International security
The lastest European Union summit was not hostile
towards Russia
926
December 19, 17:45 UTC+3

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AUTHOR
MOSCOW, December 19. /TASS/. Thursday’s European Union
summit in Brussels ended with a number of encouraging signals in favour of a
further dialogue with Moscow over settling the crisis with Ukraine and revising
anti-Russian sanctions.
"We have to keep channels of communication open.
I have known Mr. Putin for many years and I intend to swim in those channels
and take advantage of that communication," European Commission head
Jean-Claude Juncker said.
“There are no reasons for stepping up EU sanctions
against Russia at the moment. The European Union must find a way out of the
crisis in Ukraine in cooperation with Russia,” French president Francois
Hollande believes. And Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel declared that “on the
condition of preserving Ukraine’s territorial integrity the European Union may
consider the lifting sanctions.”
“The European Union's summit, which ended on December
18, makes one cautiously optimistic about the chances of a warming in relations
between the EU and Russia, judging by the tone of the statements made there,
the chief of European political studies at the Institute of International
Relations and World Politics under the Russian Academy of Sciences, Nadezhda
Arbatova, told TASS.
“The EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and
Security Policy Federica Mogherini said in her opening remarks at the summit there
was the need for building a responsible strategy towards Russia and a
constructive relationship with it. In principle, the summit produced no
breakthrough solutions on the Russian track, but in diplomacy the tone and form
are no less important than the content,” Arbatova believes.
“As before, the European Union links an improvement of
relations and the lifting of sanctions with the implementation of the Minsk
Accords. Chancellor Merkel said that she was optimistic about Russian President
Vladimir Putin’s pronounced commitment to the peace settlement of the conflict
in Ukraine,” Arbatova said.
“At the same time the conflict highlighted fundamental
disagreements between Moscow and Brussels. Although the EU leaders said they
had not considered the introduction of more sanctions against Russia, just as
supplies of weapons to Ukraine, the sanctions that the EU adopted against
Crimea and Sevastopol were perceived in Moscow as sanctions against Russia,
because both Crimea and Sevastopol are an integral part of the Russian
Federation,” Arbatova believes.
“The just-ended summit was not hostile towards Russia.
It looks like the European Union has developed the awareness it would be wrong
to take harsh measures against Moscow, in particular, in the context of the current
financial instability in Russia, which backfires on the economies of the Old
World,” said Kirill Koktysh, a lecturer at the political theory chair of the
Moscow institute of international relations MGIMO under the Russian Foreign
Ministry.
On Thursday, a source in the European Commission
confirmed that the current crisis-induced financial trends in the Russian
economy ruled out the possibility of more economic sanctions by the European
Union. “A worsening of the economic situation in Russia is fraught with
stagnation in the EU countries and the disruption of their post-crisis recovery
efforts. For this reason no new economic sanctions can be on the agenda.”
“Most probably we shall see a winter pause in contacts
between Russia and the European Union over the Ukrainian crisis, with a wide
variety of diplomatic moves being made. Decisions concerning revision of
anti-Russian sanctions may follow next spring, depending on how the events
inside and around the self-proclaimed Donetsk and Luhansk republics will be
unfolding,” MGIMO lecturer Yevgeny Kozhokin told TASS. He believes that in
contrast to US politicians the European leaders are now concerned not so much
about the Ukrainian crisis as economic relations with Russia. Hence the milder
tone of statements at the EU summit.”
“The abolition of sanctions can be the sole
encouraging and positive signal from the European Union addressed to Russia.
Everything else is self-deception,” the director of the Globalization Problems
Institute, Valdai Club member Mikhail Delyagin said to disagree with other
polled analysts.
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