Three Seas Initiative pitches US, EU against Russia, China
The member nations of the Three Seas Initiative (TSI) have held a virtual summit, hosted by Estonia, to strengthen ties between the twelve member states. Washington sees the TSI as a way of gaining ground in an area where Russia and China have been making inroads.
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The TSI was established in 2015 by Poland and Croatia, officially to discuss joint infrastructure projects, energy and digital cooperation in the region.
Altogether 12 EU countries between the Baltic, Black and Adriatic Seas take part: Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia.
Thus far, the initiative has rolled out several infrastructure projects, notably the Via Carpatia, running from Klaipeda in Lithuania to Thessaloniki in Greece, the Rail Baltica railway connection from Warsaw via Riga to Tallinn with a ferry crossing to Helsinki, or the Danube-Oder-Elbe inland waterway connection.
Watch the high-level discussion with Presidents of 🇪🇪, 🇵🇱 and 🇧🇬, VP of European Commission and U.S. Deputy Secretary of Energy on the future of the #ThreeSeas Initiative at the Three Seas Virtual Summit hosted by Estonia on 19 October 2020.https://t.co/Q1uKUC9o89
— Three Seas Summit and Business Forum (@3seaseu) October 20, 2020
US interest in the initiative
The US was the initiative’s biggest supporter from the outset. Washington has been keen on investing in the region, aiming to roll back Russian influence and counter Chinese “17 + 1” and “Belt and Road Initiative” investments in the neighbouring western Balkans.
In October, the US House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs unanimously passed a motion for a resolution supporting the TSI and invest 1 billion USD.
The resolution contains plans to increase energy security and connectivity in the region’s infrastructure and contains a condemnation of Russia’s efforts “to use energy as a weapon to put pressure on or undermine freedom and democracy in Europe”.
US attention triggered EU interest
After US President Donald Trump attended one of the first TSI meetings in Warsaw, in 2017, the EU got nervous and in 2018, then EC President Jean-Claude Juncker attended the Bucharest meeting, after some critics suggested Washington was supporting the system to “create an alternative” to the European Union.
The EU then pledged some 155 billion euros for the project. Given the current Covid-19 crisis, it is far from certain if this money will be spent on TSI projects any time soon.
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