Czech Presidency overwhelmed by challenges: Is Central Asia one of them?
Czech Presidency overwhelmed by challenges: Is Central Asia one of them?
Author(s): Jos Boonstra, Ona Juknevičienė, Aibek Tilebaliev, Gulnura Toralieva, Anvar Kamolidinov, Charlote Adriaen
Contributor(s): Jos Boonstra (Editor), Neil Melvin (Editor), Nafisa Hasanova (Editor), Natalia Mirimanova (Editor)
Subject(s): Governance, Economic policy, Environmental and Energy policy, International relations/trade, Geopolitics
Published by: CEPS Centre for European Policy Studies
Keywords: European Union; Czech presidency; Central Asia; international relations; EU foreign policy; gas dispute; energy policy; European intergration;
Summary/Abstract: Every member state that chairs the EU Council must strike a balance between the policies it wants to develop and the immediate crises that need to be dealt with. The active French EU chairmanship served to increase the visibility of France and its president, which also helped the EU to be seen as a more active and influential player on the international stage. However, this has not made matters easier for the Czechs, who are at the EU helm until mid-2009. Whereas Sarkozy’s main immediate crises were of a financial nature, preceded by the August Russia-Georgia war, the Czechs have already been confronted with two major EU foreign policy matters from the outset: the Israeli Gaza strip offensive and the Russia-Ukraine gas dispute. The Czech team may well end up continually dealing with one crisis after another instead of pushing ahead with further European integration, increasing the effectiveness of the Brussels institutions and developing foreign and energy policies.
Series: EUCAM Watch
- Page Count: 10
- Publication Year: 2009
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF