YEREVAN (RFE/RL) — Armenia can forge closer links with the European Union even after joining a Russian-led alliance of former Soviet republics, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said during a visit to Yerevan on Thursday.
Steinmeier also insisted that the conflict in Ukraine will not cause the EU and Germany in particular to lose interest in other ex-Soviet states involved in the EUâs Eastern Partnership program.
âDespite the crisis in Ukraine, which we have discussed at length, Europe is saving no effort as we believe that it is because of this kind of crises that the other Eastern Partnership countries should not be forgotten,â he said after talks with his Armenian counterpart Edward Nalbandian. âThey are not losing their significance.â
âWe want good cooperation within the Eastern Partnership framework, including with Armenia. It is essential that these good relations endure crises,â added Steinmeier.
The Eastern Partnership launched about a decade ago entitles those countries to signing far-reaching Association Agreements with the EU giving them tariff-free access to the worldâs biggest single market. Armenia was on course to finalize such a deal until President Serzh Sarkisian announced in September 2013 his decision to seek membership in Russiaâs Eurasian Economic Union with Belarus and Kazakhstan. Sarkisian signed an accession treaty with the bloc on October 10.
âWe respect Armeniaâs decisions, including the decision to join the Eurasian Economic Union,â Steinmeier told a joint news conference with Nalbandian. âI think that Armenia doesnât view that as an obstacle to developing and deepening relations with Europe.â
âWe will continue making efforts with our European partners to create a new legal basis for Armenia-EU ties,â agreed Nalbandian. He did not clarify, though, whether Yerevan is still seeking to sign a slimmed-down version of the Association Agreement with the EU.
Armeniaâs ties with the EU were also on the agenda of Steinmeierâs talks with Sarkisian held later in the day. Sarkisianâs press office said the two men further discussed German-Armenian bilateral ties and the unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
Visiting Baku earlier on Wednesday, Steinmeier said he is âlooking forwardâ to Sarkisianâs fresh talks with Azerbaijanâs President Ilham Aliyev that will be held in Paris next week. He reportedly expressed hope that the talks hosted by French President Francois Hollande will âmelt the frozen positionsâ of the conflicting parties.
In Yerevan, Steinmeier also said that he âclarifiedâ to Nalbandian Germanyâs position on Western powersâ ongoing talks with Iran over the latterâs controversial nuclear program. Yerevan hopes that further progress in those talks and the resulting easing of Western sanctions against Tehran would make it easier for Armenia to deepen its already cordial ties with the Islamic Republic.
Germany is Armeniaâs leading European trading partner and donor. The two countries have also significantly increased bilateral military cooperation in recent years owing to the presence of 120 or so Armenian soldiers in Afghanistan. They have been serving there under German command. Sarkisian singled out âArmeniaâs productive cooperation with Germanyâ at a NATO summit in Wales last month.
Just days after that summit senior Armenian and German defense officials drew up a plan of joint military activities for next year. The Defense Ministry in Yerevan said they are aimed at âenhancing the existing level of interoperabilityâ between the two countriesâ armed forces.
German FM: EU Still Committed to Closer Ties With Armenia
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