Europaudvalget 2004-05 (1. samling), Det Udenrigspolitiske Nævn 2004-05 (1. samling)
Det Europæiske Råd 16-17/12-04 Bilag 3, UPN Alm.del Bilag 32
Offentligt
Medlemmerne af Folketingets Europaudvalg
og deres stedfortrædere
Bilag
1
Journalnummer
400.C.2-0
Kontor
EUK
1. december 2004
Til underretning for Folketingets Europaudvalg vedlægges formandskabets
udkast til konklusioner vedrørende Det Europæiske Råds møde i Bruxelles
den 16.-17. december 2004, 15337/04.
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COUNCIL OF
THE EUROPEAN UNION
Brussels, 29 November 2004
15337/04
LIMITE
POLGEN 48
NOTE
from :
to :
Subject :
The Presidency
Coreper
European Council (16-17 December 2004)
– Draft Conclusions
The Presidency hereby submits to Coreper a first draft of the conclusions to be
arrived at by the European Council at its meeting on 16-17 December 2004. It no-
tes that some of the language may require amendment in view of Council meetings
and other developments prior to the European Council.
o
o
o
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The meeting of the European Council was preceded by an exposé by the
President of the European Parliament, Mr Josep Borrell, followed by an
exchange of views.
The European Council welcomed the President of the Commission, Mr José
Manuel Barroso. It congratulated him on the assumption of office of his
College and expressed its wish to work closely with the new Commission.
The European Council discussed the following items
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
Enlargement
Terrorism
Financial Framework 2007-2013: principle and guidelines
Area of Freedom, Security and Justice: the EU Drugs Strategy 2005-
2012
External Affairs
Other issues
o
o
ENLARGEMENT
General
The European Council welcomed the findings and recommendations pre-
sented by the Commission on 6 October 2004 to the Council and the Euro-
pean Parliament in its Regular Reports on Bulgaria, Romania and Turkey,
Strategy Paper on Bulgaria, Romania and Croatia, Recommendation on
Turkey and document on Issues Arising from Turkey's Membership Per-
spective.
o
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With the accession of ten new Member States to the European Union suc-
cessfully accomplished, the European Council expressed its determination
to continue the process it has engaged in with the candidate countries, thus
contributing to Europe's prosperity, stability and unity.
Bulgaria
The European Council recalled that all of the outstanding chapters in the
accession negotiations with Bulgaria had been provisionally closed earlier
in 2004. [It welcomed the successful completion of these negotiations with
Bulgaria on 14 December 2004.]
Taking due note of the relevant assessments and recommendations by the
Commission, the European Council considered that Bulgaria will be able
to assume all the obligations of membership at the envisaged time of its
accession, January 2007, provided that it continues its efforts to that end
and completes in a successful and timely way all necessary reforms and
commitments undertaken in all areas of the acquis.
The European Union will continue to monitor closely Bulgaria's preparations
and achievements.
Anticipating the successful completion by Bulgaria of its preparations for
accession to the Union, the European Council called for the finalisation of
the Accession Treaty with a view to its signing on [date to be decided]
2005.
Romania
[The European Council noted with satisfaction that progress made by Roma-
nia in implementing the acquis and commitments entered into as regards,
in particular, Justice and Home Affairs and Competition, has made it pos-
sible to close formally all of the outstanding chapters with this candidate
on 14 December 2004.
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Taking due note of the relevant assessments and recommendations by the
Commission, the European Council considered that Romania will be able
to assume all the obligations of membership at the envisaged time of its
accession, January 2007, provided that it continues its efforts to that end
and completes in a successful and timely way all necessary reforms and
commitments undertaken in all areas of the acquis, in particular regarding
Justice and Home Affairs and Competition.
The European Union will continue to monitor closely Romania's prepara-
tions and achievements.
Anticipating the successful completion by Romania of its preparations for
accession to the Union, the European Council called for the finalisation of
the Accession Treaty with a view to its signing on [date to be decided]
2005.]
Croatia
The European Council noted with satisfaction the progress made by Croatia
in preparation for the opening of accession negotiations.
Recalling its conclusions of June 2004, it urged Croatia to take the necessary
steps for full cooperation with ICTY and reiterated that the remaining in-
dictee must be located and transferred to the Hague as soon as possible.
It invited the Commission to present to the Council a proposal for a frame-
work for negotiations with Croatia, taking full account of the experience of
the fifth enlargement. It requested the Council to agree on that framework
with a view to opening the accession negotiations on [date] provided that
full cooperation with ICTY has been confirmed by the Council.
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Turkey
The European Council recalled its previous conclusions regarding Turkey, in
which at a first stage it agreed that Turkey was
a candidate state destined
to join the Union on the basis of the same criteria as applied to the other
candidate states
and, subsequently, concluded that, if it were to decide at
its December 2004 meeting,
on the basis of a report and recommendation
from the Commission, that Turkey fulfils the Copenhagen political criteria,
the European Union will open accession negotiations with Turkey without
delay.
The European Council welcomed the decisive progress made by Turkey in
its far-reaching reform process and reiterated its determination to enable
Turkey to join the European community of values, confident that Turkey
will sustain the process of reform to that end.
The European Council welcomed Turkey's [ decision ] to sign the protocol
regarding the adaptation of the Ankara Agreement, taking account of the
accession of the new Member States.
The European Council welcomed Turkey's commitment to good neighbourly
relations and its readiness to continue to work with Member States towards
resolution of remaining border disputes, in conformity with the principle
of peaceful settlement of disputes in accordance with the United Nations
Charter.
The European Council noted the resolution adopted by the European Parlia-
ment on […] December 2005.
[PM: decision, date, process]
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Framework for negotiations
The European Council agreed that accession negotiations with individual
candidate states will be based on a framework for negotiations. This
framework, which will be established by the Council on a proposal by the
Commission, taking account of each candidate's own merits and of the ex-
perience of the fifth enlargement process, will address the following ele-
ments.
As in previous negotiations, the substance of the negotiations, which
will be conducted in an Intergovernmental Conference where deci-
sions require unanimity, will be broken down into a number of chap-
ters, each covering a specific policy area. The Council, on a proposal
by the Commission, will lay down benchmarks for the opening and
provisional closure of each chapter.
Long transition periods may be needed and specific arrangements, in
areas such as structural policies and agriculture, as well as permanent
safeguard clauses, notably in the area of the free movement of per-
sons. Furthermore, the decision-taking process regarding the eventu-
al establishment of freedom of movement of persons should allow
for a maximum role for individual Member States. Transitional ar-
rangements or safeguards should be reviewed regarding their impact
on competition or the functioning of the internal market.
The financial aspects of accession of a candidate state must be al-
lowed for in the applicable Financial Framework. Hence, accession
negotiations yet to be opened with candidates whose accession could
have substantial financial consequences can only be concluded after
the establishment of the Financial Framework for the period from
2014, which should entail a structural reform of funding and ex-
penditure of the European Union.
[ PM: paragraph regarding goal and outcome of negotiations; ref.
COM line: "open-ended process whose outcome cannot be guaran-
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teed beforehand" ]
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In the case of a serious and persistent breach in a candidate state of
the principles of liberty, democracy, respect for human rights and
fundamental freedoms and the rule of law on which the Union is
founded, the Commission will, at its own initiative or on the request
of at least one third of the Member States, recommend the suspen-
sion of negotiations and propose the conditions for eventual resump-
tion. The Council will decide by qualified majority on such a rec-
ommendation, after having heard the candidate state, whether to sus-
pend the negotiations and on the conditions for their resumption. The
Member States will act in the IGC in accordance with the Council
decision.
Parallel to accession negotiations, the Union will engage with every
candidate state in an intensive political and cultural dialogue. With
the aim of enhancing mutual understanding by bringing people to-
gether, this inclusive dialogue also will involve civil society
TERRORISM
The European Council reiterated its determination to combat relentlessly and
comprehensively the continuing terrorist threat through an integrated ap-
proach reinforcing both internal and international cooperation.
Democracy and respect for fundamental rights must not be allowed to be
undermined by terrorism. The European Council stressed the importance
of promoting respect, tolerance, dialogue and full participation in society
by all. It noted that effective integration policies and exchange of best
practices within the Union can contribute to this, and in this respect wel-
comed the outcome of the Ministerial Conference on integration which
paid special attention to youth susceptible to radical influences.
Radicalisation facilitates terrorist recruitment. The European Council called
on the Council to establish a long-term strategy and action plan on both is-
sues by the end of 2005, building on the report on recruitment recently
adopted by the Council.
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The European Council called for prompt implementation of measures identi-
fied in the
Hague Programme on strengthening freedom, security and jus-
tice
relevant to combating terrorism. As, in particular, obstacles to the ex-
change of information between terrorism related services must be re-
moved, the European Council invited the Commission to present proposals
to this end based on the principle of availability of information.
The European Council welcomed the revised EU Action Plan and additional
reports presented by the Secretary General/ High Representative and the
Commission on combating terrorism and the substantial progress made
since June 2004 as demonstrated in these contributions, notably:
the reinforcement of practical and operational cooperation notably
through Europol and the Police Chiefs Task Force; better exchange
of information between Member States and Europol and Eurojust;
the exchange of data on lost and stolen passports with Interpol; the
peer evaluations in 15 Member States of the national structures on
combating terrorism to be completed for 25 by September 2005.
Member states are called upon to report on implementation of rec-
ommendations aimed at strengthening these structures;
concerning judicial cooperation: improved exchange of information
from criminal records (to be further developed by the end of 2005 on
the basis of the Commission's White Paper); progress on retention of
telecommunications data and the European Evidence Warrant (both
to be agreed by the end of 2005). The European Council invites the
Commission to present proposals for a European Protection Pro-
gramme – as soon as possible – to protect and assist victims of ter-
rorism, as well as witnesses in terrorism cases;
as regards border and document security: the enhanced security of
EU passports by the inclusion of biometric data (facial image and
fingerprints) and the establishment of the European Border Agency
(to be operational by May 2005);
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concerning intelligence cooperation, the links established between
the Counter Terrorism Group and the re-enforced EU Situation Cen-
tre which as of 1 January 2005 will provide the Council with strate-
gic threat assessments based on intelligence from national services;
and the improved exchange of information with Europol. The Euro-
pean Council invited the SG/HR to report on progress, including en-
hanced co-operation between police and security services;
measures to combat terrorist financing, notably agreement on con-
trols on cash entering or leaving the Union and on the third Money
Laundering Directive; best practices in implementing financial sanc-
tions against terrorists and their organisations; and the overall strate-
gy paper presented by the SG/HR and the Commission. In particular,
the Commission is invited to present to the Council as soon as possi-
ble proposals to prevent misuse of charitable organisations for the fi-
nancing of terrorism and Member States are urged to put forward the
names of individuals and groups for inclusion in the European Union
list for freezing of assets;
conclusions on strengthening civil protection capacity and the estab-
lishment of a Solidarity Programme regarding the consequences of
terrorists attacks. Further assessment and development of civil pro-
tection capabilities, including joint exercises and coordination of
public information aspects, as well as improved availability of medi-
cal resources is required by June 2005. A European Programme to
protect critical, trans-boundary infrastructure should be established
before the end of 2005;
progress on external policies through counter terrorism clauses in
agreements with third countries which should be made operational as
soon as possible; the implementation of the 2004 EU-US Declaration
on combating terrorism; the conceptual framework and action points
on the ESDP dimension of the fight against terrorism; and strength-
ening cooperation with priority third countries through dialogue and
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assistance. The Council and the Commission are called upon to set
up a network of national experts to respond to requests for technical
assistance by third countries and to establish a new financial instru-
ment comparable with the twinning concept.
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The European Council urged all Member States to implement on a priority
basis the measures agreed by the European Union and other relevant inter-
national organisations, and urged the Council and the Commission to con-
tinue their efforts to implement the EU Action Plan and respect its dead-
lines.
The European Council requested the General Secretariat of the Council, to-
gether with the Commission, to submit a further progress report including
any recommendations they may wish to make on improving delivery
and/or additional efforts and initiatives in June 2005.
FINANCIAL FRAMEWORK 2007-2013
Principles and Guidelines
The European Council welcomed the Presidency Progress Report on the Fi-
nancial Framework 2007-2013, including the Inter-institutional Agree-
ment/flexibility and own resources.
The European Council confirmed that the new Financial Framework, to be
agreed in comprehensive negotiations, should equip the enlarged Union
with the financial means enabling it to effectively address future challeng-
es through policies providing added value and consistent with the princi-
ples of subsidiarity and proportionality. Expenditure for individual policy
areas must be seen in the context of the overall expenditure level, and such
expenditure must be seen in the context of the overall negotiation includ-
ing the question of own resources.
The next Financial Framework should demonstrate similar efforts towards
budgetary rigour as those undertaken at national level. Those efforts will
be assisted by maintaining a strict demarcation between policy areas, with
sufficient margins within headings, and a balanced ratio of commitments
to payments. As existing measures to ensure budgetary flexibility have
worked well, at this stage additional flexibility arrangements are not
deemed necessary.
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In the light of the Presidency progress report the European Council pointed
in particular to the following shared principles:
On competitiveness for growth and employment: while recognising
the importance of regulation, coordination and structural reforms, the
European Council considered that EU expenditure programmes can
also contribute to achieving the Lisbon objectives.
On cohesion for growth and employment: the European Council af-
firmed that efforts should be directed to the objective of reducing
disparities in development levels, with particular attention to the
least developed areas of the Union. Solidarity should be the guiding
principle for the distribution of cohesion funds in the enlarged Un-
ion. In this respect the particular needs of new Member States to
converge to the appropriate European average is acknowledged.
On the preservation and management of natural resources: the Euro-
pean Council reconfirmed its agreement of October 2002 on the ceil-
ing on market related expenditure and direct payments under the
Common Agricultural Policy to be part of an overall agreement.
On the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice: the European Council
recognised this to be the main priority within the framework of ac-
tions designed to further citizenship. In this light, the European
Council confirmed that due account should be taken of the financial
implications of the
Hague Programme
it agreed in November 2004.
On the European Union as a global partner: the European Council
considered that the European Union should be able to fulfil its inter-
national responsibilities; a set of simplified and balanced foreign pol-
icy instruments should help to achieve this ambition. An adequate
margin in the relevant budget heading will allow the Union to re-
spond to unforeseen events or developments.
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The European Council endorsed the Commission proposal to maintain the
ceiling for the own resources at the current level of 1,24% of EU GNI. The
European Council took note of the Commission report on the operation of
the own resources system, including its budgetary consequences for the
Member States, as well as of the proposal to introduce a generalised cor-
rection mechanism. It called on the Commission and the Council to con-
tinue the examination of all the issues arising in this connection, including
possible simplification of the system towards a GNI-based system.
The incoming Presidency is invited to press ahead with the work towards
establishment of the next Financial Framework. Further work on the Fi-
nancial Framework should take full account of the range of positions of
Member States as reflected in the Progress Report including the building
blocks and should comply with the timeframe of the Multiannual Strategic
Programme.
The incoming Presidency is furthermore invited to take all necessary steps to
establish appropriate contacts with the European Parliament.
IV. AREA OF FREEDOM, SECURITY AND JUSTICE
EU Drugs strategy 2005-2012
The European Council adopted the Drugs strategy 2005-2012. The Strategy
will be a key instrument to effectively confront drugs use and trafficking
with a view to ensuring a high level of health protection, wellbeing and so-
cial cohesion, as well as a high level of security for the general public. The
European Council invited the Commission to present to the Council a pro-
posal for an Action Plan for implementation of the Strategy in 2005-2009
with a view to its adoption by the Council early in 2005 and to prepare an
evaluation of its implementation in 2008.
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Immigrant integration policy
Recalling its conclusions of June 2003 and November 2004, the European
Council welcomed the establishment of common basic principles for im-
migrant integration policy. These are to be the basis of a comprehensive
framework on immigrant integration, taking into account the legal, politi-
cal, economic, social and cultural diversity of Member States. They need
to be developed in the light of shared experiences.
The European Council furthermore welcomed the outcome of the Ministerial
Conference on Urban Development and recognised the importance of ur-
ban areas for promotion of social inclusion.
V. EXTERNAL AFFAIRS
The European Council reiterated that the European Security Strategy, adopt-
ed one year ago, remains a key policy framework for addressing key
threats and global challenges. It reaffirmed its determination to meet the
challenge of guaranteeing a secure Europe in a better world. The European
Council welcomed the active and coherent implementation of the Strategy
in close cooperation with partners. It invited the incoming Presidency to
continue this work in cooperation with the Secretary General / High Rep-
resentative and the Commission.
[PM: to be completed by the GAERC]
International cooperation
The European Council emphasised the importance of ensuring a coherent
contribution of EC ODA to poverty eradication in all developing countries.
In this context, whilst honouring existing commitments, the European
Council underlined the need to find ways to increase the focus on the
poorest, with a specific focus on Africa.
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The European Council confirmed the full commitment of the European Un-
ion to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and to the need to en-
sure progress towards achieving them, especially in Sub-Sahara Africa. In
that respect, the European Council welcomed the consultation by the
Commission of individual Member States with a view to presenting to the
Council (GAERC) in April 2005 concrete proposals on setting new and
adequate ODA targets for the period 2009-2010, while taking into account
the position of new Member States.
The European Council called, in the framework of achieving the MDGs, for
further strengthening of policy coherence for development by making wid-
er and more systematic use of existing mechanisms for consultation and
impact assessment and procedures to screen all relevant policies for their
impact on developing countries.
VI. OTHER ISSUES
Commonly shared values
The European Council noted with approval the series of public debates host-
ed by the Presidency, engaging participants with wide-ranging back-
grounds and experience, on the European identity and the concept of
commonly shared values as foundation of European integration and coop-
eration.
The European Council took note of the results of this series of debates, of the
report of the Education Council on Education and Citizenship and of the
follow up initiatives and welcomed further initiatives to advance the values
which contribute to active citizenship in the Union. The European Council
invited the European Commission to incorporate the results of the debates
and the main findings of the report into its future Citizens’ Programme and
its communication strategy for 2005.
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Consular cooperation
The European Council confirmed the importance of intensified consular co-
operation. It welcomed the agreement reached in the Council on pooling
consular resources and cooperation both in normal times and in times of
crises, thus helping Member States to deal more effectively with the in-
creasing demand for consular services.
European External Action Service
The European Council welcomed the fact that, following the signature of the
Constitutional Treaty, work on the European External Action Service has
begun by the Presidency, Secretary-General/High Representative and the
Commission.
It invited the Secretary-General/High Representative together with the
Commission to continue this preparatory work, in particular by identifying
key issues, including the scope and structure of the future service and tak-
ing account of the views of Member States. To ensure the full involvement
of Member States in this process, regular discussions will take place in the
General Affairs part of the General Affairs and External Relations Coun-
cil, prepared by Coreper.
The European Council invited the Secretary-General/High Representative
together with the Commission to prepare a progress report on this prepara-
tory work to its June 2005 meeting at the latest, and to take appropriate
steps to keep the European Parliament informed.
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Seats and Appointments
[PM]
o
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[PM: Ratification of the Constitutional Treaty; Communicating Europe]