The European Union in the World Delegation of the European Union
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The European Union: A World Player

 

The EU’s global role

How the EU conducts its external relations

Common foreign and security policy

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Eradicating poverty through sustainable development

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Our partners around the world

Common foreign and security policy

The idea that a strong Europe should act as one on the world stage has encouraged member countries to work together to achieve a coherent approach to foreign policy. Progress over the years has been slow, but steady.

The first step was an ambitious but unsuccessful attempt in the early 1950s to create a European Defence Community among the six founding members of the European Union (EU). Then came a process called ‘European political cooperation’, launched in 1970, which sought to coordinate the positions of member states on foreign policy issues of the day. EU countries produced joint statements whenever they could. But on particularly sensitive issues, it was not always possible to reach the required unanimous decision.

In the last 15 years, the EU has intensified efforts to play an international political and security role more in line with its economic status. The conflicts that erupted in Europe after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 convinced EU leaders of the need for effective joint action. More recently, the fight against international terrorism has strengthened this conviction.

The lessons of the Balkans

The principle of a Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) was formalised in 1992 in the Treaty of Maastricht. Only a few months later, war broke out in former Yugoslavia. The EU tried unsuccessfully to broker a political solution to the crisis. As the EU had no military force of its own, its member countries could only intervene as part of UN and NATO forces which were later sent to the region.

The lessons of this experience were not lost. In the light of the Balkan wars, and of conflicts in Africa in the 1990s, the EU has created a European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP) within the overall framework of the CFSP.

Under the ESDP, military or police forces can be sent to areas of crisis to carry out humanitarian operations, peacekeeping, crisis management and even peacemaking. Military action is carried out by an EU rapid reaction force, separate from NATO but with access to NATO resources.

The first missions carried out under the ESDP were in former Yugoslavia, the scene of earlier EU frustrations. An EU police mission replaced a taskforce of UN police officers in Bosnia and Herzegovina in January 2003, while an EU military force took over from NATO in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia three months later.

Attempts have been made over the years to streamline the way CFSP decisions are taken. But key decisions still require a unanimous vote – hard when there were 15 EU members, and now even more difficult with 27. Despite their commitment to the CFSP, member governments sometimes find it hard to change their own national policy in the name of EU solidarity. Just how difficult this can be was illustrated by the deep divisions among EU member states in spring 2003 over whether the UN Security Council should authorise the US-led war against Iraq.

At a summit meeting in December 2003, EU leaders adopted a European security strategy. This recognises that citizens in Europe and elsewhere face potential threats from terrorism, the spread of weapons of mass destruction and illegal immigration. Each kind of threat needs an appropriate response, often requiring international cooperation.

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