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TOUTES LES RUBRIQUES

Les voisins méconnus de l'Europe : Abkhazie et Ossétie du Sud

Publié 20 mars 2007 - Mis à jour 21 mars 2007
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Selon cet article rédigé par Nicu Popescu, chercheur associé au Centre européen d'études politiques (CEPS), l'UE doit régler les conflits sécessionistes de ses voisins de l'Est avant d'entamer la réalisation de ses objectifs politiques en Géorgie.

The author focuses on EU policy towards Georgia and the secessionist regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, arguing that the EU can contribute to conflict resolution in Georgia through greater inclusion of the regions in the European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP).

“From the Balkans to the Middle East, and from the South Caucasus to Western Sahara, the EU is encircled with conflicts which affect the security of the EU,” Popescu writes, and therefore the EU has no choice but to take action, especially since conflict resolution is one of the priorities of the ENP.

According to the author, the secessionist conflicts in the EU’s Eastern neighbourhood are "important tests for the whole web of the EU’s bilateral and multilateral relations with all of its Eastern partners", since the EU "can do little in the East without stumbling on these secessionist conflicts".

The EU’s policies towards the conflicts of Abkhazia and South Ossetis also raise important implications as regards "the scale of its involvement in its neighbourhood and its relations with Russia". 

The paper continues by exploring the potential of greater EU involvement in Georgia’s conflicts, as well as the effects and perceptions of EU actions in secessionist entities, before concluding with a number of recommendations.

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