The 'Common Foreign and Security Policy', or 'CFSP', was established as the second of the
three pillars of the
European Union in the
Maastricht treaty of 1992, and further defined and broadened in the
Amsterdam Treaty of 1999. It superseded the
European Political Cooperation.
The CFSP sees
NATO responsible for territorial defence of Europe and "peace-making" while since 1999 the European Union is responsible for implementation missions; i.e. peace-keeping, policing of treaties etc.
Objectives
According to the Treaty on European Union, Article 11, the European Union defines and implements a common foreign and security policy covering all areas of foreign and security policy, the objectives of which shall be:
★ to safeguard the common values, fundamental interests, independence and integrity of the
Union in conformity with the principles of the
United Nations Charter;
★ to strengthen the security of the Union in all ways;
★ to preserve peace and strengthen international security, in accordance with the principles of the United Nations Charter, as well as the principles of the
Helsinki Final Act and the objectives of the
Paris Charter, including those on external borders;
★ to promote international cooperation;
★ to develop and consolidate
democracy and the
rule of law, and respect for
human rights and fundamental
freedoms.
Elements
The
European Council defines the principles and general guidelines for the CFSP as well as common strategies to be implemented by the EU. On the basis of those guidelines the
Council of Ministers adopts ''joint actions'' or ''common positions''.
★ 'Joint actions' address specific situations where operation action by the EU is considered necessary and lay down the objectives, scope and means to be made available to the EU. They commit the member states.
★ 'Common positions' on the other hand, define the approach that the EU takes on a certain matter of geographical or thematic nature, and define in the abstract the general guidelines that the national policies of Member states must conform to.
The treaties indicate that the function of the
High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy is exercised by the
Secretary-General of the
Council of Ministers, who assists the country holding the
Presidency of the European Union in matters coming within the scope of the CFSP. When appropriate he conducts political dialogue with third parties, acting on behalf of the Council of Ministers, at the Request of the Presidency. He also coordinates the work of the
European Union Special Representatives. The current High Representative for the CFSP is
Javier Solana.
Since the
Cologne European Council in
1999, the
European Security and Defence Policy (or ESDP) has become a significant part of the CFSP.
Bodies of the European Union set up within the CFSP context include the following:
★ The General Affairs and External Relations Council (GAERC)
★ A
Political and Security Committee or PSC, which monitors the international situation in the areas covered by the CFSP and contributes by delivering opinions to the Council of Ministers, either at its request or its own initiative, and also monitors the implementation of agreed policies.
★ The
European Union Institute for Security Studies (EUISS)
★ The
European Union Satellite Centre (EUSC)
European Security and Defence Policy
The
European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP) is considered a major element of the CFSP. The ESDP was initiated by provisions of the
Treaty of Amsterdam which stipulated the progressive framing of a common security and defence policy that could deal with humanitarian and rescue tasks,
peacekeeping tasks and tasks of combat forces in
crisis management, including peacemaking. These are the so-called
Petersberg tasks. These tasks are included into the Treaty of the European Union since 1997
Treaty of Amsterdam under Article 17.2.
The ESDP is facilitated by three separate institutions that shall provide a certain degree of continuity in the strictly intergovernmental field of CFSP. These three institutions are the
Political and Security Committee (PSC), the
European Union Military Committee (EUMC), and the
European Union Military Staff (EUMS). All three institutions were established in the Intergovernmental Conference of Cologne in June 1999. Next to the respective Operational Headquarters, these institutions will, among other tasks, be responsible to handle the daily business of every European Battlegroup.
The European Battlegroup Concept in turn was drafted in late 2003 on a British-French summit meeting and was instantly endorsed by Germany. The Battlegroup Concept was submitted to the PSC and was subsequently presented as a joint initiative of the EU-3 (France, Germany, United Kingdom).
Political and Security Committee
The Political and Security Committee (PSC or "COPS" from its French acronym) first established as an interim body in 2000 is described by the Nice European Council Conclusions as the "linchpin" of the
European Security and Defence Policy and the Common Foreign and Security Policy. Its responsibilities include the drafting of opinions for the
General Affairs and External Relations Council which is one of the configurations of the
Council of the European Union, and exercising "political control and strategic direction" of EU crisis-management operations. The committee is a standing body and is composed of national representatives of "senior / ambassadorial level" and meets at least twice a week (Tuesdays and Fridays) in Brussels. It is chaired by the member state that holds the rotating Presidency of the
Council of the European Union.
Past and future
The CFSP can be considered the outgrowth and replacement of the
European Political Cooperation which had been formally established in the
Single European Act (in effect since 1987), and informally introduced already from 1970 in response to the
Davignon report. In the 1950s an even earlier attempt at political cooperation through the
European Political Community had failed to be launched.
According to the
European Constitution that has not been ratified yet, the pillar structure would have been abandoned: this means that the functions currently considered part of the CFSP will be further incorporated into the functions of the rest of the Union. It would not however be a true merging the pillars, as CFSP competences are still mentioned separately from the other EU competences in Article I-12. As part of merging the EC and EU treaties, among other things, the post of the High Representative of the CFSP will be merged with the post of the Commissioner for Foreign Affairs, creating the
Union Minister for Foreign Affairs who will be at the same time Vice-President of the Commission.
As part of the simplification of jargon in the treaties, "common positions" and "joint actions" will be both renamed into "decisions".
Whether this would truly be a simplification can be questioned, as the Draft Constitutional Treaty does maintain the substance of these instruments, and consequently it would become more difficult to quickly recognise the character of the instrument.
Timeline
''Evolution of the Structures of European Union''
See also
★
Foreign relations of the European Union
★
Three pillars of the European Union
★
European Security and Defense Policy
★
Javier Solana Current High Representative
★
General Secretariat of the Council of the European Union
★
European Union Association Agreement
References
''European foreign policy - from rhetoric to reality ?'' by Dieter Mahncke (ed.), Peter Lang,
November 3 2004 - ISBN 90-5201-247-4
External links
★
Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP)
★
Activities
★
EUFPC European Foreign Policy Council
★
A guide
★
European Parliament Resolution on progress in implementing the common foreign and security policy European Navigator
★
Institute of European and Russian Studies Carleton University named European Union Center of Excellence by European Commission
★
Changes to the CFSP in the proposed EU constitution
★
Proposal for an operational component of the CFSP: The presentation of the Eurocorps-Foreign Legion concept at the European parliament in JUNE 2003