European Military Crisis Management

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A01=Bastian Giegerich
Author_Bastian Giegerich
British Strategic Culture
Category=JW
Civilian Headline Goal
Combined Joint Special Operations Task
comparative security studies
Crisis Management Missions
Crisis Management Operations
defence integration
Defence Reform Programme
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
ESDP Mission
ESDP Operation
EU Forces
EU Member State
EU military cooperation analysis
EU's Capacity
European security policy
EU’s Capacity
Headline Goal
High Intensity Missions
Illustrative Scenarios
international
International Crisis Management
International Crisis Management Missions
International Crisis Management Operations
Medium Scale Operation
military capability gap
Military Crisis Management
Military Crisis Management Operations
missions
national defence strategies
National Strategic Culture
NATO Asset
Nick Witney
Permanent Structured Cooperation
political decision making
Strategic Culture

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138452701
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Jul 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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International demand for military crisis-management missions continues to grow and demand for troops continues to outstrip supply. Like other Western democracies, European Union member states, because of their wealth, relative military competence and commitment to human rights, bear a particular responsibility to expand the international community�s capacity for action. But while the EU has succeeded in defining a complex military-technical and political-strategic framework to boost its role and that of its member states in crisis management, its performance so far has fallen well short of its ambitions.
This paper analyses what the EU wants to be able to do militarily � its level of ambition � and contrasts this aspiration with the current reality. To explain the gap between the two, the paper examines national ambitions and performance across the EU and analyses their domestic determinants using the examples of Austria, Germany and the United Kingdom. The paper concludes by suggesting that the EU might need to strike a new balance between the inclusiveness and the effectiveness of its activities in this area if it wants to increase its military crisis-management performance and live up to its declared ambitions.

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