Although the current Ukraine crisis has been a reality check for the EU, the UK still needs to engage with the debate about a greater European capacity to act.
The concept of ‘European strategic autonomy’ has taken a hit as Europeans have been sidelined and the European Union (EU) has struggled to make itself relevant in the current standoff with Russia over Ukraine.
With NATO’s new Strategic Concept and the EU’s first Strategic
Compass, 2022 was meant to be the year of European security strategies.
But the conflict at the Ukrainian border has been a reality check about
what role the EU can today play in European security.
Conversely, the Ukraine crisis has amplified the UK’s role as a
security provider for Europe through NATO as well as bilateral and
minilateral arrangements such as the new Ukraine-Poland-UK trilateral format
or, beyond the current crisis, London’s leadership of the ten-nation
Joint Expeditionary Force (JEF). The UK’s diplomatic energy and
assertive action on the Ukraine situation – supplying military
equipment, training, and increasing force deployments – have been widely acknowledged.
The
UK needs to think through the implications of a wider European
strategic autonomy or sovereignty agenda, and seriously engage with the
EU and key member states in this debate.
This crisis offered London a chance to reinstate its role after years
of Brexit-related doubts and to confirm its priority remains
Euro-Atlantic security – something some had doubted, particularly after
the publication of the Integrated Review last year with references to an
Indo-Pacific ‘tilt’.
Strategic autonomy is not just about Russia
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