RFE
09 Jun 2026, 15:44 GMT+10
Welcome to Wider Europe, RFE/RL's newsletter focusing on the key issues concerning the European Union, NATO, and other institutions and their relationships with the Western Balkans and Europe's Eastern neighborhoods.
I'm RFE/RL Europe Editor Rikard Jozwiak, and this week I am drilling down on two issues: a damning rule-of-law verdict for Serbia and the latest Franco-German EU enlargement proposal.
Embed
share
Wider Europe Briefing: Brussels Slams Serbia's Rule Of Law Shortfall
byRFE/RL
Embed
share
The code has been copied to your clipboard.
The URL has been copied to your clipboard
No media source currently available
0:00
0:10:16
0:00
Direct link
128 kbps | MP3
64 kbps | MP3
Pop-out player
What You Need To Know:The European Commission has produced a damning report on the lack of progress made on issues concerning the rule of law in Serbia.
The annual progress report, seen by RFE/RL, was shared with EU member states in late May and indicates that there has been little or no progress in areas such as the fight against corruption, media freedom, and the functioning and independence of the countrys judiciary.
The report tracks the efforts made by Belgrade in EU accession chapters 23 and 24, which deal with how closely an EU candidate country aligns with the blocs rules and regulations with respect to justice and fundamental rights.
The internal document is produced each spring for Serbia, as well as Montenegro, and always comes halfway between the European Commissions yearly enlargement reports in the autumn, which assess progress across all policy areas in countries seeking EU membership.
Deep Background: The idea is that this document is supposed to guide current member states in assessing how well (or how badly) some countries are doing in what Brussels regards as the two most complicated negotiation blocks.
But while Montenegro is streaming ahead, with the aim of becoming EU member state No. 28 by 2028, Serbia has stood still since late 2021.
This is largely down to the fact that many of the Russia hawks in the bloc are unhappy with Belgrade not aligning with EU sanctions on Moscow since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in early 2022. There are also doubts about the rule of law in the Balkan country.
And the latest report -- possibly the harshest Brussels has issued on Serbia in years -- will do the country no favors.
Drilling Down
What You Need To Know:Rarely does a week go by in Brussels these days without new ideas and proposals for European Union enlargement.
With Ukraine and Moldova set to open accession talks next week, Montenegro aiming to conclude its negotiations this year, and Iceland due to hold a referendum in August on resuming talks suspended more than a decade ago, EU enlargement is no longer an issue that only preoccupies a few European Commission officials and some diplomats from (mainly) eastern member states as has been the case in recent decades.
Last month, France and Germanyproduced separate discussion paperson how to deal with EU enlargement going forward and on June 4 Berlin and Paris circulated a joint text, seen by RFE/RL, called A New Momentum For Enlargement. The document was meant to provide food for thought ahead of last weeks EU-Western Balkans summit and theupcoming EU-Moldova meeting.
Deep Background:The key premise of the latest France-German three-pager is to complete the Union as a truly European Union adding that to turn this aspiration into reality and to inject a new dynamism, we must provide additional incentives as part of a merit-based, gradual integration process and streamline the current process to make it more efficient and to allow for faster and deeper integration into the EU.
The concept of gradual integration is hardly new. Candidate countries are already being drawn into parts of the EU system before accession, through preferential market access, participation in programs such as the Erasmus student exchange scheme, and initiatives including the EUs roaming-free mobile phone area and the Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA), which allows cross-border euro payments to be processed as easily as domestic transfers.
As was the case with other recent discussion papers that preceded this one, it also includes the threat of reversibility, allowing for integration gains to be rolled back in case of backsliding of the relevant candidate country in its reform process and with regard to the EU core values and principles.
In practice, this has usually meant the loss of EU funding or delays in the accession process. The former has already happened, while the latter has become commonplace regardless of backsliding, as member states have repeatedly vetoed enlargement decisions for a variety of reasons. And given that no country has joined the EU since Croatia back in 2013, this has not been much of a threat up to now.
Drilling Down
There will be quite a lot of Russia sanctions in the works in Brussels this week.
First, the European Commission is set to share its proposal for the blocs 21st round of sanctions on June 9.
With Hungary no longer blocking everything, the key thing to look at now is whether Russian Patriarch Kirill will be included and whether some oligarchs that have already been de-listed due to Hungary, such as Moshe Kantor, will be proposed for blacklisting again.
The following day, on June 10, the blocs ambassadors will alsoapprove more sanctionson military companies helping the Russian war machine as well as firms supporting the Kremlins shadow fleet.
That's all for this week! Feel free to reach out to me on any of these issues on X @RikardJozwiak, or via e-mail [email protected].
Until next time,
Rikard Jozwiak
If you enjoyed this briefing and don't want to miss the next edition subscribehere.
Wider Europe Briefing: Brussels Slams Serbia's Rule Of Law Shortfall
ShareCopy link
X (Twitter)
Share
ShareCopy link
X (Twitter)
Share
Follow usX (Twitter)
Youtube
Follow us
Get a daily dose of Baton Rouge Post news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Baton Rouge Post.
More InformationCUPERTINO, California: Apple introduced a redesigned version of Siri powered by artificial intelligence, marking its biggest update...
SINGAPORE/LONDON: Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto is losing investors' trust, and his plans to grow the economy are at risk as...
NEW YORK, New York - World stock markets closed on a deeply divided note Monday, with Wall Street's technology sector powering the...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: S&P Dow Jones Indices has decided against changing its rules to allow newly public mega-cap companies to enter...
SAN FRANCISCO, California: Artificial intelligence company Anthropic has called for greater industry coordination to ensure developers...
MILAN, Italy: Commerzbank said on June 5 that shares equivalent to 7.85 percent of its capital have been tendered under UniCredit's...
The Russian president fielded questions on Ukraine, strategic partnerships, new weapons systems, the Middle East, and Moscow's relations...
New Delhi [India], June 9 (ANI): External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Tuesday shared key transformations in India's foreign policy...
Guwahati (Assam) [India], June 9 (ANI): Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma attended a meeting with 'Team Europe,' the high-level...
PRNewswire Doha [Qatar], June 9: Qatar Foundation's Lawh Wa Qalam: M. F. Husain Museum in Doha, Qatar has been named one of the TIME...
New Delhi, [India] June 9 (ANI): India is poised to regain its lost prominence in the global textiles and apparel industry, supported...
Welcome to Wider Europe, RFE/RL's newsletter focusing on the key issues concerning the European Union, NATO, and other institutions...
