For more than two decades after the end of the Cold War, the core of European security has been unchallenged. Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, NATO looked for a new rationale inside a new strategic global framework. For the Atlantic Alliance, the end of the Cold War implied less deterrence and territorial defense and an increase in strategic volatility beyond its borders.
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The Brexit had at least the advantage of forcing Europeans to propose multiple projects in order to better pool their military capabilities. Admittedly, in this situation, there is a combination of favourable circumstances for initiatives that aim to revive the CSDP. First of all, Europeans made this decision to revive CSDP in 2013. The initiative came from France, jointly with the new President of the European Commission, Jean Claude Juncker.
The multiple crises that have hit the European Union (EU) have damaged political cohesion within and between member states. Notably after the Brexit vote, there is growing awareness in many capitals that without a renewed investment in the European project, the latter may unravel. With key countries such as France and Germany facing elections in 2017, the prospects for injecting new momentum into European integration are sobering.
A differenza della Nato, la politica di sicurezza e di difesa dell’Unione europea (Ue) non è mai stata fonte di eccessiva preoccupazione per Mosca.
Donald Trump’s Republican presidential nomination and the Brexit have shocked and somehow caught by surprise the entire world. A growing sense of concern or even alarm is now spreading across Western countries and is putting traditional democratic processes to the test.
In particular, when looking at the political landscape in Europe, populism may turn out to be an unprecedented game-changer. Populists parties came to power in Poland and Hungary, they are in coalition governments in Switzerland and Finland, top the polls in France and the Netherlands, and their support is at...
To this longtime foreign resident in Thailand, the most pervasive reaction to the death of His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej – other than profound grief – seemed to be uncertainty.
La guerra in Yemen vive una nuova escalation, mentre Stati Uniti e Russia diventano attori sempre più indirettamente coinvolti nel conflitto.
Sia gli houthi (i miliziani sciiti zaiditi del nord alleati dell’ex presidente Ali Abdullah Saleh) sia la coalizione militare guidata dall’Arabia Saudita stanno alzando il livello dello scontro.
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Se non fosse per tutti quei morti, tutta quella distruzione e tutti quei profughi, si potrebbe provare, non senza un po’ di fatica, a comprendere le ragioni di tutti quei paesi che in questi anni hanno contribuito ad alimentare e inasprire un conflitto civile diventato apparentemente senza soluzione.