Europeans seem to now consider accepting new members into the European Union as part of their response to the new geopolitical reality
Media mentions – EU enlargement
It is time to decide not only how far the Union should go, but what the EU should do
Andrés Ortega analyses the EU’s enlargement process
While doing our best to help Ukraine win, we have to make sure that the EU enlargement, the most successful EU policy ever, continues
Gabrielius Landsbergis explains why it’s too early for the EU to tap itself on the shoulder
Provided reforms pick up and are sustained, the embrace of small countries like Moldova and Montenegro could happen well before a decade, puncturing the EU’s enlargement paralysis
Nathalie Tocci evaluates the prospects for EU enlargement
The condition for Skopje to start negotiations with the EU is indisputable – inclusion of Bulgarians in the constitution
There will be no going back to what relations were before February last year, no in-between, no gray zone where Ukraine comes close to the EU and NATO but is not made a part of [these institutions]
This project cannot be reduced to an act of opposition to Russia
It is not about a common state. But it does show the hope for a special alliance
I suspect the EU will open a different track for membership, with more gradual admission