Ukraine gets European Commission backing for talks on Ukraine membership

Foreign policy

The European Commission has recommended that formal talks should begin with Ukraine on joining the European Union, BBC informs.

The step takes Kyiv closer to the coveted prize of EU membership, five months after the 27 member states gave it candidate status.

Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen praised its "excellent progress, even as it's fighting an existential war."

She said talks should also start with Moldova and that Georgia should become a candidate, if it passed reforms.

Moldova and Ukraine applied for membership in the weeks after Russia invaded Ukraine and both became candidates in June. Georgia was passed over for candidate status at the time.

President Volodymyr Zelensky described the European Commission report as "historic" and said it was an important day.

Ms von der Leyen said Ukraine had completed "well over 90% of the necessary reforms" that the EU set out last year, adding that "the goal is truly within reach".

It was also a day to celebrate in Georgia, she said. The government in Tbilisi is seen as having made sufficient progress on gender equality, fighting violence against women and organised crime.

A final decision on the recommendations will be made by the EU's member states at their December summit.

But the devil to reaching the goal of membership is in the detail.

EU accession talks are a slalom of technicalities and caveats and they tend to be painstakingly slow. Candidate countries need to meet extensive legal and economic criteria to join.

The entire process normally takes about a decade, but can take longer than that.

Each enlargement decision requires the backing of all 27 EU members, and any country can block negotiations at any stage, often due to bilateral disputes.


The European Commission report, released on Wednesday, however recommends that Ukraine needs to:

further reform the way constitutional judges are selected
introduce tougher action against corruption and money laundering
and adopt new laws to curb the influence of the country's powerful businessmen, known as oligarchs.

But there is a certain leniency, considering that Ukraine is in the middle of a war.

Unlike Nato, which Ukraine is also seeking to join, the European Union has no collective defence pact. But Ukraine joining the EU would ensure that Russia does not make a further attempt to take over the country.

But ultimately the EU is facing a dilemma. It is torn between the signal of solidarity it wants to send to Ukrainians, and the difficulty of integrating such a large and war-torn country.

Ukraine is the most heavily mined country in the world, it is awash with weapons, and latest estimates suggest that around 18% of its territory is controlled by Russia.

President Zelensky has promised that Kyiv will meet the Commission's conditions, and stressed how a positive EU decision will give fresh motivation to his troops.

That is particularly relevant amid fears of "Ukraine fatigue" mounting among Western allies. He has spoken himself of the Israel-Hamas war "taking away the focus" from the war in Ukraine.

No EU member state is ready to admit Ukraine while it is at war, but the geopolitical urgency is there, says Tina Akhvlediani from the Centre for European Policy Studies.

"If Ukraine doesn't join the EU, then the country will be lost to Russia. It's autocracy versus democracy. We can't just watch while Russia invades other countries that have European aspirations."

But enlargement has never come about smoothly for the European Union. It is quite normal for the European Commission, which runs the process, to take a positive approach toward future accessions, while national governments are often divided.

In Brussels, Hungary is seen as the main hurdle that could scupper Ukraine's ambitions.

Prime Minister Viktor Orban was recently photographed shaking hands with Russia's Vladimir Putin and he has been critical of sending more military support to Ukraine.

In the early days of the EU, enlargement was driven by the need to consolidate Western Europe during the Cold War - and later by the necessity of stabilising the parts of the former Soviet empire that had become independent.

The renewed Russian threat has revived interest in bringing in Western Balkan and Eastern European countries.