Newsweek

COULD A EUROPEAN MILITARY GO IT ALONE?

PIPE DREAM, A FANTASY—JUST TWO OF the phrases bandied about whenever the idea of a European or European Union army resurfaces. This time, it was Italy’s foreign minister, Antonio Tajani, who prodded the conversation awake. “If we want to be peacekeepers in the world, we need a European military,” Tajani told Italy’s La Stampa newspaper in early January. “This is a fundamental precondition to be able to have an effective European foreign policy.”

The concept is bound up in complications from the get-go. There is no harmony on even the terminology. Would this be a European force, or one only open to European Union members? Would it be just an army, or a fully-fledged military with all the air, sea and land capabilities that come with it?

“It’s never really come anywhere near anything real,” former NATO official Edward Hunter Christie told . But times are changing. War has raged in Ukraine for two years, and many NATO countries, including EU member states, have had a nasty wake-up call following years of lax defense spending. Comments from former president Donald Trump, the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination, have fueled a reevaluation of just how much Europe relies on the U.S. for its military strength. Speaking

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Newsweek

Newsweek3 min read
Newsweek US
GLOBAL EDITOR IN CHIEF _ Nancy Cooper EXECUTIVE EDITOR _ Jennifer H. Cunningham SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, DIGITAL _ Laura Davis DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS _ Melissa Jewsbury OPINION EDITOR _ Batya Ungar-Sargon VP, DIGITAL PUBLISHING _ Chris Roberts SENIOR E
Newsweek6 min read
Exhausted No More
With only months to go before a redo of the 2020 presidential election, which offers two candidates many Americans are apathetic about, finding ways to reinvigorate civic engagement is essential. The national conversation often emphasizes how polariz
Newsweek2 min read
Cole Escola
IT’S RARE FOR A PLAY TO BECOME SUCH A CULT hit that it moves from downtown to Broadway, but that’s what’s happening with Cole Escola’s Oh, Mary! For Escola, previously known for You-Tube sketches and collaborations with Amy Sedaris, “it feels like I

Related Books & Audiobooks