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Balancing Europe's Eastern and Southern Dimensions Esther Barbé Chapter in Jan Zielonka (ed.) Paradoxes of European Policy, La Haya, Kluwer Law, 1998, pp. 117-130. Foreign After the fall of the Berlin wall Vaclav Havel said that the European history had started to walk again. The sharpest and most important boundary in Europe between the countries of OECD Europe and those of the Warsaw Pact (Davy 1990:141) had dissapeared. Since that moment a kind of Drang nach Osten filtered the European construction process. The "return to Europe" of Central and Eastern European countries became the most important aim of the European foreign policy. Even before Maastricht the European relations with the outside world concentrated their efforts on those countries: Phare Plan in 1989; EBRD in 1990; Association Agreements, including political dialogue, with Visegrad Group countries in 1991. As a result, the European network of politics and security began the process to integrate those countries. In other words, the syndrome of institutional vacuum among Central and Eastern European Countries could dissapear1. In this sense, it's worth mentioning the Stability Pact (1994), the statute of WEU Associated Partnership granted to Central and Eastern European Countries, the agreements signed by those countries in the framework of the NATO Partnership for Peace, and the strategy for EU enlargement approved by the European Council in Essen (December 1994). 1. The present chapter deals with the group of ten Central and Eastern European countries that are closer to Western Europe in terms of current institutional arrangements and future enlargement: Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia. They are members of the Council of Europe, and prior to accesion they have signed Europe Agreements with the EC, they have the statute of WEU Associated Partnership, they participate in a privileged way in the NATO structures for Eastern Europe (NACC and Partnership for Peace), and some of them even have forces in Bosnia (IFOR, SFOR). 1 It seems to me a paradox that at the same time that the European Union was concentrating its efforts on Central and Eastern European Countries it was also dedicating more attention than ever before to non-EU Mediterranean Countries. As a matter of fact, the Euro-Mediterranean Conference organized by the Spanish presidency of the European Union in Barcelona (November 1995) is the best example of the attention paid by the European organizations to the Southern Mediterranean Countries2. As a result of that attention those countries have established political dialogues wit the EU (Barcelona process), but also with the WEU and NATO. The present chapter examines the above mentionned paradox that links Eastern and Southern dimensions of Europe. How to explain it? The answer given in this chapter focuses on one of the main questions raised in this book: are the Union's policy objectives different from those of individual states? Geography rises again Experiences show that foreign policy cooperation has always been one of the most difficult areas in which to operate in common. In this sense, Regelsberger and Wessels (1996:31) point out that a DDS (discreet, discretionary, sovereignty) syndrome is at work. Therefore cooperation in the foreign policy and security area raises immediately, and most visibly, issues of national sovereignty. According to Regelsberger and Wessels (1996:31), common efforts have to accomodate different historical traditions, to consider specific sensitivities and prejudices in public opinion. Divergent traditions and conflicting interests between the 2. This chapter deals with the group of Mediterranean nonUnion countries that have signed any kind of agreement with the EC. It's a group of eleven countries -Algeria, Cyprus, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Malta, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia, Turkeyand the Palestinian Authority. Libya is the outstanding exception. 1 countries participating for two decades in the European Political Cooperation (EPC) mechanism were obvious. However, since the end of the cold war the divergences among the EU countries due to the so-called forces profondes (Renouvin 1953), elements of national power (Morgenthau 1948) or traditional factors (Aron 1962, Merle 1976), like geographical location, historical experience or cultural links with the outside world, have been more outstanding. One more paradox of the European Foreign Policy shows us that at the same time that the Twelve were negotiating the transfomation of the EPC into a Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP), the European diplomacies renationalisation due were going through to the "open space" a process atmosphere. of The dissapearance of the Iron Curtain played a centripetal role, deepening the European construction process, but also impeled a centrifugal force. In matters of security this centrifugal force has impeled a process of sub-regionalization, tending to the creation of spheres of influence. Thus, whereas the Southern European countries (Spain, France, Italy), motivated by the risks deriving from destabilization in the Arab world, recreate a Mediterranean spécificité, in the North, Germany and the Nordic countries rediscover the Hanseatic world, driven by the disappearance of the Soviet Union. In this way, mental maps based on geography, history and culture -Mittleuropa, Baltic sea as a 'mythical source of identity' (Oberg 1992:161)- could serve to indicate the centrifugal forces (renovated divergent traditions, but also conflicting interests) to which the foreign and security policy of the Union would be faced. In this sense, a report of the Bertelsmann Foundation warned of the danger of being tempted to organize defence following geographical division of labour criteria. According to that report (Bertelsmann 1995:4), "There may be some scope for the idea of some form of "military division of labour" between WEU member states on functional lines (...) But this should not be extended to a geographical division of labour, since, by appearing to 1 endorse the idea of national 'spheres of influence', it would tend to undermine rather than strengthen a common European approach. Some countries may have more military resources available for particular areas by virtue of geography -for example Sweden in the Baltic or Italy in the Mediterranean. But a primary purpose of a common defence policy is to ensure that members can rely on other members for support, wherever that support is needed. (...) The organisation of ad hoc 'coalitions of the willing' in response to particular crises is unlikely to contribute to the strengthening of CFSP. Rather, there is a danger that such coalitions will be regarded as a reflection of the CFSP's weakness, illustrating the very real risk that, with the Soviet treath gone, European defence will become increasingly 'renationalised'". This process of renationalisation, converted into a policy of spheres of influence, has been evident in the last years. Two cases can ilustrate this process: the German policy favourable to the diplomatic recognition of Slovenia and Croatia in 1991, and the Spanish policy supporting since the end of the cold war a linkage between European construction and Mediterranean stability. In both cases the policy followed by Germany and Spain consisted on converting the national aim into a European priority. In the first case, the German unilateral move in favour of a rapid recognition of the two former Yugoslav republics, disolving of any collective policy, forced the other Europeans to behave alike. Different explanations have been given to the German behaviour. Traditional power politics explanations (German sphere of influence), based on geoeconomics and geopolitics, have clashed with institutionalist approaches. Following this last approach, Bulmer and Paterson (1996:17) pointed out that "Germany's unilateralism was the product not only of domestic pressure for recognition but also of dissatisfaction at the faltering nature of EPC decision-making on Yugoslavia (...) German power will become more evident where European institutions prove to be weak". 1 In the Spanish-Mediterranean case, because of the amount of financial means necessary to meet the Spanish aims in the Mediterranean, the unilateral policy had no sense. In this case, Spain undertook a traditional lobbying policy in European organizations to commit Europe to Spanish objectives. Indeed Spain, along with other EU-Mediterranean countries, had been, already in May 1989, defined in the final resolution approved by the second Forum on the Western Mediterranean countries as "mentors" of the Maghreb countries with respect to the EC (Aliboni 1990:157). Shifting and balancing In 1989, even before the fall of the Berlin wall, the relations between the European Community and some countries of the Eastern bloc changed dramatically. Domestic changes in Poland and Hungary helped in this sense. Apart from that, Germany, feeling more powerful than ever before in the Community framework, pledged for a privileged relationship of the EC with Central European countries. The assignment of the Community, during the Arch Summit (Paris, July 1989), to coordinate the Phare Plan is the point of inflection. Indeed that coordination meant that the Community was assuming comprehensive responsabilities concerning those Central European Countries, beyond the economic assistance (Barbé and Grasa 1992:101). Since that moment some relevant persons began to establish a negative relationship between this new EC interest regarding some countries of the Eastern bloc and the EC Mediterranean policy. In other words, they feared that the Community attention and resources would be shifted from the Mediterranean countries to the Central and Eastern European countries. In order to prevent that shifting, the Spaniard Abel Matutes, Commissioner in charge of Mediterranean policy, relations with Latin America and Asia, and North-South relations, stated in October 1989 that the Community should establish a "parallelism" between Eastern Europe and the 1 Mediterranean (Comisión 1989). Matutes' opinion was in full agreement with Spanish official position. Spaniards have been a "driving force" (Gillespie 1996:210) behind the Mediterranean policy of the Union. At the end of 1992 the Mediterranean portfolio was reallocated from Matutes to another Spaniard, Manuel Marín. Spanish official position was quite clear. In this sense, Felipe González emphasized the danger of that shifting policy for the interests of the Mediterranean countries. A case in point is that during a visit to Morocco in December 1995, González (El País 1995) advised the Moroccan prime minister to put pressure on Brussels to prevent that shifting process. In other words, the idea, based at once on geopolitics and geoeconomics, that the first circle of the EC after the EC itself was formed by the Arab countries and the ACP countries (Khader 1992:177) was over in 1989. During the first half of the nineties the figures with regard to the EU budget commitment for the Central and Eastern European Countries in comparison with the Mediterranean Countries show a rapport of 2.5 to 1. Due to the demographic differences the result was that each Mediterranean citizen received in terms of European economic assistance 1 Ecu meanwhile an Eastern citizen received 5 Ecu. The difference would be much more important if we took into consideration other quantitative items like bilateral economic assistance and private investment. Confronting those figures of economic assistance the Southern Mediterranean countries emphasized the paradoxical behaviour of the Union. As a matter of fact the level of energetic dependance of the Europeans vis à vis the Arab countries and the figures of Euro-Mediterranean trade3 would have justified a privileged 3. In 1993, the trade between the EC and the Mediterranean countries implied 78.8 Ecu billions meanwhile the EC-Central and Eastern European Countries implied 46.4 Ecu billions. In the Mediterranean case the balance of trade was much more positive for the EC (12.4 Ecu billions) than in the Eastern case (5.8 Ecu 1 relationship with the South instead of the East option. The paradox of the Union behaviour is based on the well-known fact that the Twelve adopted in 1989 a solidarity approach vis à vis the other Europeans, based on historical responsability (Moïsi and Rupnik 1991), meanwhile the relationship with the Mediterranean countries became an issue of security. Refering to the beginning of the post-cold war era Dinan (1994:459) points out that "the Community's preoccupation with Eastern Europe almost blinded Brussels to developments in the South, where economics and political instability threatened the Community's security". The lobbying policy of the Southern members of the Union in favour of the interests of the non-members Mediterranean countries began to emphasize the security concerns in that region in front of the celebratory spirit of the Eastern policy. As a result the policy of paralelism proposed by Matutes with regard to both dimensions of Europe, Eastern Europe and Mediterranean, was developped conceptually into a balancing strategy. In other words the above mentionned paradox between economic relations and aid policy generated a balancing strategy, arising from the so-called solidarity versus security approach. Balancing is a familiar concept for the experience of the European construction. In fact, the Union life has been a long story of checks and balances: balancing small and big countries, balancing rich and poor countries, balancing supranationalism and intergovernmentalism, balancing European aims and national particularities. Therefore balancing Eastern and Mediterranean dimensions of Europe is a new episode in the process of the European construction. Moreover it's an important one. Mediterranean stability means European construction According to some relevant politicians the development of the Union relationship with the Mediterranean countries will influence billions) (Khader 1995:19). 1 the future of the European construction. In this sense, Felipe González, in an interview granted to the French daily Le Monde, (1990) at the height of the Gulf Crisis said: "I think, like François Mitterrand, that the construction of Europe cannot be attained without first trying to resolve the explosive problems that are building up in North Africa with respect to demography, development, religion and the standard of living". This conception of Euro-Mediterranean interdependence made the Mediterranean a priority area for Spanish, French and Italian diplomacies. Those countries, along with the Commission, played a relevant role as promoters of diplomatic initiatives for the Mediterranen region. All those initiatives were based on a global security approach (Buzan 1991). A global approach, alongside the more traditional subjects of security, such as strategic matters and armed conflicts, points to a multidimensional agenda which includes environmental, socio-economic and cultural issues. A case in point is the Spanish-Italian proposal of convening a CSCM presented by Gianni de Michelis in September 1990, during the Italian EC presidency, before its time had quite come. That Italian interest concerning the development of Euro-Mediterranean relations faded once de Michelis, the "flamboyant Italian foreign minister" (Dinan 1994:459), resigned. Above all, Italy redirected its attention away from the Mediterranean because of its own domestic instability. The CSCM proposal was based on a comprehensive approach of Mediterranean stability, tackling with economic, social, political and military dimensions of security. In fact, the CSCM proposal adopted the CSCE methodology of dividing the areas of cooperation into three 'baskets': political and security, economic, humanitarian and cultural (Barbé 1992:72). The Gulf War prevented any meeting of that kind but did not invalidate the economic, social and cultural dimensions of the European approach to the region. On the contrary, anti-Western demonstrations in some North-African countries were a warning. At first sight those 1 demonstrations were directed against the allied operations in Irak, but in fact they were showing clear signs of the social and economic unrest existing in those societies. It is quite a paradox the fact that at the same time that the Euro-mediterranean relationship emphasized the traditional civil power (Duchêne 1972) policy of the Europeans, based on economic, social and cultural relations, the Gulf War impeled the trasformation of the European foreign policy in such a way that military instruments became the center of attention. It's a fact that the civil power role played by the Europeans for two decades was partially invalidated due to the Gulf War experience. Some governments claimed that Europe should have a military dimension to face the post-cold war risks. Those demands clashed during the Maastricht Treaty negotiations with the mistrust of those countries supporting the central role of NATO in European defence. Article J.4 of the EU Treaty is the cautious result of that clash. The perception in Southern Europe of risks derived from the Euro-Mediterranean interdependence (migration, terrorism) was growing after the end of the Gulf War. Civil war in Algeria, Libyan support of terrorism and the slowness of the Middle East peace process impeled those European countries to strengthen its pro-Mediterranean lobbying policy in the Community at the same time that Central and Eastern European Countries were getting closer to the "central circle" of Europe. In this sense it's worth mentioning the statute of associated partners in the WEU granted to the Central and Eastern European Countries during the Petersberg meeting (1992) or the setting of a structured dialogue between those countries and the Union since the European Council of Essen (1994). This strategy of preparing enlargement of the European organizations with regard to the Central and Eastern European Countries put into operation a new set of instruments (WEU associated partnership, NATO partnership for peace, EU structured dialogue). The EU Mediterranean lobby focused its attention on those 1 instruments, but separating them from the aim they were set for (enlargement). Consequently, the balancing philosophy assumed by that lobby was based on instruments, not on final results. Some examples illustrate this Eastern-Southern parallelism in terms of instruments: in 1990 Italy proposed to create a Mediterranean Bank similar to the EBRD; Spain and France supported the idea of putting into motion a kind of Phare Plan for the Mediterranean (Europe 1994a:10); Spain proposed to organize a Mediterranean Partnership for Peace during a NATO meeting of defence ministers celebrated in Seville in September 1994 (Barbé 1995:20); France put forward Mediterranean the proposal during the of an Stability Euro-Mediterranean Pact for Conference the in Barcelona (November 1995) and Malta has been supporting this idea in the follow-up process (Europe 1996a:4); the 1996 Italian presidency of the Union announced the intention of creating a structured dialogue in matters of security and diplomacy for the Euro-Mediterranean region (Europe 1996b:4). In short, Manuel Marín, the Spanish Commissioner in charge of the Union's relations with the non-member Mediterranean countries assumed fully the adaptation of partnership instruments created for Central and Eastern European to the Mediterranean area. In March 1995 Marín published in the french daily Le Figaro an article with a very significant title, La Méditerranée: une priorité au même titre que l'Europe ex-communiste. On this idea the Spanish Commissioner was responsible of the policy adopted by the Commission and was personally supported by president Delors. According to Gillespie (1996:210) Marín has been a central figure in the development of EU Mediterranean policy from its former emphasis on cooperation to one on partnership. Euro-Mediterranean partnership versus Eastern enlargement Marks (1996:2) points out that "the Southern Mediterranean, along with the former Soviet Union is considered by Europe to be one of the two main strategic regions bordering a progressively 1 enlarging EU". The fact is that both developments, the consideration of the Mediterranean as a strategic region and the enlargement of the Union, have been parallel along the time. This parallelism has been converted into linkage, and even trade off, between those two developments in some occasions. The balancing philosophy between Eastern and Southern dimensions of Europe is a good example in that sense. The balancing philosophy supported by the EU Mediterranean lobby began to give some serious results in the middle of 1994. As a matter of fact the European Council of Corfu (June 1994) called, at the same time, for a new policy towards Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean. As far as Eastern Europe is concerned the policy was oriented towards enlargement. In Corfu the heads of state and government agreed that those enlargement negotiations should start after the end of the 1996 Intergovernmental Conference. The EU Mediterranean lobby, led by Spain and France, obtained reciprocal concessions when the Corfu summit decided to show its political will to create a zone of cooperation in the Mediterranean and agreed that enlargement negotiations with Cyprus and Malta will start six months after the end of the 1996 Intergovernmental Conference. In this case, the Greek presidency played hard in order to get Cyprus included in the next enlargement process. The European Commission, commited as we saw before to develop the Union Mediterranean policy from its former emphasis on cooperation to one on partnership, gave contents to a new policy. In this sense, the Commission issued a document in which the creation of the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership was proposed, with special mention being made of a free trade area, supported by substancial financial aid, and a zone of cooperation tending towards a close association, the content of which will be jointly defined at a later stage (European Commission 1994:2-3). This Partnership emphasizes two ideas: in short term, the expansion of the trade bloc built by and around the Union, and in long term, the creation of a real Euro-Mediterranen network based on every 1 kind of cooperation (energy, environment, terrorism control, culture, tourism). The European Council of Essen (December 1994) endorsed the idea of the Partnership proposed by the Commission on the basis of the Mediterranean constituting "a priority zone of strategic importance for the European Union" (Europe 1994b:1) and accepted Spain's offer to organize, during the Spanish presidency in the second half of 1995, a Euro-Mediterranean Conference at ministerial level. This decision must be considered a reciprocal concession due to the fact that the Essen summit adopted at the same time a strategy for enlargement towards the Central and Eastern European countries based, as we saw before, on structured dialogue. The Essen decision concerning the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership was presented by Jacques Delors in such terms during the summit that the cleavage between the Mediterranean lobby, led by Spain and France, and the Eastern lobby, led by Germany, was obvious, even if Delors was talking of the mitigation of those differences. The president of the Commission emphasized "the image of the Northern countries, mostly the German presidency, who have understood that it's necessary to send a message fort to the South; from now on, the French and Spanish presidencies will be able to make an "ambitious" policy for this region where we are very much present" (Europe 1994b:1). Delors' words, in some way, anticipated the row of the European Council of Cannes (June 1995). During that summit the "ambitious" Mediterranean policy of the two 1995 presidencies (France and Spain) clashed with Northern interests, led by Germany. In that occasion, the decision to be taken was not concerned with political gestures, like adopting the idea of a Euro-Mediterranean Partnership, but with the of resources. Before Cannes summit the Commission elaborated concerning the Union relations wit the Mediterranean With respect to budgetary ressources, the Commission allocation a document countries. communiqué 1 presented a proposal (Ecu 5.5bn) trying, according to Marin, to reestablish the credibility of the Union strategy for the Mediterranean countries as compared to the treatment reserved for the Central and Eastern European countries (Europe 1995:6). The idea of treating the Mediterranean partners and the countries of Central and Eastern Europe on an equal footing was thus insisted upon. In other words, the balancing philosophy was fully adopted by the Commission. The Eastern-Southern balance was also present in the first report adopted by the Council, on 10 April 1995, to prepare the Euro-Mediterranean Conference. As a matter of fact that report emphasized the will of the Union to complement its policy towards the East with a policy for the South in the interest of geopolitical coherence (EU Council 1995:2). However, as we said before, the balancing philosophy was put to test during the Cannes summit. For the first time, the objectives of the Mediterranean lobby clashed face to face with one of the main policies of the Union: the Eastern enlargement. The French and Spanish desire to reallocate resources between the East and the South -as proposed by the Commission and translated into aid proposals for the period 1995-1999 of Ecu 5.5bn for the Mediterranean compared to Ecu 7bn. for Eastern Europe- clashed with the views of the Northern countries (Germany, United Kingdom, Netherlands, Denmark). Those countries were not ready to change the 5:1 ratio of aid distribution of the last period (1992-1996), favourable to the Eastern countries. The European Council of Cannes was the scene of a clash between Kohl and González over the distribution of aid. As a result of this clash, the resources for the Mediterranean (Ecu 4.685bn) were increased by 22 per cent while those for Central and Eastern Europe rose by 8 per cent (Barbé 1996:32). The outcome of the Cannes summit suggests two conclusions: first, the successful leading role played by Spain in the Union Mediterranean lobby and second, the trade off between Eastern 1 enlargement and Euro-Mediterranean Partnership. According to Gillespie (1996:206), "Spanish lobbying to strenghten the Mediterranean policy has been linked at important junctures to other issues on which Madrid's support has been sought by Germany and other northern member states, particularly in relation to EU policy towards central-eastern Europe. Spain has never opposed the European Union's eastward expansion, from which there will be costs and dangers for economies such as the Spanish, but González's last two governments were very careful about how Spain would give its assent, ensuring first that contrapartidas (reciprocal concessions), such as German acquiescence in the mid1990s increase in the EU spending on the Mediterranean, were secured in return". CFSP agenda: Mediterranean plus Central and Eastern Europe The European Council of Lisbon (June 92) adopted a report on the possible evolution of the CFSP. That report enumerated some factors that must be taken into consideration when defining the issues and areas of joint actions: geographic proximity of regions or specific countries; an interest in the political and economic stability of the regions or countries; and the existence of threats to security interests of the Union" (Informe 1992:20). According to those factors the report indicated several geographic areas for which the EU must adopt joint actions: Central and Eastern Europe, the Balkans and the Mediterranean, particularly the Maghreb and the Middle East. One can wonder if the balancing philosophy has also affected the CFSP development in terms of defining joint actions. This chapter argues that, apart from the Maghreb, the CFSP agenda focuses its attention on the same geographic areas that the most traditional EPC agenda. As a matter of fact, Central and Eastern Europe, as a part of the CSCE process, and the Middle East conflict were the first issues approached by the EPC mechanism at the beginning of the seventies. Therefore, the CFSP has not 1 changed the issues in the agenda, determined by geographic reasons, but the content of the policies, explained by the new international system (the end of the Soviet bloc and the peace process in the Middle East). As far as this chapter is concerned the only CFSP joint action concerning Central and Eastern Europe that deserves some attention is the Stability Pact. As we saw before the Stability Pact methodology, as a confidence and security-building mechanism, was included in the Barcelona Declaration (1995). As a result of the follow-up meetings of the Barcelona Conference, the European Council of Dublin (December 1996) supported the proposal of a future Chart for Peace and Stability in the Euro-Mediterranean Region, aiming towards confidence building in the region through political dialogue, arms control and State of Law mechanisms. With regard to the Middle East, the Council has adopted two joint actions in support of the Middle East peace process. The first one, adopted by the Council in April 1994, focused on the organization and observation of the Palestinian elections, and the second one, adopted in November 1996, appointed an European envoy to follow the peace process. As far as this chapter is concerned those joint actions deserve two comments. First of all, it's necessary to emphasize the low-profile role played by the Union as regards the political dimension of the peace process. Those joint actions, above mentionned, leave high politics, the crux of the negotiation, in United States hands. Even in the low politics dimension the Union role in the Middle East is less important that it has been in Central and Eastern Europe (coordination of the Phare Plan). As a matter of fact the global coordination of international aid for the Middle East was entrusted to an Ad Hoc Liaison Committee and not to the Union, even being the EU the first donor to the area (Barbé and Izquierdo 1997). In addition to that, it's necessary to emphasize the Spanish high profile in the Union's policy for the region. For instance, Madrid was the see of the Middle East Peace Conference (October 1991). Apart from that, 1 the Council appointed in November 1996 a Spanish diplomat, Miguel Angel Moratinos, as the European envoy to follow the Peace Process. The high profile of the Spanish diplomacy in the Middle East, in addition to the role played by Spain to impel a EuroMediterranean Partnership, make us wonder if the Mediterranean lobby of the Union has an outstanding leader, playing a similar role to Germany in the case of Central and Eastern Europe. In the case of the Middle East, Salomón (1996:98) points out that "Spain assumed within EPC the leadership of the so-called progressive block integrated by France, the UK, Ireland and Greece". The leadership issue will be approached in detail farther on this chapter. Concerning the Mediterranean region, the Lisbon report brought in a new priority to the European Foreign Policy agenda: the Maghreb. The report considered that the stability of this region "acquires great common interest for the Union. Demographic growth, the repeated social crises, large scale emigration and the increase of fundamentalism and religious intégrisme are problems that endanger this stability" (Informe 1992:21). On the basis of the said dangers, the Lisbon Summit endorsed the idea of a EuroMaghreb partnership that would incorporate free trade, political dialogue, and economic, technical, cultural and financial cooperation. However, since 1992, the problems for the Euro-Maghreb option were obvious. The internal situation of Algeria and the economic sanctions on Libya, based on CFSP decisions (common position adopted in November 1993), in addition to the failure of the Arab Maghreb Union invalidated the group-to-group logic underlying the Euro-Maghreb proposal. It became evident that the Maghreb does not constitute a region in the process of economic integration, given the scarce horizontal exchanges, nor an area of political entente. As a result the Euro-Maghreb methodology was finally turned into the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership. 1 The failure of the Maghreb option meant a shock for the French leadership in terms of EU Mediterranean policy. As a matter of fact France had supported along the years initiatives of cooperation in the Western Mediterranean (Mitterrand proposal of convening a Western Mediterranean Conference in 1983, the Western Mediterranen Group initiated in 1990). The Spanish-Italian proposal of convening a CSCM for the whole Mediterranean, above mentionned, meant a challenge for the traditional French policy, based on the difference between the two Mediterranean regions: the Maghreb, where France has a distinctive leadership, and the Middle East. The French policy of chasse gardée in the Maghreb has lessened in the nineties in favour of Spain (Khader 1994) due to the role played by this country in the EU framework to improve the Union's Mediterranean policy. According to Gillespie (1996:207), "by succesfully competing for the European Commission portfolios relating to the Mediterranean, and making the Mediterranean a priority area for the diplomatic service, Spain in the first half of the 1990s was able to play a leading role in shaping this aspect of EU policy". In short, it's impossible to talk of a cohesive Mediterranean block within the EU with a clear leadership. Above all, neither France nor Spain have been interested on bringing attention to the Maghreb area following the CFSP scheme (common positions, joint actions, declarations). For instance, neither the Algerian civil war nor the Western Sahara conflict have been privileged topics in the CFSP agenda. Far from being a privileged topic, the Algerian civil war, for instance, only deserved three declarations out of three hundred adopted between the entry into force of the Treaty and the second semester of 1996. It could seem a paradox that the European Union, that was starting the ambitious Euro-Mediterranean process, obviate in diplomatic terms conflicts in Northern Africa. Could it be the result of differences between the Union's policy and some members' 1 interests? Could it be the result of applying instruments created for the Central and Eastern Europe to the Mediterranean region? Conclusions: Priority and Mistrust It's obvious that the Mediterranean members of the Union are directly affected by developments in the Southern shore of that Sea. Material reasons explain it (millions of Maghrebians living in France, Spanish energetic dependance on Algerian and Libyan gas, Spanish territories of Northern Africa, drug traffic across the Strait of Gibraltar, territorial disputes in the Aegean Sea). Apart from that, common experiences in the past or "past trauma" (Hill 1993:308) are an important factor in this region where colonialism left an important trace. The French-Algerian relationship is much more than a foreign affair issue. It's a domestic sensitive issue. Spain fought its last international war in the twenties, against Moroccan troops. In other words, the relationship with some or all the Mediterranean countries is a priority for the Southern European members of the Union due to the issues involved. Low politics are concerned (fishing, investment, trade, environment) but also high politics (conflict mediation, migration, terrorism, weapons proliferation). Are those individual states' interests clashing with the Union's policy objectives? In this case, can the Union meet those interests? This chapter argues that the Eastern-Southern dilemma is a priority's matter. As a matter of fact the Southern members don't work against the Eastern enlargement. Nevertheless those countries, specially Spain, have tried to make the Mediterranean policy a priority of the Union agenda in order to get more resources and a commitment with the region. In fact, creating a strong Euro-Mediterranean network in that region was the main objective of the Barcelona Conference. The notion of interdependence, as the basis for increasing security in the region, is the main driving force of the Euro-Mediterranean 1 affair. The Northern countries of the Union, feeling not directly affected by that security aspect of the Mediterranean dimension, must be reluctant to accept some policies of the Southern members when principles or resources are involved. In other words, has the Union the means to meet those Southern members objectives? Concerning principles, the pragmatic policies adopted by Spain or France in human rights matters in the Maghreb countries have already clashed with some European Parliament decisions (Feliu 1995:92). Concerning resources the Cannes summit is the best example to mention, as we saw before. In any case the Northern countries of the Union have converging interests with their Southern partners in Mediterranean matters if we take into consideration the trade and investment dimension of the Euro-Mediterranean partnership. In this sense, Marks (1996:2) points out that "the creation of a free trade zone emcompassing both flanks of the Mediterranean -and linked in to an area stretching north to the Arctic circle and east to the confines of the former Soviet Union- fits into the 1990s dynamic of building large transnational trading and investment blocs". Inevitably, in terms of Common Foreign and Security Policy, sensitive issues for some members, like the Algerian civil war for France, will prevent a European common position on the matter. Apparently the idea of a Euro-Mediterranean Partnership, based on free trade and economic cooperation but also on political dialogue, resembling the Europe Agreements, is too ambitious for the time being. As a matter of fact the UE relationship with Central and Eastern Europe is basically different of the Euro-Mediterranean relationship. Conceptualizing those relation in terms of security one can establish a clear difference. On the one hand, the relationship between the Union and Central and Eastern European countries is based on mutual confidence. In other words, those countries are psychologically accepted to be part of the 1 pluralistic community of security formed by the Fifteen and, as far as they are concerned, those countries share the identity elements of that community. In Deutsch words (1957:6) the countries forming a community of security eliminate the use of force among them. That is to say, they constitute a "zone of peace". The Franco-German reconciliation in the framework of the Union is the best example in this sense. Democratic regimes and the acceptance of the European integration principles constitute the basis of that community. On the other hand the relationship between the members of the European Union and the Mediterranean countries could be conceptualized as a complex of security, meaning for that "a group of states whose primary security concerns link together sufficiently closely that the national securities can not realistically be considered apart from one another (Buzan 1991:190). The existence of such a complex of security has been cited as an evidence by Southern members of the Union to develop a partnership between both shores based on the same kind of instruments used by the EU, WEU and NATO for Central and Eastern Europe. The basic problem of that Partnership in matters of politics and security is the negative perception of the so-called complex of security. In other words, the mistrust between both shores. The Arab world has criticized the Euro-Mediterranean operation arguing that the Europeans turn the economic and social problems of those countries into Northern security problems. The mistrust between the two shores is a fact concerning as much the traditional dimensions of security (military dimension) as the economic and societal dimensions, specially the identity factors. A case in point is the debate between the Europeans and the Arab World regarding the human rights interpretation, not to mention the reluctance of the Maghreb countries with regard to the redefinition of NATO's role in the Mediterranean. At all events the Maghreb countries have accused the Mediterranean lobby 1 (France, Spain and Italy) of creating troops and units (Eurofor and Euromarfor) whose mission is nothing other than intervention on the southern shore of the Mediterranean (Faria and Vasconcelos 1996:11). At the same time some of those European countries have impeled the beginning of political dialogues with the Southern shore in order to build confidence: the political dialogue begun with the Barcelona follow-up process and dialogues of some Southern countries with NATO and WEU4. 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