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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Crisis and EU Foreign and Security Policy: An Introduction

Marianne RiddervoldMarianne RiddervoldAkasemi NewsomeJarle Trondal

subject

Heading (navigation)business.industryPolitical scienceMember statesCrisis managementInternational tradebusinessSecurity policyAnnexationDomain (software engineering)

description

This chapter sums up the main findings in the four papers discussing the impact of various external crises on the development of the EU’s Common Foreign and Security Policy, the CFSP. Chapters discuss the EU’s foreign and security policy responses to the Russian annexation of Crimea and the ongoing war in Ukraine, the EU’s crisis management capacities, and the impact of crises on EU–US relations. Despite member states’ traditional reluctance to integrate further in this domain of EU policy, the CFSP is not breaking down. Instead, all the chapters suggest that the EU is able to cope with crises and that overall, crises and increased uncertainty have led to a strengthening of the CFSP mainly by muddling through and in some cases heading forward.

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51791-5_31