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9 November 2014

Europe’s Incomplete Unification

NOVEMBER 6, 2014


The summer of 1989 was balmy. During those weeks, tens of thousands of East Germans headed south. Their goal was the West.

I won’t forget the cavalcades of spluttering East German Trabant cars that chugged through what was then Communist Czechoslovakia and Hungary.

On the outskirts of Budapest, young and old had set up camps. Many were simply waiting. Others moved on, making their way to Hungary’s border with Austria. The torrent of East Germans was unstoppable. They wanted to get out to the West.


On September 10, a Sunday night, Hungary’s Communist foreign minister Gyula Horn appeared on state television. He said the border with Austria would be opened. That was it! The Iron Curtain that had been thrown up across Eastern Europe after World War II was breached. On November 9, the Berlin Wall was scaled. The reunification of Europe had begun. Twenty-five years on, it has yet to be complete.

It was people’s power that toppled the Communist systems across that part of Europe. The role of Mikhail Gorbachev, the last leader of the Soviet Union, was crucial too. He was not going to send troops from the Moscow-led Warsaw Pact to stem the exodus or squash demonstrations.

But above all, the people of Eastern Europe did not want to spend the rest of their lives under a system that completely disregarded human rights and that kept Europe divided. When their countries joined the EU, these citizens’ freedom was consummated.

It is hard to overestimate the attraction of the European Union for the “other” Europe, both then and now.

Yes, there is cynicism today about how the EU functions. There is increasing public skepticism about further enlargement. There are populist parties across Europe that believe that the EU should and can be turned into a new fortress—as if they had forgotten how the Iron Curtain created a special kind of prison in post-1945 Eastern Europe.

In 1989, the reunification of Europe began. Now, it has yet to be complete.

But the people of the Western Balkans, Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, and Belarus do not want new dividing lines to be drawn across Europe. Despite the consequences of the euro crisis and rising unemployment, they want to be part of the EU. Somehow, they believe the EU is the guarantor of their freedom and peace.

They are right to believe that.

The problem is that inside the EU, too many governments are indifferent about why freedom matters for those living in Europe’s East. This is despite the fact that so many people in Europe’s Eastern (and Southern) neighborhood only partly enjoy, or do not enjoy at all, basic human and civil rights.

Yet the power of civil society in Ukraine and in the countries of the Western Balkans shows that the status quo is not unassailable.

Ukraine’s parliamentary election on October 26 confirmed the determination of large swaths of the country’s population to opt for a Western direction. No doubt there are groups within the political parties led by Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk who pay only lip service to reforms. After all, real reforms would undermine the political role played by Ukraine’s highly influential oligarchs.

But there are now genuine independent political players—though small in number—who can make a difference over time. Their success will require an enormous commitment by the EU and its member state governments.

That commitment is needed not only in Ukraine but also in the Western Balkansand Moldova, where political elites are adept at the rhetoric of reform but miserable at delivering it.

The small civil society movements across the region are frustrated with the slow pace of change and the increasing erosion of press freedom in their countries. But they are also marginalized by the political elites, which is why they try to look to the EU for support.

Civil society does not need the @EU_Commission's turgid progress reports.

Civil society does not need the European Commission’s long and turgidly written annual progress reports on reforms. It needs something far more tangible. It needs practical, on-the-ground support across Eastern Europe and theWestern Balkans.

This means that EU leaders must be highly visible during parliamentary sessions, hold town-hall meetings that involve local communities, and speak out against the intimidation of journalists. The EU should involve citizens and civil society groups in its meetings with national and local leaders and should make a point of visiting activists who are detained.

If the region’s political elites are not going to establish checks and balances, then EU delegations, European External Action Service diplomats, and the plethora of European foundations should step in.

Governments in Eastern Europe and the Western Balkans will surely balk at such visibility. But these activities are about supporting the values that Europeans should in any case believe in and support—and that define the EU.

It is the rule of law, press freedom, and the array of human and civil rights that underpin democracy. That is the freedom those Trabi drivers yearned for, and achieved, twenty-five years ago.

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