Affiliation:
1. Dokuz Eylul University, Turkey
Abstract
In 2016, the EU Global Strategy introduced the ambition of strategic autonomy,
referring to the ability to protect the Union against external threats autonomously. To
realise this ambition, the EU also launched various capability development initiatives,
in particular, the European Defence Fund (EDF). Much of the available literature
presents rationalist explanations of the EU’s development of strategic autonomy and
the EDF. These studies attribute strategic autonomy ambition to external conditions
and consider it as an act of strategic hedging or bandwagoning. However, the
subsequent limited progress in actual capability development casts doubt on these
explanations. By drawing on historical institutionalism, this study examines the EU’s
current approach to strategic autonomy to see whether internal factors would offer
an alternative explanation to the disjunction between the ambitions and actions. For
this aim, the study scrutinises the evolution of the EDF as an instrument and the role
of the Commission as an agent of change. Based on primary and secondary data, the
analysis shows that even though external crises have created critical junctures that
compel the EU to reorient its goals, the endogenous elements of institutional change
have significantly influenced the EU’s choice of means and redistribution of resources. The findings reveal that the Commission’s ability to reinterpret the original rules and
exploit gaps and ambiguities in their local enactment in a path-dependent manner
has considerably affected the outcome of this change.
Publisher
Metropolitan University Prague
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