A TRANSATLANTIC DIVORCE AND THE TIME FOR EUROPEAN SOVEREIGNTY? - A study on how US foreign policy, during 2010-2020, impacted EU member state views on defence integration
Abstract
This thesis explores the impact of US foreign policy, during 2010-2020, on EU member state willingness
to integrate defence, by utilizing a mixed-method approach. The objective of the study is to investigate
how EU member states reacted to the Obama administration’s ‘pivot to Asia’ and the election and
presidency of Donald Trump and whether those administrations contributed to further defence
integration. The quantitative analysis focuses on changes in defence expenditure, military personnel,
and European collaborative procurement expenditures, and finds that the ‘pivot to Asia’ did not have an
impact on EU member states defence expenditures. Quantitative analysis finds that EU member state
increased defence expenditures after 2015, which steepened from 2017 which could be a continued
response to Russian aggression, Brexit, and Trump threats to the EU and NATO. Qualitative analysis
focuses on changes in rhetoric regarding EU member state participation in the newly launched defence
initiative PESCO, as well as their willingness to increase defence integration. The thesis finds no support
that the changes in US commitment to Europe impacted the EU member states to participate in PESCO
or was an argument for further defence integration. The thesis concludes that as PESCO is a member
state-driven initiative, it enables EU member states to pursue projects that align with their self-interests.
The thesis also concludes that the EU’s reaction to US foreign policy is constrained by a lack of
actorness. Further research on EU member state views on other defence initiatives is needed.
Degree
Master theses
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2021-06-28Author
Strandquist, Julia
Keywords
European Defence Integration, Transatlantic relationship, PESCO, France, Poland, Ireland, EU actorness
Language
eng