The EU and Russia have a multitude of common interests.
Most Russian exports go to the EU, and Russia is the
Union's single most important energy supplier. Both
the EU and Russia want their common neighbourhood
to be stable and prosperous. Both sides support strong
international institutions, and they worry about international
terrorism and the spread of weapons of mass destruction.
Nevertheless,
the EU and Russia have not found a way of working
together constructively. The EU is concerned about
Russia's autocratic tendencies, its use of energy
resources for political purposes and its bullying
of smaller neighbours. Moscow often find the EU's
approach arrogant and intrusive, and prefers to work
directly with the big member-states. Plans to build
four 'common spaces' in economics, education and research
and internal and external security have made little
headway. Forthcoming negotiations on a new EU-Russia
treaty could re-open divisive debates about whether
the EU and Russia share common values and how they
should structure their bilateral relations.
The
CER Russia programme explores why EU-Russia relations
have not lived up to potential and what the two sides
could do to improve them. Our work on energy and developments
in the European neighbourhood is particularly relevant
here.