this post was submitted on 10 Dec 2023
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Part of the problem with doing this sort of thing is that it undermines the EU's ability to make agreements. Like, the EU tells Bulgaria and Romania that they can join Schengen if they do a given set of things. They have uncontroversially done those things. But then some member states decide to take another round of extracting concessions.
So what happens next time the EU cuts an agreement with a country over accession to the EU or joining any EU entity, like doing Schengen integration or military integration or whatever? I mean, those countries are going to say "are these actually the terms I'm signing up to do or are some individual members going to have surprise hidden concessions that they are going to demand at the end of the process?" That's going to make it artificially difficult for Brussels to ink any agreements that might be in the interests of the aggregate EU.
None of this is to even argue against states having a veto. I'm just saying that if an existing member is going to veto a long-running process, then the conditions for that should be visible to the incoming member at the time they decide to embark on the path. They should not be whatever new conditions member state governments come up with at the end of the process, after the incoming state has upheld their end of the deal.
It's not about following accords and procedures. If it were, Romania and Bulgaria would have taken this to court and clarified it a long time ago.
I don't know what Bulgaria's deal is with Austria but in Romania's case there are unfinished backroom deals regarding OMV and petrol concessions in Romania.
This latest round of hurdles was raised by Austria in response to Romania being unwilling to cut OMV priority access to the Black Sea oil extraction rigs currently under development.
It has nothing to do with immigrants and all the other jazz, that's just official posturing for public benefit. Both parties claim one inflammatory issue out in the open while negotiating the real deals in the background.
Sounds similar to how it is with NATO
With Finland -- I assume, from your username, that you are Finnish -- NATO mostly avoided that in that they basically just skipped any kind of long-running accession process (which, given the situation with Russia, I think was probably a good idea). What happened, as I understand it, was more-or-less that Finland got added and people said "well, we'll work out any issues after Finland is in".
https://www.euractiv.com/section/defence-and-security/news/finlands-real-integration-into-nato-might-take-years-officials-say/
As obnoxious as I think that Turkey's objections to Sweden's membership have been, they also weren't something that Turkey sat on for years on end after Sweden applied and then pulled out down the line. Sweden applied May 18, 2022. Turkey issued their objections the same month. That's a veto, but it's also not a veto that waited around to be pulled out until after Sweden had done things that Turkey wanted; it's comparable to what I was talking about above with an EU member needing to raise their objections up front. Now, maybe the concessions Turkey was asking for were not reasonable (I certainly think that some on political speech in Sweden were not), but that's another story.
That being said, I think that there's a separate issue for NATO of a country effectively having to disclose that they're aiming for NATO membership; it's not really possible to keep the thing secret. The tactic that Russia used with Ukraine -- make use of a period where one thinks that a country is likely to join but has not yet joined, then aim to preempt membership by preemptively-attacking them and occupying at least part of them, holding territory as a hostage to try to block entry -- is legitimately an issue there.
There were security assurances issued by a few countries independently of NATO in Sweden and Finland's case, as I recall, but I think that there's a broader issue that the whole model isn't ideally suited to counter a party who might just attack a country any time it looks like they might join a different defensive alliance, else one could imagine the situation in Ukraine being repeated elsewhere. Maybe there needs to be some kind of temporary guarantee issued for the duration of any NATO MAP; that might be hard to keep truly secret, but at least it would be possible to limit the window during which a country might be attacked. That alone wouldn't address the issue for Ukraine -- Ukraine wasn't in a NATO MAP at the time that Russia attacked -- but it'd solve part of the problem. Something else would have to be done to deal with attacks that come before any MAP exists.
On the other hand, NATO needs to have some kind of expectation that a party is actually going to move towards doing anything that needs to be done to join. Say Austria or Ireland wants to join. They have a constitutional mandate of neutrality (which has caused political complications for the EU's mutual aid clause). They have to revise that, and that will be a public political process that takes time. NATO providing some kind of guarantees for the duration of the process might make sense (though neither one is likely to be attacked by Russia, given the existence of states between them and Russia). But, okay, say a revision attempt fails -- the government of either country cannot guarantee success, cannot simply revise the constitution at will. Then what happens? I mean, NATO also shouldn't be obligated to permanently extend protection to a non-member that isn't going to become a member with no reciprocity in place. But, that country will have divulged interest in membership. And maybe an attack isn't such a big risk for Austria or Ireland, but there are other countries for whom that is a considerably-more-prominent concern. I don't know if there are necessarily answers that handle all the edge cases. I do think that it'd be possible to at least improve on the existing situation, though.