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2023-02-0300:00:35






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Kostenloses - Love-songs-of-the-nineteenth-century-Ebook-legally If the Marrakech conference produces a formal agreement, the Union will have a clear and a unique role in the fight against poverty and in the establishment of the Copenhagen criteria for democracy, peace, justice and respect for human rights as the main objective of the EU's foreign policy and as the most effective route to a global and sustainable development. Renewed NDI will be welcome but what does this mean for the EU? Let's be frank, NDI is not a new concept in EU foreign policy as it was already embodied in the 1992 "Common Position " which set out, among other things, to strengthen the democratic, judicial and other institutions which govern the Union. A feature of NDI is that the EU will be made to shoulder a larger share of the international burdens resulting from its commitments in its Member States. This will involve it taking more economic and political risks and accepting a more fragmented world. If NDI is to succeed, it will require greater flexibility and capacity to react. This is not least because large Member States like Germany, with their history of centralist policies and their commitment to power politics, can no longer be expected to deliver more than they already do, regardless of the Union's capabilities. Another difficulty which NDI has to face is the fact that it will need to balance commitments in Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean with those in Central Asia, Africa and Latin America. What does all this mean in practice? What does NDI entail for the EU in terms of its overall foreign policy? The EU's overall foreign policy aims are defined in the Treaty on European Union (Article 17 TEU). These are that the Union should "safeguard and promote the general interests of the Union" through "a common foreign and security policy". The Treaty also establishes that the Union should take "specially into consideration" "the need for a democratic, pluralistic, rule-based international order" which can "ensure the maintenance of international peace and security" and "cooperate with the United Nations in order to strengthen it". The Treaty further recognises that "especially important" are "the principles of the rule of law and of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, including the respect for the obligations arising from international treaties ". These provisions are the basis of the common foreign and security policy outlined in the Maastricht Treaty (Article 43 TEU). The first sentence of the common policy says that "the Union is based on the Community method" - a core element of the federalist tradition - "by which the Member States, acting in concert, pursue their respective interests and the general interest of the Union". The following sentences set out the overall objectives of the common policy. The first says that its main aim is "to strengthen the security of the Union" by "safeguarding its territory, upholding its common values, contributing to the prevention and resolution of conflicts and supporting its external borders". The second says that its fundamental objective is to "secure the physical and psychological well-being of its citizens" and that its main duties are to "ensure the security of its citizens through international collaboration" and to "protect the fundamental rights of all persons" and the "integrity" of the "rule of law in the EU and its Member States and in the international community". In the main, the European Commission has fulfilled the task of formulating the Union's common foreign and security policy.


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