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      EU Foreign Policy and Post-Soviet Conflicts
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      Book

      EU Foreign Policy and Post-Soviet Conflicts

      DOI link for EU Foreign Policy and Post-Soviet Conflicts

      EU Foreign Policy and Post-Soviet Conflicts book

      Stealth Intervention

      EU Foreign Policy and Post-Soviet Conflicts

      DOI link for EU Foreign Policy and Post-Soviet Conflicts

      EU Foreign Policy and Post-Soviet Conflicts book

      Stealth Intervention
      ByNicu Popescu
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2010
      eBook Published 10 December 2010
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203834787
      Pages 176
      eBook ISBN 9780203834787
      Subjects Politics & International Relations
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      Popescu, N. (2010). EU Foreign Policy and Post-Soviet Conflicts: Stealth Intervention (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203834787

      ABSTRACT

      The European Union is still emerging as a fully fledged foreign policy actor. The vagaries of this process are clearly visible, yet insufficiently explained in the EU policies towards the post-Soviet space.

      EU Foreign Policy and Post-Soviet Conflicts examines EU intervention and non-intervention in conflict resolution, with a specific focus on the EU’s role in the post-soviet conflicts in the South Caucasus and Moldova: Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Nagorno-Karabakh and Transnistria. It explains how EU foreign policy affected these conflicts, but more importantly what EU intervention in these conflicts reveal about the EU itself. Based on extensive field research, the author argues that the reluctant EU intervention in post-Soviet conflicts results from a dichotomous relationship between EU institutions and some EU member states. Popescu argues this demonstrates that EU institutions use policies of ‘stealth intervention’ where they seek to play a greater role in the post-Soviet space, but they do so through relatively low-profile, uncontroversial and depoliticised actions in order to avoid visible Russian opposition.

      Exploring an array of questions related to the EU as a foreign policy actor, this book traces the politics of conflict intervention by EU institutions using original empirical data related to the EU decision making process and will be of interest to students and scholars of European politics, conflict resolution, foreign policy and Post-Soviet politics.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter 1|24 pages

      Introduction

      chapter 2|13 pages

      EU foreign policy and conflict management

      chapter 3|28 pages

      The EU’s piecemeal involvement in Transnistria

      chapter 4|29 pages

      The EU’s reluctant engagement in Abkhazia and South Ossetia

      chapter 5|21 pages

      The EU’s non- involvement in Nagorno- Karabakh

      chapter 6|18 pages

      Conclusions: The EU’s involvement and reluctance

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