Author (Person) | Biscop, Sven |
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Series Title | Egmont Papers |
Series Details | No.3 (January 2005) |
Publication Date | January 2005 |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
nullAbstract On 12 December 2003, the European Council approved Javier Solana’s European Security Strategy. Few EU documents represent such a clear – and clearlyworded– advance in thinking. Since its adoption, the Commission, the Council and the Member States have all made progress on security cooperation. In June 2004, the European Council has taken further decisions in the field of security. It is not always clear though whether this represents the conscious implementation of the Strategy or an unstructured process of piece-meal change. In the short-term, recent developments have certainly been positive – but if they are not tied to long-term strategic goals, they may prove unsustainable. Thus there is room for an intellectual review of the direction we have taken. The Foreign Policy Centre (London), British Council Brussels, New Defence Agenda (Brussels) and the Royal Institute for International Relations (Brussels) joined together to organize a seminar on the implementation of the Strategy. On 30 June 2004 the Audit of European Strategy brought together key policy-makers from within the European institutions and original thinkers on strategic issues. A first, analysts’ panel debated concrete recommendations to anchor the Strategy’s innovative comprehensive approach to security into policy practice. A second, practitioners’ panel reviewed ongoing and future elaboration of the |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://aei.pitt.edu/8986/ |
Subject Categories | Security and Defence |
Countries / Regions | Europe |