europeanwesternbalkans.com<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2026/01/13/eus-enlargement-to-the-western-balkans-no-longer-just-about-membership-the-case-for-operational-integration/>
EU’s enlargement to the Western Balkans no longer just about membership: The 
Case for Operational Integration
Group of authors
11–14 minutes
________________________________
Making enlargement deliver
Operational integration would give WB institutions an opportunity for direct 
influence on EU systems, moving them from passive recipients of support to 
active contributors.
13.01.2026.
9 min read
[https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/FB-logo-150x150.jpg]<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/author/group-authors/>
EU-Western Balkans Summit, December 2024; Photo: European Union
By Ramadan Ilazi and Jeta Loshaj
As what in the Western Balkans societies is by now perceived as a cliché the 
European Union (EU) has since 2003 been saying, sometimes more firmly and other 
times more out of habit, that the future of the Western Balkans is in the EU. 
This promise or vision has never been second-guessed by the EU, but what has 
happened is that it has thinned over time, worn down by vetoes from member 
states, procedural fatigue, and changing political priorities in Brussels and 
other EU capitals.
However, EU’s enlargement policy is now said to be “back on the agenda,” a 
result of a harsher geopolitical reality after Russia’s full-scale invasion of 
Ukraine, a shock that reminded EU leaders, much as the wars of Yugoslavia in 
the 1990s once did, that EU integration has often advanced often through 
crisis. However, despite the renewed momentum, enlargement does not seem to be 
moving as effectively in practice.
Albania and Montenegro are moving forward, however slowly. The remaining four 
countries of the Western Balkans (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, North 
Macedonia, and Serbia) are stuck in various forms of limbo. This is not only 
their problem, but it is increasingly becoming EU’s challenge as well.
Perhaps the mistake that Brussels seems to make sometimes is treating 
enlargement policy as a binary choice between accession and waiting. Therefore, 
in reality the most damaging gap often lies in between, and that is to say the 
absence of meaningful operational integration of the entire region of the 
Western Balkans.
Western Balkan institutions are largely excluded from EU’s institutional 
ecosystem and the practical workings in the fields of mutual interest such as 
cybersecurity, rule-of-law, and disinformation, among others. “At best”, the EU 
requests semi-formal cooperation from them on ad-hoc basis, mainly when it 
deems necessary from the point of view of its interests, for instance when 
facing a specific security threat, when it has a significant economic interest 
or when its funds are in question.
With two clear frontrunners from the Western Balkans and their prospects for 
some kind of EU accession during this decade or soon after (of course, big IF-s 
remain), the challenge for the EU is what can be done with the remaining four 
in terms of bringing them further in.
One potential answer to this is the idea of operational integration, which 
would focus on bringing in different thematic authorities/institutions from the 
WB6 (e.g., cybersecurity) into the EU institutional system, mostly the European 
Commission and related institutions such as specialized agencies.
In other words, operational integration is a form of pre-accession integration 
in which Western Balkan institutions are embedded into selected EU operational 
workflows and mechanisms without conferring membership rights to those who join.
This can be implemented through instruments such as observer status/ advanced 
working arrangements, liaison officers, contact points, participation in policy 
forums, technical groups and joint exercises, interoperable procedures and 
reporting formats, and, where legally possible, controlled access to secure 
communication and information-sharing channels.
Operational integration is not a substitute for membership or the accession 
process, nor a shortcut around the accession criteria. It is a pragmatic way to 
think about how to bring Western Balkan institutional systems and economies 
closer into the EU’s operational ecosystem.
Participation is benchmarked, differentiated by policy area, and reversible, so 
that access expands with demonstrated capacity and compliance by WB6 
governments (including data protection, confidentiality and vetting) and can be 
suspended if standards are not met. As such, it is also a practical way to 
implement the EU enhanced enlargement, methodology endorsed and brought forward 
by the EU in early 2020, through more robust conditionality, both positive and 
negative.
In other words, operational integration can be also seen as a trial run. As 
operational integration would advance, the EU and Member States would also 
become more accustomed to seeing WB6 institutions present in the EU 
institutional ecosystem, and creating collegiality. Also, the tools already 
exist, but what is missing is the political decision to use them systematically.
Operational integration gives Western Balkan institutions an opportunity for 
direct influence on EU systems, mechanisms and thus moves our region’s 
countries from passive recipients of EU support to active contributors directly 
within the Union’s core mechanisms.
This approach also offers our region a concrete platform to demonstrate to EU 
sceptics that the Western Balkans can become good members in the future, by 
proving themselves as rational, responsible partners within EU system who add 
value to EU security.
And, of course, this approach protects EU interests, since as the old argument 
goes, developments in Western Balkans, for good or bad, can have direct effect 
in the EU (e.g., the Balkan route remains a critical pathway for drug and human 
trafficking into the EU).
If the Western Balkans remain outside the EU’s mechanisms for countering 
cyberattacks, disinformation, corrosive capital, and malign foreign influence, 
the EU exposes itself to significant vulnerabilities. 
Research<https://stratcomcoe.org/cuploads/pfiles/analysis_of_sputnik_serbia_30-04_v4-1.pdf>
 shows that disinformation narratives tested in the region frequently migrate 
into EU member states. Russia, for example, operates major outlets such as 
Russia Today and Sputnik from Serbia, amplifying its influence.
The Western Balkans are already functionally intertwined with the EU’s 
information and economic space, a reality often acknowledged by Brussels. 
Leaving the region only partially integrated creates security gaps on both 
sides. Operational integration between the Western Balkans Six (WB6) and the EU 
can address this challenge. There several policy areas where operational 
integration is common sense and of mutual benefit. Cybersecurity, investment 
security, rule of law, disinformation, are clear examples.
Operational integration in cybersecurity starts with advancing current forms of 
cooperation between EU’s Cybersecurity Agency (ENISA) and WB6, through formal 
working arrangements with each WB6 national authority, appointing contact 
points, setting annual priorities, etc. WB6 teams should participate in 
ENISA-led training and exercises, use compatible incident categories and 
reporting templates, and agree on protocols for handling cross-border incidents.
Next, WB6 authorities should establish structured liaison with EU CSIRTs, 
including notification and coordination protocols tested through joint 
exercises. Where possible, WB6 experts would be invited to observe or join 
ENISA technical working groups on a defined scope. The most important ask here 
is to grant all WB6 observer status, which require the EU to amend the 
Cybersecurity Act, but in the meantime, the goal is greater interoperability.
All WB6 countries need to accelerate alignment with EU norms and strengthen 
their own agencies and legislation on cybersecurity, which we outline in this 
paper<https://qkss.org/en/publikimet/integrimi-i-gjashte-vendeve-te-ballkanit-perendimor-bp6-ne-agjencine-e-bashkimit-evropian-per-sigurine-kibernetike>
 prepared in the framework of the IGNITA initiative.
For investment security and given the room and vulnerability for economic and 
security influence in WB6 of non-Western powers, their governments need to 
adopt functioning FDI screening systems in line with the Regulation (EU) 
2019/452, which we detail in this 
paper<https://qkss.org/en/publikimet/alignment-of-the-six-countries-of-the-western-balkans-wb6-with-the-eu-regulation-on-screening-of-foreign-direct-investments>
 developed with regional experts as part of IGNITA initiative. WB6 also need to 
be invited as observers in the EU’s FDI Screening Contact Points network and 
Expert Group.
The practical solution is a Commission-coordinated WB6–EU interface, with 
shared notification templates, a common risk taxonomy, and regular joint 
briefings to flag sensitive transactions and receive feedback. Participation 
could be built through invitation-based technical sessions, not as full Member 
State access. The current EU–WB6 cooperation on FDI screening is fragmented and 
needs to be anchored in a standing format.
In rule of law, operational integration means initially including Bosnia and 
Herzegovina and Kosovo in the EU’s annual rule of law report, and then 
establishing working arrangements between each of the WB6 and the EU Agency for 
Fundamental Rights (FRA). The later would improve cooperation on hate crime, 
discrimination, digital rights, and protections for vulnerable groups.
EPPO integration requires completing working arrangements with all WB6 
countries (currently Kosovo and Serbia are behind), with clear contact points, 
standard referral formats, and joint training on procurement fraud and grant 
manipulation.
Civil service exchange should be launched, placing WB6 officials inside 
Commission Directorates-General (e.g., for up to six months), working on live 
files. Eurojust integration should move from project-based engagement to 
regular coordination meetings, secure channels, and standard procedures for 
joint investigations.
On disinformation and foreign information manipulation and interference (FIMI), 
WB6 should be invited to EU Internet Forum meetings (low hanging fruit), set up 
a standing exchange with EUvsDisinfo, and develop an affiliated Western Balkans 
node linked to EDMO to connect fact-checking and research to EU standards.
Operational integration isn’t about voting rights or new EU funding. It’s about 
conditional, differentiated participation for countries that meet concrete 
benchmarks. The alternative is stagnation through the current unsystematic 
approach. As Albania and Montenegro progress, and others risk falling behind, 
this fuels frustration and gives space to spoilers. Operational integration 
offers a way out as it shows enlargement is not frozen, even if accession 
process remains unpredictable.
Most steps for operational integration can be taken through agency decisions, 
Commission coordination, and, fundamentally, political will. The real question 
is whether the EU is ready to treat integration as a practical process, not 
just some kind of legal endpoint. If enlargement is to remain credible, it must 
be felt in our institutions now, most of whom are well prepared and ready to be 
part of the EU workings.
The Kosovar Centre for Security Studies (KCSS), through the IGNITA initiative, 
will focus this year on advocating for operational integration of the Western 
Balkans in the EU, and has developed a concrete menu of steps as 
recommendations for the relevant EU institutions and decision-makers to 
consider.
________________________________
Ramadan Ilazi is head of research at the Kosovar Centre for Security Studies 
(KCSS) and the team leader of the GAINS project of the IGNITA initiative 
supported by the Open Society Foundations – Western Balkans, which advocates 
for gradual integration of the WB6 in EU; s security and rule of law mechanisms 
and policies. Jeta Loshaj is a Researcher and Project Associate at the Kosovar 
Centre for Security Studies (KCSS) and also an associate of the Council for 
Inclusive Governance (CIG).
Tags

  *   cybersecurity<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/cybersecurity/>
  *   EU<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/eu/>
  *   EU integration<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/eu-integration/>
  *   IGNITA<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/ignita/>
  *   Jeta Loshaj<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/jeta-loshaj/>
  *   KCSS<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/kcss/>
  *   Ramadan Ilazi<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/ramadan-ilazi/>
  *   Western Balkans<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/tag/western-balkans/>

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