Foreign ministers from the European Union's 27 nations decided yesterday
to relaunch suspended negotiations with Russia despite opposition by Lithuania.
"We have found a good way to proceed," said EU External Relations
Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner after emerging from a meeting of EU foreign
ministers.
"We think it is time to resume the talks," said the commissioner, adding that
no date was set.
A mandate that the EU's executive Commission has to restart the negotiations
on a new Cooperation and Partnership Agreement with Russia doesn't need a
consensus among all the 27 EU members.
"Twenty-six out of 27 is not so bad as a majority and secondly it was not
necessary to vote," said French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, whose country
is holding the EU presidency, because of the commission's mandate.
Lithuania insists that the negotiations, which was frozen at the EU's Sept. 1
extraordinary summit due to the Georgia-Russia conflict, should remain suspended
unless Moscow fully complies with a EU-brokered ceasefire between Georgia and
Russia.
Britain and Sweden voiced support to restarting talks, despite that they
called for continued review of bilateral ties with Russia.
"We are not returning to business as usual, nor are we turning the page on
the conflict in Georgia," they said, "The EU will stick to the tough mandate
that has been agreed for the negotiations."
Poland, another strong opponent of Russia, also gave up its opposition to
opening the talks, which are designed to update a decade-old deal that governs
bilateral relations.
"We agree with the consensus of views," said Poland's Foreign Minister
Radoslaw Sikorski, predicting that the talks may restart at the end of this
month or the first half of next month.
The foreign ministers met here to prepare for an EU-Russia summit on Nov. 14
in Nice, France.