Karel Schwarzenberg 

‘Europe’s fate is being determined in Ukraine’ 


VoxEurop


24 February 2015 


*       Comment 
<http://www.voxeurop.eu/en/content/blog/4899140-europe-s-fate-being-determined-ukraine#comments>
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Karel Schwarzenberg was Foreign Affairs Minister of the Czech Republic from 
2007 to 2013. He was chancellor under Václav Havel in the 1990s, when he led 
the first delegation of the OSCE to Nagorno-Karabakh following the outbreak of 
war between Armenia and Azerbaijan. He now leads the conservative TOP 09 party 
and ran for the Czech president in 2013, losing to Miloš Zeman in the second 
round.

Mr. Schwarzenberg, was the Nobel Peace Price for the European Union in vain?

In my opinion, it was a pretty useless gesture. There is no doubt that the EU 
has achieved a lot for peace. We won’t challenge that. [The EU] made enormous 
progress within its member states, but I think that giving the Nobel Price to 
an international organisation is useless.

How do you assess the current geopolitical situation in Europe?

Right now we are heading towards, or already have behind us, a great defeat. 
The ceasefire that the leading powers of the EU – Germany and France – 
negotiated in Minsk did not even hold for 24 hours. But this was clear right 
from the outset. Putin has succeeded 
<http://www.voxeurop.eu/en/content/cartoon/4896115-next-ceasefire>  in 
ridiculing the EU’s representatives 
<http://www.voxeurop.eu/en/content/cartoon/4893466-peace-talks> , and Europe 
will have to decide if it still wants to take itself seriously.

What can and should the EU do?

Offer the strongest possible resistance to the conquest of Ukraine and help 
Ukraine <http://www.voxeurop.eu/en/content/news-brief/4895013-how-save-ukraine> 
 by any means necessary. This will require considerable sacrifices.

What sacrifices do you have in mind?

Money, money, and more money – as the old field marshal [Raimondo] Montecuccoli 
said: “for war you need three things: money, money, and more money.” And since 
Russia is waging war against Ukraine, we have to support Ukraine – and this 
requires money, money, and more money.

Who is to blame for the situation in Ukraine?

Many are to blame. But in the first instance Russia, of course, or Putin. He 
wants to subjugate Ukraine once again, for it to submit to the domination of 
Moscow. For Putin, it is not about recovering the old industry in Donetsk, nor 
is it about some villages in eastern Ukraine. For him, it is about the 
possession of Ukraine in its entirety. And that should be clear in our minds. 
Europe’s fate is being determined in Ukraine 
<http://www.voxeurop.eu/en/content/news-brief/4893483-will-eu-end-yugoslavia-or-ussr>
 .

What motivations are at play?

For Putin, power. It’s very simple. He does not recognise the autonomy of 
Ukraine or the existence of a Ukrainian nation, and believes it should be 
subject to his power. Power alone is a very honorable goal. Americans have a 
nice phrase: “power is better then sex.”

Does the EU have a problem with power?

It doesn’t use its powers, unfortunately. We are preoccupied, scared, about our 
business interests. But there is an old joke: “even in leather pants, people 
without balls are still impotent.”

You were very active against the communist governments in the old 
Czechoslovakia and elsewhere in the Eastern bloc. Do you draw parallels between 
today and the situation more than 50 years ago?

There are huge differences, but it is Russia’s unabated claim to power that 
unites them.

The Czech Republic became a NATO member in 1999 and joined the EU in 2004. How 
did you experience this period of change?

I was very happy that it succeeded, because I was reassured that my home 
country was more or less secure. There were no big tensions. Both accessions 
were welcomed by the population. There were some who protested – communists and 
others – but they clearly were the minority.

What future does the Eastern Partnership have?

I believe we should continue the Eastern Partnership 
<http://www.voxeurop.eu/en/content/article/4846987-no-future-without-founding-fathers>
 . It is in our interest to care about our neighbors, because if the East 
remains a turbulent and poor region, it will hurt us. We should have no 
illusions about this. In that sense, it is in the best interest of EU member 
states for the countries of the Eastern Partnership to prosper. It is less a 
charitable act than one of self interest.

But might this not be difficult to justify, since it could be seen as too much 
influence by the EU?

I would love to know which states in the region we have a considerable 
influence on. I don’t know of any.

Why doesn’t the EU have this influence?

Because the Eastern Partnership is controversial. It does not guarantee future 
EU membership. The EU is schizophrenic about this 
<http://www.voxeurop.eu/en/content/article/4897360-threats-hanging-over-europe> 
. As always, the EU does not really know what it wants.

Karel Schwarzenberg spoke to German editor Yann Schreiber 
<http://www.voxeurop.eu/en/content/author/4821234-yann-schreiber>  at the 
European Student Conference at Yale <http://www.escatyale.com> .

http://www.voxeurop.eu/en/content/blog/4899140-europe-s-fate-being-determined-ukraine

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