Should Europe simply retire from global governance? Or are there assets on which it can draw in order to play an influential role as a new world order emerges?
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Syria, Libya, Mali, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen - a new generation of civil wars and humanitarian crises is emerging along Europe's southern flank. While the EU is focused on the Eurozone crisis, these crises threaten Europe's interests too: Islamist bases in Somalia and Mali, or a war-torn Syria, offer bases for future terrorist attacks.
Yet, constrained by austerity and intervention fatigue, European governments are increasingly reliant on the United Nations and organisations like the African Union and Arab League to manage the crises in its unstable periphery. Although the EU has been building up its own security structures over the last decade, it may now find it more cost-effective and politically expedient to prioritise helping these other actors manage looming threats.
In a new ECFR policy brief, Richard Gowan argues that strengthening the EU's web of partnerships with the UN and regional organisations is essential for Europe's security. The paper also suggest concrete steps how to improve the EU's role in civilian and military crisis management:
"The EU has to what it can with its constrained resources to manage crises as they arise through whatever channels are available. In crisis management - as in many other policy areas - the EU needs all the friends it can get."- Richard Gowan
Contact details
Richard Gowan: .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address), Mobile: +1 917 975 6629 twitter: @RichardGowan1
Click here for a PDF of ‘The case for cooperation in crisis management’
Notes for Editors
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