Russia & Former Soviet Union

EU official reveals how far Ukraine is from membership

Kiev’s accession path will take “longer than a year or two,” European Commissioner Oliver Varheliy said

Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky, March 3, 2021 © Getty Images / Anadolu Agency / Contributor

Ukraine’s accession to the European Union will take several years, the European commissioner for enlargement and neighborhood policy said on Sunday.

In an interview with the German newspaper Welt am Sonntag, Oliver Varhelyi said Kiev needs to do “extensive work” to prepare for “participation in the EU internal market and in many other important policy areas.”

The commissioner predicted that “the entire preparations for accession will most likely take longer than a year or two.”

Varhelyi also stressed that the accession criteria for Ukraine are the same as for any other candidate country.

However, Olga Stefanishina, Ukraine’s European Integration Minister, told Welt: “Ukraine is not an ordinary candidate for accession.”

Stefanishina noted that Ukraine started integration reforms under EU supervision before it was granted accession status, and argued that the country can “proceed faster” in its membership bid, especially considering that some of its neighbors and the Baltic countries “have already signaled that quick accession is possible.”

READ MORE: EU Commission officially backs Ukraine as candidate

On Monday, Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova, took to Telegram to respond to Varhelyi’s remarks, writing that Ukraine’s accession will take “as long as the collapse of the EU.” 

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov earlier described the EU’s decision to provide Ukraine with candidate status “a part of the geopolitical gambit against Russia.”

Ukraine applied to join the 27-nation bloc shortly after Moscow launched its military offensive in late February. In June, Brussels granted Kiev EU candidate status, the first step in the accession process, and stressed that the country must continue structural reforms, fight corruption and reduce “the persistent influence of oligarchs.”

Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo made it clear at the time that granting Ukraine EU candidate status was an important “symbolic message” in support of Kiev amid its conflict with Russia. Actual EU membership, however, is still “many years” away, and the country must first meet European standards, he said.

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