EU countries agree to begin membership talks with Moldova and Ukraine
EU countries on Friday formally approved launching accession talks with Ukraine and Moldova next week, a landmark event for the two countries at the start of their long path towards joining the bloc.
Starting the negotiations will still only put the two ex-Soviet states at the beginning of what is likely to be a years-long process of reforms before they can finally become members.
EU leaders took the key step in December of agreeing to open talks on war-torn Ukraine—and Moldova —joining the club.
But to actually begin the negotiations the bloc’s members still had to sign off on a formal framework for the process.
The EU’s executive told member states this month that Ukraine and Moldova had met all the criteria needed to launch the talks.
As it has battled to hold off Russia’s invading forces on the front line, Kyiv has impressed its European supporters by managing to launch key reforms.
Pressure has grown to move Ukraine onto the next step in its quest for membership, in the face of fears that Hungary could stall progress when it takes over the EU’s rotating presidency in July.
Hungary—the friendliest country to Russia in the EU—has said it does not intend to hold any further rounds of talks with Ukraine during its six months at the helm.
Russia’s war in Ukraine has reinvigorated a push in the EU to take on new members, after years in which countries particularly in the Western Balkans made little progress on their hope to join.
The EU in December 2023 also granted candidate status to another of Russia’s former Soviet neighbours, Georgia.
It has also approved accession negotiations with Bosnia and has opened such talks with Serbia, Montenegro, Albania and North Macedonia.
NATO member Turkey has been a candidate since 1999 and launched membership talks in 2005 — but the country’s push to join the EU is dead in all but name.