EU seeks closer energy ties with Syria
Top EU officials will travel to Syria to boost future cooperation on oil and gas exports to Europe in the face of
Washington's increasingly hard-line approach to Damascus. EU Energy Commissioner Loyola de Palacio will head to
Damascus to discuss connecting Syria to Europe's energy market and developing the region's oil, gas, electricity and
transport sectors.
"The meetings will concern Syria's integration in the regional petroleum market and its future transit role towards
the EU for Egyptian, Iraqi and Middle Eastern oil and gas resources," said a statement from the EU Executive.
News of the visit comes just days after US President George W. Bush tightened sanctions against Damascus,
highlighting a growing Trans-Atlantic policy divide towards the country. Washington banned all US exports to Syria
other than food and medicine over accusations that the regime was harbouring terrorists and pursuing weapons of mass
destruction (WMD).
By contrast, the EU has insisted on maintaining a policy of constructive engagement with Syria and is seeking to
bring it fully into an existing trade block with Mediterranean rim nations in exchange for efforts to combat
terrorism and speed up democratic reform. But despite taking a more positive approach to Damascus, the EU has stalled
the final signing off of an association agreement with Syria as The Netherlands, UK and Germany want stronger
commitments denouncing nuclear weapons programmes.
The EU decided in November that all new trade agreements with non-EU countries would contain an anti-WMD clause but
Syria has so far refused to agree to these terms. A British official argued it would be "ludicrous" to water down the
clause at the first opportunity, but Syria has protested that the EU has not made the same demands on its arch-enemy
Israel.
Diplomats are currently working on wording to break the stalemate, and EU foreign ministers are expected to discuss
the issue when they meet in Brussels. The resolution of the impasse would allow Syria to become a fully-fledged
member of the EU's “Barcelona” process, an alliance forging closer trade and political ties with
countries in the Mediterranean block.
Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Gaza and the West Bank, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Tunisia and Turkey are all currently members of the Mediterranean block.
