The International Spectator, Vol. 46, No. 4, December 2011
31/12/2011
Special cores on The EU, Italy and Intervention in Libya and Comparing Neighbourhood Policies
The International Dimension of the Arab Spring Free
Recent Publications Free
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Issue
46/4
Opinions
The International Dimension of the Arab Spring
Roberto Aliboni
The Arab spring is a transition away from the long alliance between the West and
the moderate Arab states, as well as a transition on the part of these states
from being more or less passive clients of the US and the West to more or less
vibrant democracies with an assertive agenda in the region. As elections take
place, they will generate more democratically and Islamist-based governments,
certainly more sensitive than previous ones to nationalist feelings and with
foreign policy objectives more or less diverging from Western ones. This compels
Western countries to revisit and possibly adjust foreign strategies and
policies. In this perspective, American and European policy towards the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict in recent years may remain a stumbling block in the
West's relations with the Middle East and may make the ongoing process of
political change in the region more difficult and uncertain.
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Essays
The EU, Italy and Intervention in Libya
The EU and the Libyan Crisis - In Quest of Coherence?
Nicole Koenig
The EU's reaction is slow; the EU is divided; the EU is unable to deliver: time
and time again, newspapers depict the image of an incoherent and uncoordinated
EU foreign policy. This time, the topic under discussion was the EU's response
to the Libyan crisis. Many have compared the EU's internal divisions over Libya
with those over the Iraq war, an often used example to illustrate the limits of
the Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP). This article aims to assess the
coherence of the EU's short- to medium-term response to the Libyan crisis. It
distinguishes between the horizontal, inter-institutional, vertical and
multilateral dimensions of EU coherence. The analysis shows that unilateral
actions or inactions of the member states mainly account for the EU's incoherent
response. The post-Lisbon institutional structure has done little to compensate
for these internal divisions. While the EU cannot change the course of national
foreign policies, it should increase its 'leadership for coherence', Europeanise
its crisis response in the medium term and aim at preventing incoherence in the
longer term.
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The Berlusconi Government and Intervention in Libya
Ben Lombardi
Rome's approach to the Libyan unrest has been guided by two objectives: to
protect the commercial relationship that it has built up with Libya over the
past decade, and to prevent a mass exodus of migrants toward Italy. Initially,
it was believed that these objectives would be endangered by the intervention
advocated by Great Britain and France. By early April, principally because
Washington's support for the military mission became clearer, the government's
policy changed. Italy secured commitments from the rebel leaders to honour
existing agreements and to scale future relations to the level of support they
receive. Although Rome's concern about immigration proved to be exaggerated, it
was also addressed in late April when France agreed to support a proposed reform
of Schengen. Once it concluded that the Qadhafi regime was unlikely to survive,
Italy cast aside its earlier caution and joined the NATO-led war.
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Comparing Neighbourhood Policies
Just Good Friends? The European Union's Multiple Neighbourhood Policies
Michael Emerson
The EU's self-definition as an integrating civilian, democratic and legal space
of political norms and economic regulation, without any significant military
power structure, profoundly affects the conception of its neighbourhood
policies. It tries to promote with its neighbours what it has achieved itself at
home. While the EU has one explicit neighbourhood policy, there are no less than
13 concentric circles of graduated neighbourhood relationships surrounding its
territory, with a continuous blurring of categories between them. The EU can be
described as engaging in a policy of Eurocentric normativism. But does trying to
make neighbours 'become like us' amount to an effective strategy? There is
widespread agreement that although the enlargement process for accession of new
member states has proved impressively transformative, the official ENP,
sometimes called 'enlargement-lite', has not. Nevertheless, while the
conditionality mechanism has proved weak in the absence of the accession
incentive, the alternative of Europeanisation by socialisation might still work
gradually in the longer term in the outer neighbourhood.
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The United States and Latin America: The Neighbourhood has Changed
Peter Hakim
Centrifugal forces are gaining strength year by year in inter-American
relations. US policy toward neighbouring Latin America is today retreating from
a long tradition of efforts to formulate a Latin American-wide policy. It is
early to dismiss the prospect of a future resurgence of hemispheric cooperation.
Surely the US and Latin America share enough common interests and values for
cooperation, even integration to benefit all countries. But the trend is now
toward a Latin America increasingly independent of the US. The United States is
becoming more and more focused on its own problems, while increasingly middle
class, globalised Latin American nations are finding new partners, and
determinedly pursuing their own course.
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China in its Neighbourhood: A 'Middle Kingdom' not Necessarily at the Centre of Power
Zhimin Chen and Zhongqi Pan
China's regional policy is mainly centred on its efforts to forge a friendly,
stable and prosperous neighbourhood. To achieve this end, China has developed an
approach combining both partnership bilateralism and tailored regional
multilateralism. By and large, China does not consider its neighbourhood as a
whole and has been very cautious and hesitant to engage in overarching
'region-building'. China has relied mostly on soft (attractive) use of power,
particularly economic power, supported by cultural and assurance diplomacy, even
though diplomatic and economic coercion have been exercised occasionally. China
has once again become the biggest economy in Asia. Yet, neither the new power
configuration in Asia nor China's own ambitions point to a return to the old
'Middle Kingdom' with China holding a dominant position in its neighbourhood.
China will most probably continue to see itself as a self-restrained regional
power in the foreseeable future.
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European Union Training Mission in Somalia and the Limits of Liberal Peacebuilding:
Can EUTM Contribute to Sustainable and Inclusive Peace?
Kseniya Oksamytna
The European Union Training Mission (EUTM) in Somalia, the EU's mission to
contribute to the training of the Somali Security Forces, was deployed in April
2010 and extended for another 12-month period in July 2011. Despite the positive
assessment of the outcome of the first training period, the overall feebleness
of Somalia's Transitional Federal Government puts the political feasibility of
the mission into question. EUTM Somalia can be subjected to many of the same
criticisms as the liberal peacebuilding agenda in general for trying to contain
rather than resolve conflict and maintaining a top-down perspective which
ignores organic, indigenous local structures.
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Learning From a Troubled Experience - Transatlantic Lessons from the Nuclear Standoff with Iran
Riccardo Alcaro
With the US eventually embracing the European-devised 'dual track' approach
comprising both sanctions and incentives, the transatlantic partners have
currently reached a remarkable level of convergence on how to deal with the
Iranian nuclear conundrum. Although EU-US unity might not be enough to solve the
dispute, the experience of transatlantic cooperation on Iran offers some
important lessons. It shows that strategic convergence between the transatlantic
partners, or lack thereof, has a considerable impact on the way a crisis unfolds
in an area in which both parties have a stake. It highlights the added value
represented by European/EU political and economic assets in a situation in which
US military options are both unlikely to have the desired effect and at grave
risk of backlash. Finally, it sets an important precedent for a specific option
for intra-EU and EU-US cooperation - the contact or lead group - that seems to
suit the emerging multipolar world better than other, more institutionalised
methods.
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Book Reviews
A Governmentality Approach to Peace Operations
Elisa Lopez Lucia
Review of: Governing disorder : UN peace operations, international security,
and democratization in the post-Cold War era, by Laura Zanotti,
Pennsylvania State University Press, 2011
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Russia's Dual State
Felix Hett
Review of: The crisis of Russian democracy : the dual state, factionalism,
and the Medvedev succession, by Richard Sakwa, Cambridge University Press, 2011
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Recent Publications
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