Partnerships and European strategic autonomy

European Strategic Autonomy series - Security & Defense

Policy Brief

04/07/2022

How to turn them into a win-win approach

To become more strategic and autonomous, the European Union has to use its global partnerships better. Managing external security threats to the EU requires active and reliable partnerships, first and foremost, with more capable and like-minded partners. Moreover, partnerships can increase the Union’s capacity to act in Europe and beyond.

Today, the EU has several partnerships. While the number has grown over the last decades, their palpable use in the security and defence domain has rarely been demonstrated. But the pressure on the EU to deliver more in international security is growing.

The Russian war against Ukraine is a watershed for European security, by pressuring both EU institutions and members to unprecedented collective decisions, such as sanction packages on Russia and the delivery of weapons financed by the European Peace Facility. Russian military aggression adds to ongoing security challenges around Europe, from instability in the south to transnational challenges.

While the US administration is firmly committed to supporting Ukraine and European defence, America’s focus on the systemic rivalry with China remains a structural trend that risks turning US attention away from Europe again.

Internally, the narrative of strategic autonomy has been pushed mainly by France and the European Commission led by Ursula Von der Leyen. The 2022 Strategic Compass operationalises that ambition through four lines of action: Act, Secure, Invest and Partner. The importance of partnerships as an enabling tool is hence growing. To deliver, EU partnerships with NATO, the US and the UK have to be prioritised and pushed forward. The EU should focus on identifying its interests, engaging partners and investing in implementation.

European security and defence are also two of the building blocks of the European Strategic Autonomy. We discussed them in one of the events of the #EUStrategicAutonomy policy breakfast series on 5 July 2022.

This Policy Brief is part of a Strategic Autonomy Series, and you can find out more about this issue on the project webpage.

Network
Fondation Jean-Jaurès
Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung
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