Polish threat to reignite EU summit row
Poland is threatening to reopen a bitter dispute about European Union voting rights after the countrys prime minister claimed his country had been sold short at last weeks summit.
Jaroslaw Kaczynski, prime minister, said the voting issue, which threatened to derail EU treaty talks at the Brussels summit, was not yet fully settled for Poland. We have to finally resolve this issue at the intergovernmental conference being held by the EU from next month, Mr Kaczynski said, when asked if he planned to fight for Polands interpretation of the deal.
The proposal risks further deepening rifts between Poland and the rest of the EU if it unpicks part of the painful compromise reached on a revised version of the EU constitution.
Senior European leaders warned that the matter was closed, but Mr Kaczynski said closer examination of the deals fine print suggested Poland had not been given what it wanted. The warning has dismayed José Socrates, Portugals prime minister, who assumes the EU presidency tomorrow and who has the task of finalising technical work on the Unions reform treaty. Mr Socrates said Polands plan to reopen the deal appeared to be based on a misunderstanding. The mandate is very clear and precise on what has to be done. I am sure this is only a misunderstanding, he said.
But Mr Kaczynski said it was not a renegotiation but a question of putting on paper what had already been agreed informally on voting rights. Anna Fotyga, Polish foreign minister, called it a gentlemens agreement struck late at night with the German presidency.
His threat to block a new treaty won Poland a reprieve in the introduction of the new system until 2014. It will not come fully into effect until 2017. Now he claims there was a misunderstanding on a specific part of the deal which would allow a country to delay EU decisions if they are just short of enough votes to block them. Warsaw says it had agreed to a delay of two years in such cases, but EU officials say the deal was for decisions to be postponed only until the next EU summit. The summits are held three to four months apart.
That Poland agreed a deal without fully understanding it supports suspicions in the outgoing German EU presidency that Warsaw did not have the technical expertise to grasp the complexity of the negotiations. A purge by Polands ruling Kaczynski twins Mr Kaczynskis brother Lech is president has removed many experienced diplomats because of their links with Polands communist past.
A quarter of the countrys embassies are without ambassadors; it has no ambassador in Lisbon in spite of the new EU role about to be assumed by Portugal. José Manuel Barroso, Commission president, said adjustments to the treaty agreement could be discussed, but nothing that would contradict the agreement that was unanimously obtained.
Posted by: lotp 2007-06-30 |