The latest deterioration of EU-Russia
relations could not have come at a worse moment. The German EU presidency had put a review of the
five guiding principles for EU's Russia policy, established in 2016, on the agenda, including for
the biannual Gymnich meeting scheduled for August 28th in Berlin. The German diplomats
had planned to use this opportunity to suggest ways to strengthen the principle of "selective
engagement" with Russia in the years ahead.
However, when the EU's foreign ministers began
their discussions, Alexey Navalny was lying poisoned on a hospital bed, less than two kilometers
from the Federal Foreign Office in Berlin Mitte, and the Russian President Vladimir Putin had just
announced he had formed a police reserve to back Alyaksandr Lukashenka's regime in Belarus. As was
so often the case in the past, Berlin's attempts to search for common ground between the EU and
Russia were thwarted by the acute worsening of bilateral relations. For Berlin, it may have been a
case of once too often. A quick return to the selective engagement agenda does not seem possible
anymore.
While Navalny is doing better, relations between the EU and Russia are still
worsening. Much of the recent deterioration is not due to the poisoning itself, but to the way the
case has been treated by Moscow. It is important to note that Federal Chancellor Angela Merkel did
not accuse the Kremlin of poisoning Navalny, although the use of the nerve agent Novichok could
hardly have allowed any other conclusion. Instead, Berlin and other EU leaders called for an
investigation. In other words, they left Moscow with an opportunity to show that Russia cared about
the political fallout of the affair, if not about the case itself. All that was needed was the
Kremlin to take these calls more seriously, and possibly initiate an investigation.
So far,
Moscow has been missing out on this opportunity. Western calls for an investigation were met with
sarcastic, dismissive responses, such as Putin's suggestion to Macron that Navalny probably poisoned
himself. While there may be some point in discussing whether the Russian leadership was directly
responsible for the attack on Navalny, the Kremlin is clearly in control of how it responds to the
incident. Moscow can still take the EU's concerns seriously and demonstrate a minimal willingness to
engage in a sincere way. But if the Kremlin sticks to its current rhetoric, the rift in EU-Russia
relations will only deepen.