Media/Opinion pieces
Media/Opinion pieces
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About the sovereignty of Europe

In his 2017 Sorbonne speech, President Macron has pleaded “for a sovereign, united, democratic Europe.” Four years have passed and France has chaired the Council of the European Union (EU) in the first half of 2022. On this occasion, the French presidency  aimed at advancing on the EU’s sovereignty. From the state of play, it emerges that, while the EU brings together elements of internal sovereignty, the Member States remain sovereign, and that, while the EU is a recognised actor in international relations, it does not have the sovereignty  which must rely on power.  

 

Since 2017, crises, especially the pandemic, have marked the world. The European Union has been able to overcome these crises by adding elements to its sovereignty, whether it be its budgetary capacity, the consolidation of the euro, the search for a greater industrial autonomy, the affirmation of its commercial interests, progress, albeit still insufficient, in the field of defence, and even in the judicial field, despite the crisis opened by Poland. However, the situation has not fundamentally changed and the question of Europe’s sovereignty remains open, either internally or in the face of the continental states that are imposing themselves on the international scene. 

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Digital sovereignty and cybersecurity of Europe

History is never written in advance, because it is the result of the will of the nation. This article brings together the work conducted during the first half of 2021 as part of a political and ecological think tank on the issues of security and digital sovereignty. It approaches the subject from four angles: environmental security, the digital sovereignty of citizens’ uses, the digital sovereignty of economic operators and the digital sovereignty of States.

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A NECESSARY MEASURE AGAINST EXTRATERRITORIAL COERCION: TO COMPENSATE OUR VICTIMS

“The aggressed EU must foot this bill of the European victims without
condition, restore proper international dignity and try ultimately to get compensation
from the rule breaker: meaning in addition to any due compensation of our own EU
victims, we must build proportionate countermeasures in full respect of the international
law. The full protection of our victims cannot become the blind spot of a well-intentioned
and comprehensive EU anti-coercion instrument.”
By Denis Verret, President, DV Conseil and member of the EuroDéfense-France Board.