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Réécrire les règles de la diplomatie européenne : mise en place du SEAE

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Publié 28 mai 2010

La mise en place du Service européen d'action extérieure (SEAE) se révèle plus difficile que prévu, mais ce n'est pas une surprise étant donné que les détails de sa création ont été laissés de côté jusqu'à sa phase d'exécution et qu'il demande une réécriture des règles de base de la diplomatie européenne, écrivent Timo Behr, Johanna Nykänen et Aaretti Siitonen de l'Institut finlandais des affaires internationales (FIIA) dans un document d'information.

Ce qui suit est un résumé d'un document d'information de la FIIA.

  • The newly ratified Lisbon Treaty determined the rough shape of the European External Action Service (EEAS), but left the difficult task of negotiating all the remaining details to the implementation phase.
  • In the post-Lisbon debate on the EEAS, the Commission has attempted to ensure its control over EU foreign policy, while the European Parliament has demanded greater democratic oversight and defended the 'Community method' of decision-making. The Council has been torn between the imperative of creating a functioning service and the instinct to safeguard national prerogatives.
  • Much of this confrontation has been shaped by differences over the intergovernmental versus supranational character of the future service.
  • The outcome of this conflict is not only going to change the current institutional balance of power in Brussels, but also shape the nature and direction of European diplomacy in the future.
  • With the establishment of the EEAS, the EU's approach to international affairs is likely to become more ''political'' and ''intergovernmental''. At times, this will facilitate quicker and more decisive EU actions, but might also result in a loss of the EU's normative character as an international actor.
  • As previously, the EU's ability to appear as a unified actor in international affairs will depend on the Council's capacity to take common decisions. Here, whether the EEAS will be the catalyst of a more unified European foreign policy, rather than act as a bulwark of national interests, remains to be seen.

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