XI ICCEES World Congress

Evolving Role of the EU in the European Security Architecture – Capacity Building in and with the Neighbourhood

Tue22 Jul05:00pm(15 mins)
Where:
Room 4
Presenter:

Authors

Tyyne Karjalainen1; Juha Jokela11 Finnish Institute of International Affairs (FIIA), Finland

Discussion

The development of the EU’s security political role can be studied through three key contexts: the geopolitical crises the EU has responded to; the evolving network of European security institutions; and the internal political dynamics among member states. These dimensions have shaped the EU’s security and defence policies, institutions, and strategic approach to crises and conflicts. Russia’s war of aggression in Ukraine 2022 shook all these three contexts: there was a need to respond to a full-scale war in Europe, in a context where the pillars of European security architecture were shifting, with the war having varied implications for its 27 members.


As a result, some existing trends in the EU’s security role were consolidated, including the ambition to become a more credible partner and to focus more on military matters. A level of joint understanding among the member states concerning the needed policy response and the desired role for the EU opened new windows of opportunity for joint action, particularly concerning activities with a military dimension in the Eastern neighbourhood. While disagreements have started to re-emerge, the war response did not remain a one-time exercise but has already profoundly shaped the EU’s security-political role. The implications extend beyond Ukraine: the EU’s new approach to capacity building is already being applied in the wider neighbourhood as well as internally.


The paper contributes to the emerging literature exploring the fundamental shift in the EU’s security political role in 2022 (e.g., Blockmans, Fiott) by focusing on two main aspects: Firstly, it addresses the EU’s security political role as one shaped by the crises, conflicts, and demands of its neighbourhoods. In this context, the watershed moment of 2022 in the EU’s security policies is understood as emerging in response to the needs of and in cooperation with its partners in the Eastern neighbourhood. Secondly, the paper examines the EU’s role in capacity building in particular, finding it as an assignment that results from the division of labour with NATO and the overall context of the European security architecture. Finally, the report provides recommendations on how the EU can contribute to comprehensive security in the European neighbourhoods and address topical challenges, such as to support the provision of security guarantees for Ukraine through its capacity building functions.


The report is part of the Horizon 2020 funded InvigoratEU research project.

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