Eduard Soler i Lecha (coord.), Chloé Berger, Dalia Ghanem, Solène Leclerc, Panagiota Manoli, Daniel Marcos, Jesús Manuel Pérez Triana, Valeria Talbot, Sinan Ülgen
The Russian invasion of Ukraine has changed the way the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) addresses security challenges on its southern flank. At the Madrid summit (29-30 June 2022), the allies acknowledged the importance of the Mediterranean, North Africa, the Sahel and the Middle East as a space of global geopolitical competition and an area with worrying levels of human insecurity and foci of instability.
NATO could play a more constructive role on its southern flank by: 1) improving stabilisation and crisis management approaches and instruments; 2) finding ways to transform partners from security consumers to security providers; 3) enhancing NATO maritime capabilities and partnerships; 4) strengthening coordination and cooperation with the European Union (EU) and, when possible, with other regional organisations; 5) exploring common ground among NATO’s Mediterranean members;
6) increasing anticipation capacities, including by cultivating a more structured relationship with political, economic and social experts and research centres.
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