The European Union in Central Asia: Balancing Competing Actors and Opportunities for the V4 Countries

The European Union (EU) launched its second strategy on Central Asia in 2019, providing a framework for stronger engagement with Kazakhstan, the Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Building on previous commitments, the EU has promised to approach the region more comprehe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kizekova, Alica
Format: Report
Published: Think Visegrad 2019
Online Access:https://www.europeum.org/en/articles/detail/3080/the-european-union-in-central-asia-balancing-competing-actors-and-opportunities-for-the-v4-countries
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/95082
_version_ 1848765964332564480
author Kizekova, Alica
author_facet Kizekova, Alica
author_sort Kizekova, Alica
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The European Union (EU) launched its second strategy on Central Asia in 2019, providing a framework for stronger engagement with Kazakhstan, the Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Building on previous commitments, the EU has promised to approach the region more comprehensively, work with the individual states and bring improvements to Central Asia without falling victim to accusations of ‘admonishing’ in its dialogue with the region, as has sometimes been the case historically. Its focus is also on Afghanistan, a joint priority, and a source of both instability and opportunity. Increasingly, the EU is merging resources to manage its programs for Central Asia and Afghanistan. The enhanced focus on Afghanistan, however, should not overshadow the collaboration with the Central Asian states. The EU faces a challenging political environment and a diverse presence of external powers, all competing for collaboration by bringing their own regional policy initiatives. More prominently, China, Russia and the United States opt for various forms of engagement to gain influence. The EU should seek like-minded states with which to coordinate its activities to avoid duplication. The Visegrad Group countries should support and encourage the spread of the EU’s soft power by contributing to people-to-people contacts and helping with gradual economic transformations, but also offer their expertise in specific spheres, such as academic, education and research cooperation; water management or security reforms. They should be more proactive in coordinating their activities via their own embassies or programs to help make the EU’s initiative a bigger ‘game-changer’; otherwise, the ambitions in the strategy will not be met in the near to medium future.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:43:37Z
format Report
id curtin-20.500.11937-95082
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:43:37Z
publishDate 2019
publisher Think Visegrad
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-950822024-05-22T04:06:13Z The European Union in Central Asia: Balancing Competing Actors and Opportunities for the V4 Countries Kizekova, Alica The European Union (EU) launched its second strategy on Central Asia in 2019, providing a framework for stronger engagement with Kazakhstan, the Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Building on previous commitments, the EU has promised to approach the region more comprehensively, work with the individual states and bring improvements to Central Asia without falling victim to accusations of ‘admonishing’ in its dialogue with the region, as has sometimes been the case historically. Its focus is also on Afghanistan, a joint priority, and a source of both instability and opportunity. Increasingly, the EU is merging resources to manage its programs for Central Asia and Afghanistan. The enhanced focus on Afghanistan, however, should not overshadow the collaboration with the Central Asian states. The EU faces a challenging political environment and a diverse presence of external powers, all competing for collaboration by bringing their own regional policy initiatives. More prominently, China, Russia and the United States opt for various forms of engagement to gain influence. The EU should seek like-minded states with which to coordinate its activities to avoid duplication. The Visegrad Group countries should support and encourage the spread of the EU’s soft power by contributing to people-to-people contacts and helping with gradual economic transformations, but also offer their expertise in specific spheres, such as academic, education and research cooperation; water management or security reforms. They should be more proactive in coordinating their activities via their own embassies or programs to help make the EU’s initiative a bigger ‘game-changer’; otherwise, the ambitions in the strategy will not be met in the near to medium future. 2019 Report http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/95082 https://www.europeum.org/en/articles/detail/3080/the-european-union-in-central-asia-balancing-competing-actors-and-opportunities-for-the-v4-countries Think Visegrad fulltext
spellingShingle Kizekova, Alica
The European Union in Central Asia: Balancing Competing Actors and Opportunities for the V4 Countries
title The European Union in Central Asia: Balancing Competing Actors and Opportunities for the V4 Countries
title_full The European Union in Central Asia: Balancing Competing Actors and Opportunities for the V4 Countries
title_fullStr The European Union in Central Asia: Balancing Competing Actors and Opportunities for the V4 Countries
title_full_unstemmed The European Union in Central Asia: Balancing Competing Actors and Opportunities for the V4 Countries
title_short The European Union in Central Asia: Balancing Competing Actors and Opportunities for the V4 Countries
title_sort european union in central asia: balancing competing actors and opportunities for the v4 countries
url https://www.europeum.org/en/articles/detail/3080/the-european-union-in-central-asia-balancing-competing-actors-and-opportunities-for-the-v4-countries
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/95082