The anti-compensation camp may have won the argument already, but many doubt that a system without a compensation mechanism will be efficient enough. This is one of the arguments deployed by both Luke de Pulford and Luke Patey in this series. In the end, compensation may still be needed, but outside of the ACI, through unilateral sovereign decisions, or by coalitions of states, intra-European or not. After all, the ACI does not necessarily represent the totality of a European response to an act of coercion.
Third, the Council and the Commission do not agree on whether European individuals and companies directly affected by coercive measures can claim damage and reparation from the coercive party. The version of the Council completely erased the part on damage and reparation initially proposed by the Commission - the argument being that holding natural or legal persons from a third country liable for a state policy of coercion will create more problems than solutions for the European Union. However, as a result, the instrument is currently weaker than it initially was - but final decisions are still to be made, and the damages/reparation issue is still up for discussion in the trilogue.
In sum, the ACI should be thought of as one tool in a larger toolbox, and one element of a larger foreign policy response. In the case of relations with China, a critical mass of like-minded states showing collective determination will usefully complement the ACI.
This is partly because compensation, even though it is not in the ACI, will always be a critical issue in the broader fallout. The coerced state/parties will seek compensation from various sources to make up for their losses in terms of market access: the United States provided critical help to Lithuania, just as Japan provided critical support to Taiwan. When coercion is not limited to market access but targets supply chains, concerted action beyond countermeasures against the coercive state will be extremely important.
This is also because, in actual cases of coercion, escalation control will be central to the game - particularly when dealing with a great power like China, which coerces in the name of national security and geopolitical interests, not in the name of trade, and seeks to make other parties believe that it is willing to escalate.
If in the future, Europe responds to Chinese coercion with a package of countermeasures, China will be tempted to demonstrate that it is undeterred. If a cycle of escalation begins, Europe will need its international partners. Therefore, deterring coercion should remain a priority on the agenda of European consultations with key countries having faced similar attacks in the past, in addition to G7 format discussions - Australia, Canada, the Republic of Korea, Japan, Norway and the United Kingdom are the most obvious candidates. In short, the ACI will carry much greater weight if the EU works with its partners too.
Copyright: Kenzo TRIBOUILLARD / AFP
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