Roman, don't take only some countries out of the pocket to prove that I am wrong. I know that the states of the "Visegrad pact" (or whatever else is called the cooperation between Hungary, Poland, Czehia and Slovakia) are friendly to each other. But look at the whole picture: do you see an eastern block, formed from all of the region's countries, acting like an alliance? I don't. (and yes, it was an exageration, but you know very well that nationalistic problems and conflicts can rise anytime and the promised join to the EU is one of the major stabilizing factor)
Good that we agree on military power. "Large military"=sovjet memories.
Again: don't take Slovenia out of the pocket. Economically they could join the EU tomorrow, but they are a very small country. You can call Poland, Hungary or the Czech Republic as "medium wealth" if you treat them alone, but not in combination with Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Bulgaria or other nations from the Balkans. (though I admit it was better if I said: "The average GDP of the region is about the half from the poorest EU country's GDP", or was it the half from the EU's average?; damn, I'm not sure anymore)
Anyway, do you agree with me that Eastern Europe should belong to the EU, and should not be treated as a separate civ?
Good that we agree on military power. "Large military"=sovjet memories.
Again: don't take Slovenia out of the pocket. Economically they could join the EU tomorrow, but they are a very small country. You can call Poland, Hungary or the Czech Republic as "medium wealth" if you treat them alone, but not in combination with Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Bulgaria or other nations from the Balkans. (though I admit it was better if I said: "The average GDP of the region is about the half from the poorest EU country's GDP", or was it the half from the EU's average?; damn, I'm not sure anymore)
Anyway, do you agree with me that Eastern Europe should belong to the EU, and should not be treated as a separate civ?
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