Abstract
This chapter continues the debate on the role of norms in the EU’s maritime foreign and security policy through a study of the EU’s anti-smuggling naval mission ‘Sophia’. According to the EU, Sophia was launched in 2015 in response to the migrant crisis in the Mediterranean, as increasingly more people died at sea while trying to reach Europe’s shores. For example, the Council’s decision on the launch of a naval mission states that its main aim is to prevent further loss of life at sea, to tackle the root causes of the ongoing emergency situation in line with the relevant international law provisions, and that its immediate priority is to prevent more people from dying at sea. Critiques of the EU’s naval mission have however questioned its legitimacy, claiming instead that such justifications are mainly rhetoric, covering up the member states’ self-interest in trying to reduce the flow of sea-borne migration to the EU. Studying the relevance of this claim, the analysis shows that although Sophia is a search and rescue operation, the EU does not live up to all the human rights standards it has set for itself in the conduct of the mission. Instead, as the refugee crisis continues and Sophia is amended, the EU seems to be moving towards becoming more of a traditional foreign policy actor.
Notes
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The Commission published a broad ‘European Agenda on Migration’ in May 2015, amongst other things, suggesting a common EU border control system, including a strong coast guard and dual use component. The EU has also entered into an agreement with Turkey on the return of refugees and committed itself to help finance the UN Refugee Programme in the Middle East.
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Riddervold, M. (2018). The EU’s Naval Mission Sophia: A Humanitarian Operation to Help Refugees in Distress at Sea?. In: The Maritime Turn in EU Foreign and Security Policies . Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-66598-6_3
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