9.4 C
London
HomePoliticsMontenegro wants to join EU for security, PM says

Montenegro wants to join EU for security, PM says

The bloc might be “the last peace project on Earth,” Milojko Spajić proposes.

Montenegro’s leader says his nation wants to become an EU member less for traditional “fiscal” reasons and more for security.

“Joining the EU … used to be a story about … fiscal support for your infrastructure,” Prime Minister Milojko Spajić told POLITICO’s European Pulse Forum in Barcelona. “But it’s actually not the case anymore.”

Instead, Montenegro — which officially launched accession negotiations to the EU in 2012 and is the leading candidate for membership — is looking to join the bloc partly because of its status as a “peace project,” he said.

“The key for us, why we want to join the EU, is obviously common values that we all believe in, and secondly, it’s the single market, it’s half a billion people versus half a million Montenegrins,” Spajić said. “And the third thing is it’s a peace project, maybe even the last peace project on Earth now these days, so this is the value of the European Union.”

Across Europe, non-EU countries from Iceland to Moldova have increasingly expressed interest in joining the bloc for security and safety rather than simply trade and economic benefits following Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine and Donald Trump’s threats to seize Greenland.

See also
Far-right leader Bardella criticizes Macron’s pan-European nuclear push

Montenegro is by far the most advanced candidate country in accession negotiations, having closed 14 of 33 negotiating chapters, the criteria required to join the EU. But some member countries are skeptical about adding new members and first want to reform the bloc’s decision-making process.

Spajić said Podgorica, which has set an ambitious target of joining the EU by 2028, was “80, 90 percent there” when it comes to closing the remaining chapters and was “very confident” of doing so by the end of 2026.

“Some of the things that we are doing now, the reforms we are doing, they are absolutely unprecedented,” he said.

By joining the EU, Montenegro would “give hope to the Western Balkans” along with “preserving enlargement as a very, very strong tool of the European Union,” Spajić argued.

Latest news
Related News