img_pub
Rubriques

How the EU Must Change

BERLIN – Though we still don’t know when – and, more importantly, how – Vladimir Putin’s war of aggression in Ukraine will end, it is already clear that the conflict will dramatically transform the European Union.

Le 27 mai 2022 à 12h08

The EU was Western Europe’s answer to the explosive violence of the two world wars, which were themselves the products of industrialization and nationalism from the nineteenth century onward. These historical processes led to the complete destruction of the traditional European order. After World War II, the European continent came to be dominated by two non-European powers: the United States and the Soviet Union. Because these two powers’ material and ideological interests were impossible to reconcile, a decades-long nuclear-arms race and Cold War ensued.

Immediately after WWII, Western Europe’s economy was in tatters and it was militarily defenseless against a Soviet invasion. Without the US Marshall Plan and America’s guarantee of military protection, Western Europe would hardly have been able to survive.

NATO’s founding in 1949 ensured that the western part of the continent would remain safe from both Soviet encroachments and a re-emergent, albeit partitioned, Germany. This arrangement then gave rise to the idea that a stable Western European order could be achieved through economic integration within a single market, collective institutions, and a common legal system – eventually implying a complete integration of the states involved.

The aim was not only to overcome the socioeconomic and political causes of destructive nationalism, but also to ensure that Europe’s historical troublemaker and strongest economy, Germany, was fully and permanently brought into the fold. In the decades that followed, NATO and the EU (initially the European Coal and Steel Community and then the European Economic Community) became the respective military and economic pillars of European security and prosperity, and thus of the Western European order.

But with the end of the Cold War came new questions about what the European order would look like. The answer was that both Western European pillars – NATO and the EU – would grow to include the Central and Eastern European countries that qualified for membership. For their part, many of the former Soviet republics and Warsaw Pact members wanted a binding guarantee that the European order would not be revised by Russia.

NATO and EU membership thus brought the promise of collective security and a common market. The hope was to eliminate the last remnants of the old East-West confrontation, and to ensure a permanent peace through economic exchange and interdependence.

Under Putin, however, Russia has been pursuing a different kind of policy. It has sought to re-establish its status as a global power by laying claim to more and more “Russian earth,” which implies a reversal of the post-Soviet order. Looking to the past rather than the future, Putin wants to restore the old Russian empire.

As Ukrainians increasingly expressed their desire to integrate with the West, Putin took steps to deny their freedom and Ukraine’s sovereignty. In 2014, he annexed Crimea and ignited a low-burn war in Ukraine’s Donbas region. And now he has launched an all-out war of aggression, wrecking any chance for peaceful coexistence between Russia and the EU, at least as long as he remains in power. Geographic partition, enforced by nuclear blackmail, will once again prevail over economic exchange and cooperation.

The EU will now have to focus much more on security and geopolitical issues than it did in the past. Moreover, now that Sweden and Finland will join NATO, Austria, Ireland, Malta, and Cyprus will be the only EU members that do not also belong to the alliance. Thus, the relationship between the two pillars of the European order will also change. EU members will have to increase their defense spending substantially as well as urgently shore up their contributions to NATO.

The EU will also confront increasingly high-stakes geopolitical challenges, as applications for membership by Ukraine, Georgia, and Moldova are already showing. Until now, the sole geopolitical instrument that the EU had at its disposal was the promise of full membership (and thus economic growth and prosperity). But that promise has turned out to be an illusion for Turkey and the Western Balkans.

Under its current institutional and legal framework, the EU can pursue its geopolitical interests only to a very limited extent, if at all. The EU of the future therefore will need a more flexible structure, with a quasi-confederative arrangement surrounding a federated core. Rather than requiring full membership or nothing at all, the EU could instead offer narrower access to the common market, common security, the EU legal community, the common currency, and so forth.

The EU cannot grow endlessly. But it does need to accept that its geopolitical interests extend much further than the instrument of full membership does. As long as authoritarian regimes pose a material threat, the EU – representing the economic and societal alternative – will become an increasingly significant force not just on the European continent but in the larger gray area to the east, where there is no clear-cut border with Asia.

Whatever happens in Ukraine, the situation demands a new structural flexibility and not rigid adherence to old, overstrained arrangements or promises that cannot be fulfilled.

© Project Syndicate 1995–2022

Par
Le 27 mai 2022 à 12h08

à lire aussi

Philippe Lalliot pressenti comme futur ambassadeur de France à Rabat (média)
DIPLOMATIE

Article : Philippe Lalliot pressenti comme futur ambassadeur de France à Rabat (média)

Le diplomate français Philippe Lalliot est pressenti pour succéder à Christophe Lecourtier au poste d’ambassadeur de France.

Prix des médicaments, tensions géopolitiques et sécurisation des stocks. Le point sur le secteur de l'industrie pharmaceutique avec Yasmine Lahlou Filali (FMIIP)
ECONOMIE

Article : Prix des médicaments, tensions géopolitiques et sécurisation des stocks. Le point sur le secteur de l'industrie pharmaceutique avec Yasmine Lahlou Filali (FMIIP)

Élue à la tête de la FMIIP en septembre 2025, Yasmine Lahlou Filali aborde les défis majeurs du secteur de l'industrie pharmaceutique. Dans sa première interview depuis sa nomination, elle détaille pour Médias24 les réformes en cours, les stratégies pour sécuriser l’approvisionnement et les mesures pour renforcer la production locale.

الصحراء المغربية : النمسا تؤكد أن حكما ذاتيا حقيقيا تحت السيادة المغربية يشكل أحد الحلول الأكثر قابلية للتطبيق
Arabic content

Article : الصحراء المغربية : النمسا تؤكد أن حكما ذاتيا حقيقيا تحت السيادة المغربية يشكل أحد الحلول الأكثر قابلية للتطبيق

عبرت النمسا، اليوم الأربعاء، عن دعمها للقرار 2797 (2025) الصادر عن مجلس الأمن التابع للأمم المتحدة، مؤكدة أن "حكما ذاتيا حقيقيا تحت السيادة المغربية يمكن أن يشكل أحد الحلول الأكثر قابلية للتطبيق".

Marbio inaugure une unité de solutions contraceptives à Benslimane
Quoi de neuf

Article : Marbio inaugure une unité de solutions contraceptives à Benslimane

Soutenue par la Fondation Gates, cette nouvelle installation de 700 m² est dédiée au développement d'hormones contraceptives. Elle marque une étape clé pour Marbio dans le déploiement de solutions de santé publique depuis le site de Benslimane.

Sous pression du système d’entrée et de sortie en Europe, les transporteurs routiers internationaux préparent une grève nationale
ECONOMIE

Article : Sous pression du système d’entrée et de sortie en Europe, les transporteurs routiers internationaux préparent une grève nationale

Le transport routier international de marchandises au Maroc est de nouveau sous pression. L’entrée en vigueur du système européen "EES" complique davantage l’activité des professionnels. Ces derniers préparent une grève nationale. Si aucune action n'est entreprise d'ici le 27 avril 2026 par les autorités compétentes, sa date et sa durée seront annoncées.

Righa. Ce site oublié qui pourrait être une ancienne capitale du Maroc antique
Science

Article : Righa. Ce site oublié qui pourrait être une ancienne capitale du Maroc antique

À 8 kilomètres au nord de Sidi Slimane, au cœur des méandres de l’Oued Beht, Righa s’impose comme l’un des chantiers archéologiques les plus prometteurs du Maroc. Après vingt ans de recherches, la mission franco-marocaine affirme un peu plus l’importance du site : la découverte de thermes romains et de pressoirs à vin inédits vient renforcer l’hypothèse selon laquelle cette cité de dix hectares, longtemps restée dans l’ombre de Volubilis, pourrait avoir été l’une des capitales du royaume maurétanien.

Médias24 est un journal économique marocain en ligne qui fournit des informations orientées business, marchés, data et analyses économiques. Retrouvez en direct et en temps réel, en photos et en vidéos, toute l’actualité économique, politique, sociale, et culturelle au Maroc avec Médias24

Notre journal s’engage à vous livrer une information précise, originale et sans parti-pris vis à vis des opérateurs.

Toute l'actualité