strategic considerations rather 
than by the pursuit of perfect institutional solutions. In retrospect, that 
move is widely regarded as one of the most successful in the history of the 
European Union: it stabilised the post-socialist space, accelerated the 
economic development of the new member states, reduced security risks, and 
permanently integrated them into the Western political, legal and value-based 
framework. Amid today’s geopolitical volatility, including Russia’s invasion of 
Ukraine, it is difficult to overstate how much more vulnerable the EU would be 
without that landmark enlargement.

Viewed through this lens, the initiative for the group accession of Western 
Balkan countries is not an experiment, but rather a natural extension of an 
established European practice, recalibrated to meet the demands of the current 
geopolitical and strategic environment.

The Western Balkans as a “prisoner of the process”

In contrast to Central and Eastern European countries in the early 2000s, the 
Western Balkans today remain trapped in a prolonged candidacy without a clearly 
defined outcome. The enlargement process increasingly resembles an end in 
itself, while the genuine prospect of membership has been supplanted by complex 
technical phases, provisional mechanisms and political conditionalities.

Such an approach reduces the region from an active participant to a passive 
recipient of policy, weakening political motivation and public support for 
reforms. A group-based EU approach could generate a powerful psychological, 
political and institutional impact by restoring a clear connection between 
reform implementation and a tangible reward — the core principle underpinning 
any effective enlargement policy.

Lessons from previous enlargement rounds provide important insights:

  *   The Baltic states (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, 2004) – a decisive and 
well-coordinated approach, a clear European perspective, strong domestic 
political will and EU support, which resulted in rapid and successful 
integration. Well-defined benchmarks, transparent timelines and broad internal 
consensus proved essential to the credibility of the process.
  *   Romania and Bulgaria (2007) – formal membership combined with 
post-accession mechanisms (the Monitoring and Cooperation and Verification 
Mechanism) highlighted the risks associated with prolonged and fragmented 
reform processes, a diminished perception of EU credibility and frustration 
within the new member states.
  *   Croatia (2013) – a protracted negotiation process guided by a clear 
strategy and political determination illustrates the importance of regional 
consensus, internal reforms and transparent negotiations for long-term 
stability and favourable EU engagement.

Lessons for the Western Balkans: At present, the region is affected by 
prolonged uncertainty, fragmented criteria and limited regional consensus. 
Unlike earlier enlargement waves, which offered a clear and credible path to 
membership, the Western Balkans continue to be “trapped” within the process.

A group-based EU approach could help restore the credibility of enlargement, 
provide clearer timelines and re-establish the principle of rewards linked to 
reform implementation. Such a model would transform the region from a passive 
recipient of policies into an active participant in European integration.

The EU’s credibility crisis and the role of regional cooperation

The European Union’s current enlargement policy is marked by a serious problem 
of double standards. Many existing member states do not meet the criteria 
demanded of Western Balkan countries, particularly in the areas of the rule of 
law, media freedom, anti-corruption efforts and the independence of the 
judiciary. Such asymmetry generates a sense of political unfairness and 
reinforces perceptions of selective political pressure. Moreover, the practice 
of ad hoc changes to requirements and the absence of clear timelines erode 
trust among both citizens and institutions in EU decision-making mechanisms, 
making the enlargement process appear politically instrumentalised rather than 
merit-based, and significantly undermining the EU’s credibility in the eyes of 
the Western Balkans.

Against this backdrop, regional cooperation emerges as a crucial driver of a 
stronger European perspective. In 2025, the Western Balkans generated a 
combined GDP of around EUR 130 billion, with trade with the European Union 
accounting for approximately 65–70% of the region’s total external trade, 
demonstrating a high degree of economic interdependence and the need for a 
coordinated approach to integration.

The experience of the Visegrád Group confirms that joint political action, 
experience-sharing and mutual support can substantially accelerate the 
accession trajectory. At present, the Western Balkans are engaged in several 
regional initiatives that foster connectivity and a sense of shared 
destiny—including CEFTA, the Berlin Process, the Open Balkan and the 
Adriatic–Ionian Initiative. A group-based EU approach could further catalyse 
these efforts, transitioning the region from a passive policy-recipient to a 
proactive stakeholder in the integration process, while enhancing its 
negotiating leverage and strategic significance within the broader European 
framework.

EU enlargement as a strategic response to crises and trust-building in the 
region

Throughout its history, EU enlargement has served as a response to internal 
crises within the Union. Today’s challenges are particularly acute: the war in 
Ukraine, a reshaped European security architecture, energy insecurity, 
migration pressures, the rise of populism and declining global competitiveness. 
The integration of the Western Balkans is not merely an act of solidarity, but 
a strategic investment in the security, stability and geopolitical cohesion of 
the continent. The exclusion of the region from the Union would generate a 
persistent source of instability along the EU’s borders and further erode the 
Union’s internal stability.

The prolonged stalling of the enlargement process is already having significant 
social and political repercussions. Public trust in the EU has been steadily 
declining: in Serbia, it has fallen from 70% in 2010 to approximately 40% in 
2025; in Montenegro, from 65% to 45%; while North Macedonia and Albania have 
seen a decline from around 60% to 35–40%. The EU is increasingly viewed as an 
inconsistent and unpredictable partner, opening space for competing 
geopolitical narratives and the expanding influence of other global actors. 
Sustained uncertainty weakens the appeal of the European idea and fuels the 
search for alternative political, economic and security anchors. In the absence 
of a clear timeline for membership, the geopolitical reorientation of the 
region is becoming a realistic option, carrying the risk of fragmentation, 
waning European soft power and increased security threats in Southeast Europe.

Support for the initiative of the President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vučić, in 
favour of group membership does not imply abandoning reforms, but rather 
acknowledges that the current model has been exhausted and that a new dynamic 
is needed. A group-based approach can help restore the credibility of 
enlargement policy, stabilise the Western Balkans, narrow the existing 
geopolitical vacuum and reinforce the EU’s internal cohesion. To deliver 
meaningful results, countries in the region must continue profound reforms in 
the area of the rule of law, intensify regional cooperation, address bilateral 
disputes and present a coordinated approach towards Brussels.

Conversely, the European Union needs to articulate a credible accession date or 
timeframe, put an end to ad hoc adjustments of criteria, and reposition 
enlargement as a strategic policy choice rather than a purely technical and 
bureaucratic procedure.

Only such an approach can make the group model an effective tool for 
stabilising the region, solidifying the Western Balkans’ European perspective 
while safeguarding security, public trust and the continent’s geopolitical 
resilience.

Geopolitical competition and the EU’s strategic responsibility in the Western 
Balkans

The Western Balkans today stand at a crossroads, caught between European 
integration and escalating global geopolitical competition. Prolonged 
uncertainty surrounding the region’s European perspective has opened space for 
a stronger presence of the United States, Russia and China.

The United States remains a key security actor, focused on stability through 
NATO, bilateral arrangements and diplomatic presence, but without prioritising 
the institutional integration of the region into the EU. The continued 
postponement of EU membership deepens the Western Balkans’ dependence on 
American engagement, ultimately diminishing the European Union’s strategic 
autonomy.

Russia treats the Western Balkans as an arena for geopolitical competition and 
as an instrument of destabilisation. Its strategy includes energy ties, 
political support for selected political actors, cultural and historical 
narratives, and information operations. The absence of a clear European 
perspective further strengthens Russia’s position and amplifies narratives 
about the EU’s “closed doors”.

China’s engagement is primarily economic and infrastructural, driven by 
initiatives such as the Belt and Road, without attaching political conditions. 
Such a model appeals to segments of political elites but does not offer 
long-term institutional integration nor a value-based framework. China’s 
economic footprint thus represents an alternative, but not a substitute, for 
the European perspective.

The impact of external actors is also reflected in financial terms: Russia 
invests approximately EUR 10 billion annually, while China channels between EUR 
8 and 10 billion through its infrastructure projects. Analyses suggest that a 
clear European perspective could curb their political and security influence by 
as much as 20–30%.

Against this background, the EU enlargement policy cannot be treated as a 
standalone process; it needs to be integrated into a broader transatlantic and 
global strategy. A clear and viable accession perspective is crucial for 
safeguarding the Union’s credibility, reducing the influence of external actors 
and reinforcing long-term regional stability. Prolonged uncertainty not only 
expands the scope for such actors to operate, but also undermines the EU’s own 
strategic posture.

EU enlargement to the Western Balkans should be viewed not as a form of rivalry 
with the United States, Russia or China, but as an act of the Union’s strategic 
self-defence. Integrating the region into Europe’s institutional, political and 
security structures reduces the scope for destabilising influences and 
strengthens the long-term geopolitical credibility and stability of Southeast 
Europe.

The Western Balkans: between European integration and geopolitical 
responsibility

The Western Balkans today stand at a critical crossroads between European 
integration and geopolitical fragmentation. Persistent uncertainty in the 
enlargement process increases the reach of external actors that neither 
subscribe to European values nor offer durable stability, thereby further 
exacerbating the region’s strategic vulnerability.

In this context, the initiative for group enlargement acquires particular 
geopolitical significance. It represents a strategic step aimed at firmly 
embedding the Western Balkans within Europe’s political, security and 
value-based frameworks. An individual approach to membership carries the risk 
of favouring certain countries, deepening regional tensions and limiting the 
effectiveness of European policy. By contrast, a group-based model enhances the 
EU’s credibility, contributes to regional stability and narrows the existing 
geopolitical vacuum.

Prolonged reliance on an individual accession approach leads to declining 
public support, the consolidation of Russian and Chinese influence, and the 
fragmentation of reform efforts. Should the EU fail to meet its historical 
responsibility, other actors will move to fill the vacuum, albeit under 
non-European rules. Extended uncertainty seriously undermines the Western 
Balkans’ European perspective, weakens the Union’s strategic position and 
increases the risk of the geopolitical reorientation of individual countries in 
the region.

The initiative for group membership represents a realistic, politically 
rational and historically grounded way out of the current stalemate. If the EU 
intends to preserve a relevant geopolitical role on the continent, the Western 
Balkans must cease to be a “permanent candidate” and become an integral part of 
the European project.

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