10/11/23View in Browser

Enlargement à la russe

By Georgi Gotev | @GeorgiGotev

Vladimir Putin’s biggest – and wildest – project is to resuscitate the Soviet Union in some form during his lifetime. But he has a problem: No country wants to join the Russian Federation, not even Belarus, despite its vassal status.

Enlargement à la russe is what Putin is trying to do in Ukraine. The good news is that this type of enlargement doesn’t work because today, you cannot really force nations at gunpoint to become part of your empire.

Ukraine, Moldova, Belarus to the west, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia to the north, Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan in the Caucasus, and Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan in Central Asia were all part of the Soviet Union. Now, they are sovereign countries.

The German Democratic Republic, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Romania were all satellites of the Soviet Union. However, it wasn’t their choice – this was the result of post-World War II division,  the infamous Yalta agreement.

When the Soviet Union collapsed, Germany was reunited. Czechoslovakia split into Czechia and Slovakia, Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Romania recovered their sovereignty, as did Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia by leaving the Soviet Union.

All integrated into the West, joining NATO first, then the EU.

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Photo of the day
A garment workers' union member holds a union flag as she takes part in a protest to demand an increase in the minimum wage in front of the Press Club in Dhaka, Bangladesh, 10 November 2023. The workers, who had been demonstrating for approximately two weeks, demanded an increase in the minimum wage to 23,000 Bangladeshi Taka (around 207 US dollars). However, on 07 November, the government announced a new minimum wage of 12,500 Bangladeshi Taka (around 112 US dollars), a figure that workers' unions rejected. EPA-EFE/Monirul Alam

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The Roundup

Negotiators from EU countries and the European Parliament agreed on a landmark new law late on Thursday to restore at least 20% of Europe’s land and sea areas by 2030 and all ecosystems in need of restoration by 2050.

EU policymakers are butting heads over the principle of compliance by design, harmonisation of administrative procedures, and implementation deadlines, according to a compromise document on the short-term rental regulation, seen by Euractiv.

technical meeting on the EU’s AI regulation broke down on Friday after large EU countries asked to retract the proposed approach for foundation models.

Following a 2021 judgement by the EU’s court of justice, Germany has boosted the independence of its federal grid agency, the Bundesnetzagentur, a move heavily criticised by the opposition.

If you are looking for more policy news, don’t miss this week’s Economy Brief and the Tech Brief.

Look out for…

  • Commission President Ursula von der Leyen meets with European Round Table of Industrialists in Stuttgart on Sunday.
  • Economy Commissioner Paolo Gentiloni participates in Vienna Economic Forum on Monday.
  • Foreign Affairs Council in Brussels on Monday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

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