CSDP after Brexit: the way forward
The Common Security and defence Policy (CSDP) will be strongly impacted by the imminent divorce between the United Kingdom (UK) and the European Union (EU), for better or for worse. What tomorrow will bring is nevertheless still unknown. The Brexit negotiations in the area of defence were supposed to be easier and more consensual than in other fields. It does not seem to have been the case so far. The first part of the study focuses on the terms of the equation. They analyse: the new interest of the United Kingdom for the CSDP, the proposal made by the UK to the EU in this area, how the EU has answered so far and what are the existing rules and practices allowing the involvement of third counties in the EU defence policies. The following part examines the potential impact of Brexit on the most promising defence policies that the EU is presently carrying out: the support to the defence industry, PESCO, the Galileo and Copernicus programs and, naturally, the CSDP missions. Finally, this study reviews the EU options on the table of one of the most difficult negotiations in contemporary history.
Studie
Externe Autor
Federico SANTOPINTO (Groupe de Recherche et d’Information sur la Paix et la Sécurité - GRIP)
Über dieses Dokument
Art der Veröffentlichung
Schlagwortliste
- Aushandlung von Abkommen (EU)
- Austritt aus der EU
- das Vereinigte Königreich
- EU-Programm
- Europa
- EUROPÄISCHE UNION
- europäisches Einigungswerk
- Finanzen der Europäischen Union
- Finanzierung der EU
- Forschung und geistiges Eigentum
- gemeinsame Sicherheits- und Verteidigungspolitik
- GEOGRAFIE
- INTERNATIONALE BEZIEHUNGEN
- INTERNATIONALE ORGANISATIONEN
- militärische Forschung
- militärische Zusammenarbeit
- NATO
- Organisation des Verkehrs
- Politik der Zusammenarbeit
- Politische Geografie
- PRODUKTION, TECHNOLOGIE UND FORSCHUNG
- Rüstungsindustrie
- Satellitennavigation
- VERKEHR
- Verteidigung
- Verteidigungspolitik
- Weltorganisationen
- Wirtschaftsgeografie