Strategic sovereignty: How Europe can regain the capacity to act
The EU needs to learn to think like a geopolitical power
The EU needs to learn to think like a geopolitical power
Europeans can take steps now to enhance their economic power, without advocating increased protectionism or a retreat from globalisation
If Europe does not address these difficult questions soon it will find itself surrounded by more powerful rivals deploying AI against it
The EU and its member states should strengthen their sanctions policy and begin to build up their deterrence and resilience against secondary sanctions
To hedge against US disengagement without precipitating it, Europeans should converge on “taking a greater share of the burden of defending Europe”
Europe should pursue a ‘dual track’ approach of confrontation followed by dialogue with unfriendly cyber powers
The turmoil in the current system represents an opportunity for Europeans to shape a new order that meets their strategic needs
Fragmentation in the EU makes it increasingly difficult for member states to build coalitions. The EU Coalition Explorer reveals potential new groupings.
The results of the European election confront EU leaders with a considerable challenge: navigating a new, more fragmented, and polarised political environment
Support for membership of the European Union is currently high, but so too is pessimism about the future of the European project