Ayuda
Ir al contenido

Dialnet


Resumen de Panos Koutrakos. The EU Common Security and Defence Policy . Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013. Pp. 318. ISBN: 9780199692729.

Julia Schmidt

  • The European Union has gone through a profound development as an international crisis management actor. It was only in 2003 that the common security and defence policy became operational. Since then, the EU has conducted more than 25 civilian and military crisis management missions in many parts of the world. These missions are carried out in the name of the EU whose international legal personality has been formally recognized by the Treaty of Lisbon (Article 47 TEU). At the same time, the EU depends on capable and willing Member States to launch and to carry out an operation under the auspices of its common security and defence policy. The development of the EU as a military actor is remarkable in the light of the EU's historical evolution. In the 1950s, it started as a peace project that was based on economic integration. To prevent the emergence of a new war on the European continent, Robert Schuman proposed linking the coal and steel industries of France and Germany together "within the framework of an organization open to the participation of the other countries of Europe". Attempts to create a European army within the European Defence Community failed in 1954. Today, Europe has moved away from being merely a civilian power. When confronted with its inability adequately to respond to the Balkan crisis in its neighbourhood in the 1990s, the Cologne European Council of 1999 marked the birth of the EU's common security and defence policy. A process was put in motion that equipped the EU with the legal capacity and the civilian and military means to engage in "missions outside the Union for peace-keeping, conflict prevention and strengthening international security" (Article 42(1) TEU). Civilian and military means may be used by the EU to fulfil the so-called Petersberg tasks, �


Fundación Dialnet

Dialnet Plus

  • Más información sobre Dialnet Plus