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    The Blueprint of a Diplomatic Debacle: Analyzing Germany’s Historic UNSC Loss

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    A Century of Diplomatic Relations Between Albania and Russia: Exclusive Interview with the Russian Ambassador to Albania, H.E. Alexey Zaytsev

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    The European Parliament building in Strasbourg, France with flags waving calmly celebrating peace of the Europe. July 12, 2020.

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    From a great ‘apple of disaccord’ to a  point of  cooperation! A bad start! The strange absence in Davos!

    5 lessons from the American 3 January! Don’t count the chicken before they are hatched! Will NATO freeze in Greenland? Wrong diplomatic messages!

    German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, son-in-law of U.S. President Donald Trump line up for a family photo opportunity at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany, December 15, 2025.    REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/Pool

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    The Digital Protectorate: How the EU AI Act Codified Silicon Valley’s Monopoly

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    Serbia at the Crossroads of EU Integration and Geopolitical Balancing: IFIMES Analysis

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    No End in Sight: Trump, Netanyahu and the Expanding Middle East War

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    U.S. Embassy: Iran-Linked Groups May Target Americans and Iranian Opposition in Albania

    The Council of Albanian Ambassadors disappointed with the voting of the draft law on the foreign service in the parliamentary committees.

    Prime Minister Edi Rama Addresses Israel’s Knesset in Historic Special Session

    Kazakhstan’s Strategic Reform Agenda: Stability, Modern Governance, and Responsible Diplomacy

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  • Home
  • OP/ED

    Pierre Nora and the institution of memory we lack in Eastern Europe

    The Blueprint of a Diplomatic Debacle: Analyzing Germany’s Historic UNSC Loss

    Cyber Attribution, Corruption, and the False-Flag Question in Albania’s 2022 Alleged Iranian Cyberattack

    Between Russia, Iran and Europe: Azerbaijan as a balancing power in the South Caucasus

    The Zero-Tariff Gate: Sovereignty as a Service in the Sino-African Corridor

    Albania vs. the Sea/ Marginal Notes on A. Leka’s Novel The Hidden Side of the Albanian Socialist Garden

    May 9 and the long shadow of a Letter: Is Europe still Schuman’s Project?

    The Arbnesh of Zadar: A living memory of Albanian identity on the Adriatic coast

    Science Diplomacy and Academic Freedom: A strategic nexus for contemporary diplomacy

  • Interview

    Exclusive Interview with Oleksandr Tyshchenko: A 40-Year Legacy of Chernobyl, Nuclear Risks, and Global Responsibility

    INTERVIEW: ZLATKO KRAMARIĆ – THOUGHTS ON THE OLD CONTINENT

    EXCLUSIVE / Ukrainian Ambassador to Albania, Volodymyr Shkurov: “Ukraine wants peace, but not at the expense of its freedom and independence”

    EXCLUSIVE| Ambassador Tayyar Kagan Atay: Türkiye and Albania, a Strategic Partnership Rooted in Shared Heritage and a Common Vision for the Future

    “Diplomacy, Not War”: Palestinian Ambassador to Albania Calls for Justice, Peace, and Global Action for Gaza

    Exclusive: “Even After Tito – Tito”/ Ambassador Zlatko Kramarić on Authoritarian Legacies and Democracy’s Future in the Balkans

    The Conclusion of the Diplomatic Mission / Ambassador Dancho Markovski: Strengthening Albania-North Macedonia Relations for a Shared European Future

    A Century of Diplomatic Relations Between Albania and Russia: Exclusive Interview with the Russian Ambassador to Albania, H.E. Alexey Zaytsev

    Exclusive/ The chairman of the Freedom Party, Ilir Meta: “The will of the citizens will triumph in Albania, as it did in North Macedonia”

  • Realpolitik

    IBAR? ”Sufficiently! Much ado about nothing! Shart contrasts in Beijing! Where is the exit?!

    Neither peace nor war! Peace with bombs?! IBAR in autumn?! Not another Hormuz in Taivan! 

    IBAR – a springing board or an obstacle? Can we catch the EU Negotiation train 2027? When the dress makes the news!  EU electoral April  ends in a draw 1:1!  

    The European Parliament building in Strasbourg, France with flags waving calmly celebrating peace of the Europe. July 12, 2020.

    EU 2027 or 2037! Even half membership failed! No exit strategy!     

    What next?

    “With diplomatic velvet“! Major question marks! In Washington yes, but  in the White House NO! A strange dinner in Brussels!

    From a great ‘apple of disaccord’ to a  point of  cooperation! A bad start! The strange absence in Davos!

    5 lessons from the American 3 January! Don’t count the chicken before they are hatched! Will NATO freeze in Greenland? Wrong diplomatic messages!

    German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, son-in-law of U.S. President Donald Trump line up for a family photo opportunity at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany, December 15, 2025.    REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/Pool

    A Strategy that could change the world! Europe in Berlin! Why an historic compromise? Only charm diplomacy in Athens!

  • Current Events

    Rama alleges ‘hybrid war’ behind protests against Kushner-linked coastal development

    BELGRADE, SERBIA - JUNE 18. 2020: Russian and Serbian flags on display during Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov's visit to the Liberators of Belgrade Memorial. Valery Sharifulin/TASS,Image: 533095429, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: UWAGA! Zdjęcia zawierają oryginalny opis dostawcy (ITAR-TASS). Szczególnie w związku z agresją Rosji na Ukrainę mogą zawierać przekaz niezgodny z faktami. Zweryfikuj go przed publikacją, Model Release: no, Credit line: Valery Sharifulin / TASS / Forum

    Balkan Maskirovka: Why Moscow’s “Distancing” Is Only an Operation for the Survival of Vučić’s Regime

    Serbia – China 2026: Technological partnership, geopolitical positioning and a new phase of the Chinese presence in the Western Balkans

    The Digital Protectorate: How the EU AI Act Codified Silicon Valley’s Monopoly

    The 28th MFC Annual Conference in Durrës / Sulaj: Microfinance remains a key instrument for financial inclusion

    Serbia at the Crossroads of EU Integration and Geopolitical Balancing: IFIMES Analysis

    Tirana – €20 Million EU–Banking Agreement Boosts Albanian SMEs

    The Myth of Independence: How Chinese Efficiency is Rewriting the Constitution of Modern Geopolitics!

    Europe Yesterday and Today: Why 9 May Still Matters

  • Top News

    Rama alleges ‘hybrid war’ behind protests against Kushner-linked coastal development

    No End in Sight: Trump, Netanyahu and the Expanding Middle East War

    Tirana – €20 Million EU–Banking Agreement Boosts Albanian SMEs

    “EU4Municipalities II” Project, a Strategic Investment for Strengthening Municipalities and Accelerating Albania’s Path towards the EU

    Albania, Italy deepen defence ties with naval shipbuilding deal

    U.S. Embassy: Iran-Linked Groups May Target Americans and Iranian Opposition in Albania

    The Council of Albanian Ambassadors disappointed with the voting of the draft law on the foreign service in the parliamentary committees.

    Prime Minister Edi Rama Addresses Israel’s Knesset in Historic Special Session

    Kazakhstan’s Strategic Reform Agenda: Stability, Modern Governance, and Responsible Diplomacy

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EU Dream Fading in Western Balkans, a Local’s View

17 December, 2020
in ENGLISH, English OP/ED
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By Ernest Bunguri

It might be a trauma, but no one can claim Bulgaria’s recent veto on North Macedonia’s EU accession talks came as a shock.
It was seen coming from, at least, late August by EU states’ diplomats who meet in the relevant EU Council working group, the committee on enlargement (Coela), in Brussels.
But Germany, the outgoing EU presidency, showed little sense of urgency.
Berlin behaved as if its mighty chancellor, Angela Merkel, would get a last-minute deal, the way she did, for instance, on the EU budget and on climate targets.
Those were important and difficult issues.
But when it comes to political and psychological complexity, the Western Balkans are in a league of their own.
Identity and language are still weaponised in the region, the same way they were in all of Europe after World War 2, when the EU project began.
“We left some unfinished business to the [incoming] Portuguese [EU presidency],” Merkel said at her end-of-year EU summit, in what was quite an understatement.
To be honest, if Bulgaria/North Macedonia was the only problem, it would probably have been solved by now.
But in fact, France, and other EU states, such as Denmark, the Netherlands, and Spain, have, for years, been putting obstacle after obstacle in the way of enlargement.
On paper, the EU accession process has its ‘Copenhagen criteria’, which tell those on the outside to fix their problems before they get in.
But in reality, it is EU national elections and even EU leaders’ personal ambitions which have become the bloc’s enlargement conditionality.
“Let’s first win elections against the far-right/xenophobes/eurosceptics, then do enlargement,” EU politicians think.
“And while we’re at it, let’s use frightening propaganda about Balkan asylum seekers, blackening their image to make ourselves look whiter-than-white.”
I got confirmation of some of this mentality when I asked for an interview with Albanian prime minister Edi Rama for French newspaper Libération back in May 2019, in the middle of the French presidential elections.
“Edi Rama has given his word to [the now-president] Emmanuel Macron that he will not open his mouth on enlargement until the last day of the elections in France”, a member of Rama’s cabinet told me at the time.
Despite Rama’s subservience, Macron still vetoed North Macedonia and Albania’s accession talks in October 2019.
And to add insult to injury, Macron did it while using the rhetoric of French far-right leader Marine Le Pen, by pretending that a few thousand Albanian asylum seekers posed a danger to France.
France and the European Commission then came up with new enlargement rules in January.
They did nothing about the EU’s internal veto politics.
But they did create even more hoops for EU outsiders to jump through and they made this progress “réversible” if they slipped up on the way.

Case study

Let’s look at things from Skopje’s point of view.
First, they waited nine years before Greece lifted its EU veto in a painful dispute on local history.
The North Macedonians changed their name and constitution and all-but rooted out corruption and nationalism.
Now, Bulgaria wants them to say their language and ethnicity are fake, in the run-up to Bulgarian elections in March.
And if that is solved? Well, we also have Czech, Cypriot, Dutch, and German elections next year.
I come from Albania and it hurts me to see how the EU dream, which has been the region’s guiding light for 30 years, is fading away.
The level of progress in the Western Balkans since the devastating wars of the 1990s has been breathtaking – any Europeans who go hiking there or who go on holiday to the region can see it with their own eyes.
It is the EU dream that inspired the Western Balkans to make it this far.
And it is billions of euros of EU taxpayers’ money which has been invested there in the name of bringing Europe together.
But the journey is not over and, lately, the dream is turning sour.
It’s not just EU hypocrisy – preaching rule-of-law, while Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán and Polish deputy prime minister Jarosław Kaczyński destroy rule-of-law.
It’s not just weak PR – in Serbia, which gets the biggest share of EU pre-accession funds, most Serbs somehow think China, Russia, and Turkey do more than the EU for their country.
It’s about the deeper EU attitude to the Western Balkans as outsiders, leftovers, second-class ticket holders.
The pandemic cast a harsh spotlight on this when the EU slammed shut its borders to the region as if it was Wuhan earlier this year.
Nobody thought to invite these EU family-members-to-be, or even their Erasmus students, inside Europe’s ring of protection.
Instead, the EU gave the Western Balkans €3bn to shut up (and say: ‘Thank you!’), even as existing EU states began to fight with each other about borders, masks, and toilet paper.
And the other day, when European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen spoke of vaccines, she said the Western Balkans might get the EU’s leftovers, after member states had had their fill.

Hole in EU map

I am just a journalist and my job is not to predict what happens next if the EU continues like this.
But for me, it makes no sense to treat the Western Balkans this way.
How can we be outsiders if we share the same history, culture, and geography – the Western Balkans are literally surrounded by EU countries and maritime zones?
I’m saddened that with every new veto and every new Hungarian or Polish outrage, the European model shines less brightly.
So let’s not wait for the new US administration of president-elect Joe Biden to come in and try to mend the things we have broken or neglected.
Let’s not just count meetings of the Kosovo-Serbia normalisation talks, as though the more of them we have, the better things become, even though the talks are going nowhere.
And let’s not hope for last-minute miracles, the way Germany did on Bulgaria, to stop trains from crashing.
Instead, let’s make the EU dream bright again.
Europe can be bold. She can hold enemies of EU values to account, rise above national politics, and end veto-blackmail.
But EU leaders and citizens must also open their minds to the fact there is no united Europe, so long as there is a Western Balkans-shaped hole in its map. /EUobserver

Tags: ALbaniaErnest bunguriEUnord macedonia

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