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Realism in the EU: Can a Trans-national Actor Be Strategic?

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Abstract

The aim of this chapter is not to trace the development of the EU’s foreign policy or to provide a comprehensive discussion of particular cases. Our objective is to examine some of the challenges that the EU faces in trying to act “strategically” in geopolitical spaces in close proximity and which have been traditionally sources of the types of conflict that led to the reasons for the creation of the Union in the 1950s. The global reach of the EU and its member states inevitably means that it takes on many different roles in its foreign policy and approaches to international relations. However, we will focus on two areas that are particularly useful to illustrate the challenges the EU faces in being a strategic actor as well as the continuing or growing nationalization of foreign policy: its actions in the Balkans and the EU’s relations with Russia. Our argument is that both areas present not only foreign policy challenges but also existential issues that point to the EU’s lack of ontological security. They highlight the tension in the growing need to make strategic choices in both cases while remaining consistent with its narrative of a benign, normative power.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Cited from the Independent, July 13, 2006. Accessed on May 22, 2012.

  2. 2.

    “Barroso clashes with Putin over human rights abuses in Russia ,” European Forum for Democracy and Solidarity, February 9, 2009. http://www.europeanforum.net/news/509/barroso_clashes_with_putin_over_human_rights_abuses_in_russia. Accessed September 23, 2013.

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Correspondence to Vincent Della Sala .

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Della Sala, V., Belloni, R. (2019). Realism in the EU: Can a Trans-national Actor Be Strategic?. In: Belloni, R., Della Sala, V., Viotti, P. (eds) Fear and Uncertainty in Europe . Global Issues. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-91965-2_12

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