The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

A more assertive EU in a volatile world

- • By HELGA SCHMID

The prediction­s made last year with regard to the growing importance of great power rivalries still ring in our ears. What is more, our strategic environmen­t grows ever more unpredicta­ble. Major powers openly challenge the rules-based internatio­nal order and seek to promote alternativ­e visions of a world divided into spheres of influence. Geopolitic­al rivalry stokes tensions and raises the alarm bell of a new “proliferat­ion age” that risks escalating into inadverten­t military confrontat­ion. Climate change is becoming an existentia­l threat while cyberspace and disinforma­tion campaigns are the new weapons of the 21st century.

For the European Union, these challenges can be tackled only through a multilater­al approach. We have the tools and the political weight to shape the future global order if we stay united. This is why instead of retreating from internatio­nal cooperatio­n and global partnershi­ps, the EU is stepping up its commitment to address global challenges together with its partners. This is true for the Paris agreement on climate change, the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA) on non-proliferat­ion, the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, the EU’s strategy for connectivi­ty between Asia and Europe or the reform of the WTO.

While these agreements are – in essence – hard to reach, we are convinced they are the best way to ensure a more peaceful, prosperous and secure world environmen­t. Even more so when it is clear that no single country can address these challenges alone. I am convinced this approach is the right one and the fact that demand for European action from our partners has never been so high speaks for itself.

At every given opportunit­y, the need to define common answers to common problems is not only highlighte­d but translated into action. The European Union is therefore investing in broader internatio­nal cooperatio­n and partnershi­ps above all with NATO, the UN and regional organizati­ons, such as the Africa Union and ASEAN. Our trilateral EU-AU-UN cooperatio­n on common challenges such as migration illustrate­s how multilater­al solutions can contribute to greater safety, stability and prosperity.

For instance, as the UN IPCC Special Report on Global Warming warned us recently, there is an urgent need to act on climate change. This is the logic for the EU’s tireless efforts to reach a successful outcome at COP 24 in Katowice. The EU will lead by example by turning its own ambitious commitment­s for 2030 into concrete action. This was made clear at the high-level event on climate and security hosted by the EU last June.

In the security sector, the EU continues to assert its role as a security provider. Not only is it working internally to intensify joint efforts to effectivel­y fight terrorism, hatred and violent extremism, it is engaged on the ground with 16 crisis management missions with nearly 4,000 men and women. From building capacities in Mali, Niger and Central African Republic, to supporting security sector reform in Iraq, fighting piracy off the coast of Somalia or preventing a resurgence of violence in Georgia, the EU continues to strengthen internatio­nal security in its neighborho­od and beyond. This is complement­ed by continued engagement in more than 40 mediation activities across the world, from Colombia to Yemen and the Philippine­s, and underpinne­d by financial assistance, as the EU remains the lead donor for developmen­t and humanitari­an aid.

As Europe is taking more responsibi­lity for its own security, the debate on European strategic autonomy has moved to the fore – and not without controvers­y. However, at its heart is a simple reasoning: when needed, Europeans need to be able to protect and defend European interests and values and have the capacity to act. We want to be able to cooperate with third countries on our own terms.

In this respect, we stepped up the developmen­t of joint military capabiliti­es.

Through our Permanent Structured Cooperatio­n (PESCO), we will increase joint investment­s through the European Defense Fund. We are streamlini­ng military command structures (MPCC) and we agreed on a compact to strengthen our civilian crisis management. These initiative­s also contribute to strengthen NATO’s European pillar and contributi­on to collective defense.

Greater responsibi­lity also includes beefing up our own resilience and capacity in energy, space, infrastruc­ture and other critical sectors. We Europeans cannot accept interferen­ce and destabiliz­ation through hybrid and cyberattac­ks, hence our ongoing focus on reinforcin­g cybersecur­ity capacities, improving the protection of data and containing disinforma­tion through the recently adopted Action Plan on Disinforma­tion.

We also need to be extra vigilant to preserve achievemen­ts on non-proliferat­ion, such as the INF treaty or the nuclear deal with Iran, as the stakes for our own security are simply too high. The starting point cannot be to dismantle the current architectu­re and start from scratch. We Europeans are working at all levels to promote the universali­zation and implementa­tion of existing agreements, such as the Nuclear Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty or the Hague Code of Conduct against Ballistic Missile Proliferat­ion. We are also pushing for the Comprehens­ive Test Ban Treaty to come into force, which could play an important role as we work toward a complete, verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­zation of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Taking greater responsibi­lity does not stop at defense issues. Security is also about economic security. This includes the strategic importance of the Euro and the need to ensure that the single currency can play its full role on the internatio­nal scene. Promoting the Euro’s internatio­nal role is part of Europe’s commitment to an open, multilater­al rules-based global economy. The extra-territoria­l effects of sanctions also challenge the EU’s capacity to follow through on our own political commitment­s. In this context, we are developing mechanisms that will assist, protect and reassure economic actors to pursue legitimate business abroad.

As Europeans, we cannot afford to waste time or to be less innovative than others. We need to modernize our approaches and engage more actively with new actors at the intersecti­on of technology and foreign and security policy. This is why the High Representa­tive launched the Global Tech panel with the CEOs of major tech companies, in order to help ensure that internatio­nal ethics and rules can keep pace with human ingenuity. To harness these opportunit­ies, we also must take the security implicatio­ns seriously, hence the recent European Commission Communicat­ion on Artificial Intelligen­ce.

Supporting rules-based multilater­alism and greater European strategic autonomy are not contradict­ory objectives. If we strengthen our resilience in the face of new risks, the European Union will play its part in reinvigora­ting the multilater­al order and be reckoned as an assertive actor in a volatile world.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? PLACARDS ARE pictured during the ‘Rise for Climate’ demonstrat­ion in Brussels on March 31.
(Reuters) PLACARDS ARE pictured during the ‘Rise for Climate’ demonstrat­ion in Brussels on March 31.
 ?? (Courtesy) ?? HELGA SCHMID, secretary-general of the European External Action Service.
(Courtesy) HELGA SCHMID, secretary-general of the European External Action Service.

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