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The EU Global Strategy

Biscop, Sven

The EU Global Strategy :: Realpolitik with European Characteristics / [Recurso electrónico] PDF .-- Rue des Petits Carmes, 24 A, 1000 Brussels, Belgium : Royal Institute for International Relations (EGMONT) , June 2016 .-- Recurso online, 6 p. .-- Security Policy Brief ;- . -- No. 75 (June 2016) . ;

On 28 June 2016 High Representative Federica Mogherini presented the Global Strategy for the European Union’s Foreign and Security Policy (EUGS) to the European Council. Many pundits will present it as another example of Brussels’ otherworldliness to table an external strategy just a few days after the UK created a huge internal challenge by voting to leave the Union. But would it have demonstrated a better sense of reality to pretend that because of the British decision to put a stop to its EU membership the world around Europe will come to a stop as well? The EU needs the EUGS and that “is even more true after the British referendum”, as Mogherini rightly says in the foreword. Many will also gladly find fault with the document, looking for the deficiencies. But it is the strategy now. Therefore the question is not what it could have said that it doesn’t, but whether it gives us something to work with to render EU foreign and security policy more effective. The answer is: yes, and quite a lot. Having gotten that out of the way, we can move on to the substance of the EUGS.

Gestión de crisis Estrategias de seguridad

Países de la Unión Europea

Royal Institute for International Relations (EGMONT)