You're reading: Commissioner: EU open to building relations not only with Eastern Partnership but also Central Asian countries

The European Union should respect countries that do not wish to have closer relations with it and should look for ways to build relations with them as well, European Commissioner for European Neighborhood Policy and Enlargement Negotiations Johannes Hahn said in an interview with BNS.

Speaking about the six countries participating in the Eastern
Partnership program, i.e. Moldova, Ukraine, Belarus, Azerbaijan, Georgia
and Armenia, Hahn pointed out that these are different countries with
different ideas as to how they should build their relationships with the
EU, and the EU should work with all of them, as it cannot choose
neighbors for itself.

It is critically important now to understand that Europe should
decide what its interests are, and these fundamental interests
essentially are peace and growth, especially considering the EU’s
neighbors, he said.

The EU will do all it can to help the neighboring countries implement
the rule-of-law principles and improve their standards of living, Hahn
said. While it is easier and more efficient to cooperate with countries
wishing to have closer relations with the EU, the EU should also respect
the countries whose ideas are different, Hahn said in commenting on the
approach that Latvia has chosen toward its relationships with the
Eastern Partnership countries during its chairmanship of the Council of
the European Union.

Good relations with different countries, including Central Asian
ones, which Latvia has declared among the priorities of its
chairmanship, are in the EU’s best interests, he said.

The world is multi-polar at the beginning of the 21st century, with
no hegemony of one power, the U.S., as it was at the end of the 20th
century, and with no competition between two powers, the U.S. and the
USSR, Hahn said. The multi-polar arrangement meets the EU interests, as
the EU is not a military power, and therefore it is interested in good
relations with different countries, including the Central Asian ones, he
said.