About Krzysztof Bobinski
Krzysztof Bobinski is the president of Unia & Polska, a pro-European think-tank in Warsaw. He was the Warsaw correspondent of the Financial Times (1976-2000) and later published Unia & Polska magazine.
Articles by Krzysztof Bobinski
Two
In 2050 democracy blossomed all around the world partly because, some years back, bankers in the west and elsewhere were stopped from accepting deposits from dodgy rulers. It was a big sacrifice by the banks and they resisted it fiercely, especially in Switzerland. After all these deposits made up a large chunk of bank balance sheets. Tyrants and dictators are driven by many things; power, of course and sex but amassing an ill-gotten fortune was a regular feature.
Poland: the politics of history
A small crowd gathers at midnight on 13 December 2008 outside a modest house in Warsaw. It is an annual event.
The scenario outside the darkened house hardly changes from year to year - even down to the attendees, who are divided into two groups. These chant slogans at each other, the larger (and younger) group scorning the house's occupant and the smaller (and older) one supporting. A line of police (mostly young) separates the rivals. Around one o'clock in the morning the demonstrators drift away. See you next year.
The Polish summer, 1989: a farewell salute
The irony was clear. Inside Warsaw's Stalin-era Pałac Kultury i Nauki (Palace of Culture), Europe's Christian Democrat leaders were reverentially watching a film about Solidarity's role in toppling communism - then. Outside the building, Solidarity trade-unionists were battling police in a demonstration against closures of their indebted and ill-managed shipyards - now.
The partnership principle: Europe, democracy, and the east
The European Union's "Eastern Partnership" seemed a vaguely good idea at the time. The moment when the mood of slightly quizzical approbation that has surrounded it from the start began to sour was 5 April 2009. That was the day of Moldova's parliamentary election, when police in the capital Chisinau began to beat up detainees who were already assembling to protest against the conduct and outcome of the vote. Also on Europe's eastern problems in openDemocracy:
Ivan Krastev, "Europe's trance of unreality" (20 June 2008)
Ivan Krastev, "Europe's other legitimacy crisis" (23 July 2008)
Paul Gillespie, "The European Union and Russia after Georgia" (10 September 2008)
Katinka Barysch, "Europe and the Georgia-Russia conflict" (30 September 2008)
Natalia Leshchenko, "Belarus's election paradox" (1 October 2008)
Dessy Gavrilova, "Entropa: art of politics, heart of a nation" (16 January 2009)
John Palmer, "The Czech Republic and Europe: uneasy presidency" (19 January 2009)
Irina Novakova, "Bulgaria and Russia: a cold marriage" (27 January 2009)
Anand Menon, "Europe's eastern crisis: the reality-test" (5 March 2009)
Juliana Sokolova, "Slovakia: in search of normal" (2 April 2009)
Vessela Tcherneva, "Moldova: time to take sides" (14 April 2009)
The idea for the partnership arose when the Polish prime minister Donald Tusk heard Nicolas Sarkozy at a European Union summit extolling the virtues of his Mediterranean Union. Tusk thought: why not have a parallel "Eastern Union" which would draw the countries to the east of Poland closer to Europe? The notion won the support of Sweden's foreign minister Carl Bildt. The European commission worked on it, and at the summit in Brussels on 19-20 March 2009 it became European Union policy.
The partnership is to be officially launched at a summit in Prague on 7 May 2009 where EU leaders will meet with leaders from the six partner-states: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine. Brussels has set aside €600 million ($775 million) to be spent in 2010-13 on multilateral and bilateral projects in these countries; the thinking is that these projects will encourage reforms and thus in time help make the six countries eligible for accession to the EU.
The lost heart
The initiative has been trumpeted in Warsaw as a success of Polish diplomacy, but it has met with some confusion in the target states. Ukraine has been upbeat: it sees the partnership as a significant step on its road to Europe. Belarus's dictator Alexander Lukashenka has viewed it as a chance to gain some credibility in the west. Moldova, which has established a number of government committees designed to build EU-compatible institutions, has acquiesced in the scheme. Georgia, which after the August 2008 war with the Russians has other problems, was happy to consent. Armenia and Azerbaijan too gave it the nod. At the same time, the Caucasus countries in particular couldn't understand why the EU was coming up with another scheme so soon after its "Black Sea Synergy" project had aimed similarly to enhance cooperation between states in the region.
Now, after the events in Chisinau, the confusion has wound its way back into the EU. The union's leaders are wondering if they really want to sit down with Moldova's president, Vladimir Voronin, after what his security people have done to detainees in police cells. Alexander Lukashenka on his own account seems likely to avoid the opportunity to socialise with Europe's leaders. At this stage, the Prague summit looks unlikely to advance the ambitions of the partnership.
The events in Moldova have put the underlying situation into sharp perspective. The election - which returned the ruling Communist Party to power (albeit only when this was confirmed in a recount conceded by Voronin) - was deemed less than free and fair by clear-eyed observers such as Emma Nicholson from the European parliament. There followed a "flash-mob" demonstration that put up to 15,000 people onto the street in protest at the way the election was handled. This was hijacked by rock-throwing youths who stormed and set fire to the parliament building - raising suspicions that this was indeed the work of provocateurs.
The ensuing arrests produced ample evidence that detainees were being beaten, with at least three cases of people being battered to death in custody. The authorities supplemented such brutality with harassment of local and foreign journalists, intimidation of local print and electronic media and wild charges of "fascist" provocation. Moldova's government seemed determined to live up to the caricature of an authoritarian regime seeking to stay in control using methods taken straight from the old communist textbooks.
The closing door
The problem for the European Union and its new partnership is that such methods are an extreme version of those employed in other capitals of the countries it seeks to reach towards. In February 2008 in Yerevan, force used to disperse crowds protesting the conduct of the election that saw Serzh Sarkisian ascend to Armenia's presidency left at least ten dead and several score in prison. In December 2003 in Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliev was elected president with 89% of the votes cast in what even the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) said was a fraudulent election; the pattern was repeated in the parliamentary polls of November 2005 and the referendum of March 2009 allowing Aliev to remove a two-term limit on the presidency. Krzysztof Bobinski is the president of Unia & Polska, a pro-European think-tank in Warsaw. He was the Financial Times's Warsaw correspondent (1976-2000) and later published Unia & Polska magazine. He writes for European Voice and is an associate editor on the Europe section of Europe's World
Also by Krzysztof Bobinski in openDemocracy:
"A stork's eye view from Poland" (25 May 2001)
"Poland's nervous 'return' to Europe" (29 April 2004)
"Poland's letter to France: please say oui!" (23 May 2005)
"Democracy in the European Union, more or less" (July 2005)
"The European Union's Turkish dilemma" (2 December 2005)
"Belarus's message to Europe" (22 March 2006)
"Poland's populist caravan" (14 July 2006)
"Hungary's 1956, central Europe's 2006: beyond illusion" (27 October 2006)
"European unity: reality and myth" (21 March 2007)
"The Polish confusion" (28 June 2007)
"Poland's generational shift" (1 November 2007)
"Europe's coal-mine, Ireland's canary" (21 June 2008)
"The Caucasus effect: Europe unblocked" (15 September 2008)
"Europe's politics of self - and others" (20 October 2008)
"Europe between past and future" (9 March 2009)
In Belarus, Alexander Lukashenka has a proven track-record of intimidation of the opposition. In Georgia, Mikhail Saakashvili has been legitimately elected but faces a vociferous opposition unhappy about his authoritarian style and ever ready to mobilise in the streets in an attempt to force his resignation. In Ukraine, the rivalry between the president, Viktor Yushchenko and prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko is a constant impediment to coherent governance; both are mulling the option of using martial law to stop the other from winning the forthcoming election.
In the Soviet times, people protested most often about price rises. Now people demonstrate when they suspect the authorities of cheating at elections. That may be a form of progress. In any event, more protests in the region can be expected.
In these circumstances, the summit in Prague on 7 May risks being seen as a meeting of the EU with a group of kleptocrats who are ready to resort to electoral fraud and the use of force to stay in power. The realisation is also dawning in Brussels that the implementation of EU-style reforms (and this is what the Eastern Partnership is all about) will put an end to the rule of these people. The "partners" know it as well. Are they signing up to the scheme in good faith?
To make things worse, the Russians have signalled that they are unhappy with the Eastern Partnership. Sergei Lavrov, the foreign minister, described it in Brussels on 21 March 2009 as a plan to extend the EU's sphere of influence. The Germans, still keen on their special relationship with Moscow, will see that as a clear signal to consign the whole idea to a filing cupboard.
Indeed, some diplomatic chanceries in the EU are worried that the Russians may be bent on provoking unrest in the region just to demonstrate to the Europeans the cost of getting involved in such a volatile area. That unrest, the theory goes, will be met with Moldova-style crackdowns - with the result that these countries will move closer to Russia even as the EU steps aside.
The opening key
To consent to such an outcome would be painful and costly for the EU - even a betrayal. For the events in Moldova show that it would entail the EU abandoning a younger generation with no recollection of the Soviet past; with experience in many cases of work, study and travel in the west; and with a desire to live in a "normal" country. It was these young people who streamed onto the streets of Chisinau after the disputed election on 5 April (see Vessela Tcherneva, "Moldova: time to take sides", 14 April 2009).
They have, too, advantages in disseminating their message - including an array of electronic means of publicising official misdeeds and their own protests that surpass anything available to their dissident predecessors (more used to typing out bulletins in triplicate and passing them to individual foreign correspondents). The police methods may show a mentality deeply rooted in the KGB past, but Moldova also shows that a sophisticated network of think-tanks and institutes was able to assemble, gather information and protest in ways the authorities found it hard to track and subdue.
In this light the EU's choice is no choice. If anyone in the union is having second thoughts about the advisability of pressing ahead with the Eastern Partnership he or she should remember the Helsinki treaty in 1975. This was criticised by many at the time for legitimising the division of Europe; but it was also Helsinki's "third basket" on human rights which brought the subject to the fore and gave dissidents a foothold and reference-point from which to challenge the dictators of the time.
The EU must, then, stick by the Eastern Partnership - while also making it abundantly clear that the partnership's key element is the human rights and democratising aspect of the project. This is a message that should be heard in Prague at the 7 May summit, where NGOs as well as EU leaders will be meeting. Moldovan NGOs have shown the way. A network of like-minded NGOs needs to come together throughout the region ready to monitor the partnership project and react immediately if fundamental rights are infringed. The EU member-states must also signal that they will recognise that the NGOs have a vital role to play in the process.
The EU will declare in Prague that it has a partnership with the east. It must also affirm that its policy towards this region is based on principles of human rights and democratic action.
Europe between past and future
An early sign of how the financial crisis in east-central Europe in February 2009 was being perceived in the west came in a major feature in the Financial Times. The story was not so much in the words as in the accompanying map, which showed the old Comecon countries as an undifferentiated mass. It was as if nothing had changed since the 1980s, when the Soviet Union's own "single market" still kept a swathe of states from the Baltics to the Balkans tightly in its orbit. Krzysztof Bobinski is the president of Unia & Polska, a pro-European think-tank in Warsaw. He was the Financial Times's Warsaw correspondent (1976-2000) and later published Unia & Polska magazine. He writes for European Voice and is an associate editor on the Europe section of Europe's World
Among Krzysztof Bobinski's articles in openDemocracy:
"Democracy in the European Union, more or less" (27 July 2005)
"The European Union's Turkish dilemma" (2 December 2005)
"Belarus's message to Europe" (22 March 2006)
"Poland's populist caravan" (14 July 2006)
"Hungary's 1956, central Europe's 2006: beyond illusion" (27 October 2006)
"European unity: reality and myth" (21 March 2007)
"The Polish confusion" (22 June 2007)
"Europe's coal-mine, Ireland's canary" (20 June 2008)
"The Caucasus effect: Europe unblocked" (15 September 2008)
"Europe's politics of self - and others" (20 October 2008)
"Poland: the politics of history" (24 January 2009)
A small matter on its own - but also significant in the very year that the new European Union member-states are celebrating a double anniversary: the twentieth since the peaceful collapse of Soviet communism, and the fifth since the enlargement of the EU to accommodate seven former Soviet-bloc states (Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania - as well as Slovenia, Cyprus and Malta). The Financial Times's map is a sobering reminder that western Europe's reflexive view of the former "satellites" of Moscow - if indeed it thinks of them at all - is of an anonymous, uniform "other".
The twilight of union
The latest crisis to afflict the enlarged European Union of twenty-seven member-states is bound to test the depth of the union's will to stay together as a forward-looking project: that is, as a post-1989 grouping which accepts and practices the belief that the new members are full partners deserving of a solidarity which will give them a chance to develop.
The impression that this conviction was more fragile than it needs to be deepened in the days leading up to the informal meeting of European Union heads of state and government in Brussels on 1 March 2009. The primary focus of the summit - though it was held under the auspices of the Czech Republic's presidency - seemed to be on solving the problems of the union's major (western) economies, relegating those of the smaller (and newer) states to a lower place on the agenda. Even the widespread scare-stories about the rise of a new "east-west division" (or a new "Berlin wall") implied that the eastern countries were not really part of the same, shared reality. There was little affirmation of the enlarged EU as an achieved whole - the taken-for-granted foundation on which understanding is to be reached and policy developed.
True, a degree of division is rooted in objective post-enlargement conditions. The newer member-states - including Bulgaria and Romania, which joined in 2007 - remain recipients of major aid flows from the EU which will run until 2013, and these can be expected to cushion some of the shock of their financial troubles.
But the financial hurricane that has hit the union's eastern flank also reverberates in the west, as Anand Menon notes in his openDemocracy article (see "Europe's eastern crisis: the reality-test", 5 March 2009). After all, western-owned banks are in danger of being drained of capital by their crisis-hit owners, and western-owned industries located in the new member-states could become the first to be downsized. The ravaged financial markets themselves at least recognise integration and interdependence - for as the east Europeans see their currencies fall and export-markets vaporise, investors keen to offload their stocks see no difference between the stronger economies in the region and the ones (Latvia and Hungary in particular) where the crisis is biting especially hard.
The turning-point
The retreat from inclusiveness and solidarity evident before and during the Brussels summit is arguably not just a response to immediate events, but part of a wider problem in the European Union's sense of self and direction. Indeed, one response in "deep" Brussels to the financial crisis is to excavate the only half-buried feelings of nostalgia for the days of a smaller, more exclusive and manageable union. The implication is to see the decades when the European Union's precursors were composed of only six or nine or twelve states - when integration seemed to be happening, and additional members seemed no more than a peripheral distraction from that aim - as the equivalent of a golden era.
The proponents of this view have at heart never really accepted the logic of enlargement. They have also internalised a particular - and selectively misleading - narrative of the European Union's history, which argues that the EU was set up as a federalist project to safeguard Europe against the threat of future wars. What this misses is that the creation of the EU was also a response to the Soviet Union's expansionist challenge after 1945, with a design that attempted to make the remilitarisation of West Germany palatable to the French.
The effect of the disappearance of the external threat - with the disintegration in 1989-91 of the Warsaw Pact, the Comecon bloc, and the Soviet Union itself - was to make enlargement to the east the prime response to changing times. The dominant motif that survived the geopolitical convulsion was of a peaceful Europe whose member-states dedicated themselves to working in solidarity with each other towards an "ever-closer union". As enlargement to the east progressed in the 1990s, however, this motif itself began to come under increasing strain. Now, in 2009, it is now set to be severely tested by Europe's share of the global financial crisis.
In this light the current strains were to a degree foreordained by the way the cycle of enlargement - a policy that the EU stumbled into after 1989 as its main policy-tool for relations with its neighbours - has unfolded. The promise of EU membership was dangled before states emerging from Soviet hegemony as an incentive for political and economic reform. The approach worked - to the extent that all sides now accepted that significant reforms in an aspirant member can only be achieved if the membership "carrot" really exists.
There is both "negative" and "positive" evidence for this. Turkey's pro-EU reform efforts have stalled partly because Ankara no longer believes the EU is serious about its membership offer. The reforms in Ukraine are chaotic and half-hearted not just because of the country's internal political divisions but because the EU seems unable to open a real membership perspective for the country. The Balkan countries (including Serbia) are finally gearing up to incorporate the EU's body of law - the acquis communautaire - because all believe they have a chance of joining the EU.
But if enlargement to the east and southeast is becoming the EU's raison d'etre, how long can it go on enlarging? The failures of success, after all, were already apparent in 2005 when voters in France and the Netherlands voted in referendums against the constitutional treaty. A year after the major expansion of 2004, "enlargement fatigue" was becoming widespread in the EU's founding-states.
The rear-view mirror
The twinge of longing for a lost past in "deep" Brussels is paralleled in the revival of nationalist sentiments in several member-states - fuelled by the protectionist temptations that accompany economic dislocation. Even within the framework of the European Union, the member-states - the larger and/or post-imperial ones especially - respond to the pressures of the time by pursuing national strategies that draw on only half-submerged memories of earlier grandeur.
The Austrians are most interested in the territories that once belonged to the Austro-Hungarian empire. The French are absorbed by the southern Mediterranean and north Africa. The Germans pursue their business-based romance with the Russians, confident that they are the only ones who can handle Moscow. The British, in classic balance-of-power mode, fret about the links between Germany and Russia and look for a policy in the east which could somehow provide a counterweight to this growing alliance. Even the Poles at a certain level "remember" their pre-partition frontier to the east, and focus on support for the states (Ukraine and Belarus) whose territory lies to the west of that line.
The official response to the crisis in the European Union is to reaffirm the need for greater economic and political integration; to hold the single market together; and to maintain the four freedoms - the movement of goods, persons, services and capital - on which the EU is based. This is all very well, but the logic of the foregoing is that neither it nor an impossible return to the past can address the more fundamental issue of the European Union's identity and purpose.
It is clear that a new paradigm is needed for European integration which takes into account post-1989 realities. That must include a genuine recognition that the present new member-states are indeed full-fledged members of the EU. A failure to do this will compound the dangers of the present moment.
In London in the early 1940s, Paul-Henri Spaak - the exiled Belgian foreign minister who was to become one of the architects of post-war European integration - had a conversation with a colleague. Both had just emerged from a meeting about the creation of a federalist European order with the Polish prime minister, General Władysław Sikorski, and other exiled representatives of European governments.
Spaak's colleague remarked that he couldn't summon up much interest in the concerns of the central Europeans. Spaak replied that if we had taken more interest before the war in these concerns, then maybe we wouldn't be in London in the middle of a war which had driven them into exile. The sentiment is worth remembering today. It presents a challenge to the present generation of leaders: look back, to look forward.
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openDemocracy writers track the European Union's politics: Aurore Wanlin, "The European Union at fifty: a second life" (15 March 2007) Krzysztof Bobinski, "European unity: reality and myth" (21 March 2007) Frank Vibert, "The European Union in 2057" (22 March 2057) George Schőpflin, "The European Union's troubled birthday" (23 March 2007) Kalypso Nicolaïdis & Philippe Herzog, "Europe at fifty: towards a new single act" (21 June 2007) Krzysztof Bobinski, "The Polish confusion" (28 June 2007) Michael Bruter, "European Union: from backdoor to front" (3 July 2007) Kalypso Nicolaïdis & Simone Bunse, "The ‘European Union presidency': a practical compromise" (10 October 2007) Katinka Barysch & Hugo Brady, "Europe's "reform treaty": ends and beginnings" (18 October 2007) Ivan Krastev, "Europe's trance of unreality" (20 June 2008) Krzysztof Bobinski, "Europe's coal-mine, Ireland's canary" (21 June 2008) Ivan Krastev, "Europe's other legitimacy crisis" (23 July 2008) Paul Gillespie, "The European Union and Russia after Georgia" (10 September 2008) Krzysztof Bobinski, "Europe's politics of self - and others" (20 October 2008) John Palmer, "Ireland, the Lisbon treaty, and Europe's future" (16 December 2008) Dessy Gavrilova, "Entropa: art of politics, heart of a nation" (16 January 2009) Anand Menon, "Europe's eastern crisis: the reality-test" (5 March 2009) |






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