Brief
Is neutrality an outdated concept in Europe?
Since the Russian Federation launched its “special military operation” against Ukraine on 24 February 2022, several European states have broken with their respective traditions of neutrality. Urged by the urgency to take up a position, certain States, such as Finland and Sweden, have officially submitted a request to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) as full members. Does this mean that the various forms of neutrality in Europe have now become untenable? Or that the neutral Countries’ strategic positions, however specific they may be, are currently changing rapidly? Between the Atlantic Alliance and the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) led by Russia, are European States inescapably fated to pick a side? Is the post- USSR piecemeal Europe now giving way to a Europe divided into two blocs?
SUR LE MÊME THÈME
ON THE SAME THEME
PUBLICATIONS
The Ukraine Facility
Promoting peace is not the same as fighting war
EU and China between De-Risking and Cooperation: Scenarios by 2035
Arsenal Europe, Financing Military Capabilities for Ukraine and EU Member States
[FR] NATO summit in Vilnius: mixed results
India and the European Union in 2030
[FR] Faced with the Russian threat, which budgets for which defence?
Enlargement of the European Union: an unexpected revival
A European Political Community for a Geopolitical Era
EU economic governance in the new geopolitical scenario: a policy agenda
Relations with Russia: France’s unique position
[FR] Europe retains public favor in the face of the war in Ukraine
A new world order?
What security guarantees can the EU provide to Ukraine?
Victory, but what kind?
Whose leadership will emerge from the new European geopolitical situation?
European action against Russia: what does the future hold for the sanction strategy?
China and the role of Europe in a new world order
Cyberattacks in Russia’s hybrid war against Ukraine
Which European defence policy?
[FR] European opinions on the war in Ukraine
The war in Ukraine:
what are the consequences for European organisations?
Newsletter June 2022
United in diversity? National responses to the European energy crisis
Regional perspectives on energy citizenship and citizen participation in the energy transition
Stop feeding the bear
Moldova and the war
Making migrant returns a pre-condition of trade openness
What the EU budget can and cannot do in response to the war in Ukraine
Welcoming Ukrainian refugees in the EU
Bosnia and Herzegovina under pressure
Newsletter April 2022
Strategic Compass: industry or power?
One month of war in Ukraine:
the first takeaways
[FR] Ukrainian refugees: the next step
Europe unites in support of Ukraine under attack —Newsletter March 2022
Ukrainian crisis: Rethinking security in Europe
High energy prices. Russia fights back?
European Union / Russia.
EU – Russia: beyond rivalries?
EU security: a matter of political urgency
Supporting Ukraine’s difficult path towards reforms
A catalyst role for the Union
The external challenges of the EU: what strategies?
A new president, for what purpose?
Making more of our interdependence
The EU in the East: too ambitious in rhetoric, too unfocused in action
EU-Russian Relations: Moscow lays down its Conditions
MÉDIAS
MEDIAS
Le monde dans tous ses états
Bilan de l’économie mondiale
‘Russian’s Trojan Horse in the EU’: Orban wants a European Union ‘that would please Vladimir Putin’























































