Barcelona limps on despite Middle East crisis
April 2002
Despite
tensions between Arab and Israeli delegates on Monday and the absence of
Syrians and Lebanese representatives, ministers reached agreement on broad issues
and Israel eased up slightly on its resistance to EU mediation in the conflict.
European Commission officials were upbeat about the
outcome of the talks: “The Valencia conference has once again shown the
resilience of the Euro-Mediterranean partnership process despite the current
drama in the Middle East,” Gunnar Wiegand, the executive’s external relations
spokesman told European Voice.
Wiegand referred to what he called an unprecedented
consensus in adopting a broad action plan to take the seven-year-old ‘Barcelona
Process’ forward.
The plan is to forge a Euro-Med free trade area within
the next decade, beyond bilateral association agreements, promoting north-south
trade, economic reform, political dialogue and security cooperation.
Prior to Valencia, Algeria and Lebanon had yet to sign
the agreements they had initialled in recent months, leaving Syria as the only
country without a deal. Algeria decided at the last minute to sign its
agreement on the sidelines of the conference after Lebanon, which was scheduled
to ink its deal, withdrew from the forum.
Although the first day saw Arab foreign ministers
storm out of a speech by Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Michael Melchior, the
second was crowned by a minor diplomatic breakthrough when his boss, Shimon
Peres, invited EU High Representative Javier Solana to visit besieged
Palestinian president Yasser Arafat.
Peres explained that a ‘misunderstanding’ was behind
Israeli refusal earlier this month to allow EU access to Ramallah and the visit
went ahead yesterday.
Peres, who had earlier criticised what he called EU ‘anti-Semitism’
while addressing AIPAC, an Amerian pro-Israeli lobby group, sounded a
conciliatory note in Valencia, saying he recognised that there was a role for
the EU to play alongside Washington in ending the spiral of violence.
Nevertheless, experts are divided over whether the
Barcelona Process can achieve prosperity and stability in the Euro-Med area
without a satisfactory settlement to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Indeed,
some fear the conflict may undermine the process as the EU's partners spin
further apart.
Despite the Commission President Romano Prodi’s recent
declaration that he wanted to use the Barcelona Process to help resolve the
conflict, the executive has so far resisted calls by MEPs and activists to
suspend the EU’s preferential trade agreement with Israel and has, instead,
preferred to engage in “a dialogue of civilisations” with its Mediterranean
partners.
Eberhard Rhein, a senior adviser at the European
Policy Centre, a Brussels-based think-tank, says the Commission is using the
wrong tactics: “The Barcelona Process is not the right forum for the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and was never meant to be.
”It should focus on the key issues of socio-economic
and political reforms in the countries in the region and how the EU can help
with that.”
Other analysts argue that peace in the Middle East is
of huge importance to the survival of the Euro-Med partnership.
”The Euro-Med process is based on a false assumption
that it is possible to separate economics from (regional) politics,” Alain
Dierkhoff, senior research fellow at the Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches
Internationales in Paris, said at a recent seminar in Brussels.
This article appeared in the 25 April 2002
issue of European Voice. ©2002 The Economist
Group
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