EU Global Strategy Conference organised by EUISS and Real Institute Elcano, Barcelona

Similar documents
Speech by HRVP Mogherini at the EU-NGO Human Rights Forum

Human Rights under threat: exploring new approaches in a challenging global context

That's right, revise, reboot, rebuild. What is your idea to answer that objective?

SIMULATION : The Middle East after the territorial elimination of the Islamic state in Iraq and Syria

the Middle East (18 December 2013, no ).

SPEECH. Over the past year I have travelled to 16 Member States. I have learned a lot, and seen at first-hand how much nature means to people.

THE ISIS CHALLENGE IN LIBYA

Global Affairs May 13, :00 GMT Print Text Size. Despite a rich body of work on the subject of militant Islam, there is a distinct lack of

The Coming One World Religion - pt 2. The next group that we will examine is the United Alliance of Civilizations. The website for the...

THE ANDREW MARR SHOW INTERVIEW: TONY BLAIR FORMER PRIME MINISTER JUNE 14 th 2014

Policy Workshop of the EU-Middle East Forum (EUMEF) Middle East and North Africa Program. Deconstructing Islamist Terrorism in Tunisia

Remarks by High Representative/Vice- President Federica Mogherini following her

Analysis of ISIS's Claims of Responsibility for Terrorist Attacks Carried Out Abroad. Overview 1

Speech by Federal President Frank-Walter Steinmeier at Singapore Management University on 2 November Thank you very much for the warm welcome!

THE GERMAN CONFERENCE ON ISLAM

The Terrorism Threat In 2012: Global Perspective Terrorism Risk And Insurance Markets In 2012 OECD Headquarters Paris, France 5 December 2012

Situation of Christians in the context of freedom of religion

Assessing ISIS one Year Later

International Affairs Program Research Report

Conference Report. Shockwaves of the. war in Syria

St Thomas Lutheran Church/ Finland Saturday Evening Mass 21/5/ 2016 On the Occasion of The Bible Event Rev. Samer Azar/ Amman

Heidi Alexander speech to Lewisham East Labour Party 01/07/2016

Overview 1. On June 29, 2014, ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-baghdadi declared the establishment of the

Introduction. Special Conference. Combating the rise of religious extremism. Student Officer: William Harding. President of Special Conference

Dissent from Vice Chair Zogby On IRFA Implementation Section of 2017 Annual Report

Recently, the group released videos showing the killing of two American journalists in Syria.

MBC EMBRACING AN INTERNATIONAL IDENTITY

Our Joint Declaration. International Scout Conference Scouting for Europe

THE IRAQI KURDISTAN REGION S ROLE IN DEFEATING ISIL

CHINA IN THE WORLD PODCAST. Host: Paul Haenle Guest: Dmitri Trenin

Supporting the Syrian Opposition

Federica Mogherini's speech at the Conference "Thinking Europe Forward" on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the Treaty of Maastricht

REPORT ON A SEMINAR REGARDING ARAB/ISLAMIC PERCEPTIONS OF THE INFORMATION CAMPAIGN

I. Conceptual Organization: Evolution & Longevity Framework (Dr. Allison Astorino- Courtois, 3 NSI)

. 2. Select region - 5. the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). It seeks to establish a regional,

Syria: to end a never-ending war. Michel Duclos

Joint Remarks to the Press Following Bilateral Meeting. Delivered 20 May 2011, Oval Office of the White House, Washington, D.C.

Reflections on the Paris Attacks

WLUML "Heart and Soul" by Marieme Hélie-Lucas

Why The U.S. Must Stop Supporting Kurdish Forces In Syria BY POLITICAL INSIGHTSApril 3, 2018

Pentagon Address on the Progress Toward Defeating ISIL. delivered 6 July 2015, The Pentagon, Washington, D.C.

RESOLUTION ON THE SITUATION OF THE ROHINGYA MUSLIM MINORITY IN MYANMAR PRESENTED TO THE

Before the Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade Subcommittee of the Committee on Foreign Affairs

Joint Presser with President Mahmoud Abbas. delivered 10 January 2008, Muqata, Ramallah

I m writing this public letter to you EU because I think at times people from the outside see issues in a clearer manner.

British fanatics heading to Iraq to join ISIS militants in their HUNDREDS amid fears 'they could bring terror to UK'

NATO Press Conference After Defense Ministerial. delivered 15 February 2017, NATO Headquarters, Brussels, Belgium

WHY WOULD A MUSLIM MOVE TOWARD CHRIST?

Conference on Peaceful Coexistence, Dialogue and Combating Radicalization

Is Extremist Violence in the West Caused by the Clash of Cultures?

Frequently Asked Questions about Peace not Walls

Jihadist Strategies in the War on Terrorism

Inter Religious Tolerance and Peaceful co-existence in Ethiopia

PRO/CON: How should the U.S. defeat Islamic State?

14TH MIDDLE EAST SECURITY SUMMIT THE IISS MANAMA DIALOGUE FOURTH PLENARY SESSION SATURDAY 27 OCTOBER 2018 BRETT MCGURK

PREVENTION OF EXTREMISM IN COPENHAGEN

Radical Islam In The House: The Plan To Take America For The Global Islamic State By Kate Mathieson, Michael Coffman READ ONLINE

A Leading Political Figure Reports on Israel

describes and condemns is an ideology followed by a fraction of over a billion followers.

Al-Arabiya Television Interview With Hisham Melhem. delivered 26 January 2009

Tolerance in Discourses and Practices in French Public Schools

28 th Arab Summit: Beyond the Veneer of Optimism INSTITUTE OF STRATEGIC STUDIES. Issue Brief. April 14, Arhama Siddiqa, Research Fellow, ISSI

Report-Public Talk. Western-Muslim Tensions Key Challenges

2-Provide an example of an ethnic clash we have discussed in World Cultures: 3-Fill in the chart below, using the reading and the map.

Islam and Religion in the Middle East

Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Center for Special Studies (C.S.S)

Radicalization Prevention and the Limits of Tolerance

Anatomy of an Insurgency

Syria's Civil War Explained

CUFI BRIEFING HISTORY - IDEOLOGY - TERROR

[For Israelis only] Q1 I: How confident are you that Israeli negotiators will get the best possible deal in the negotiations?

News Without Borders. by Enas Asiri. St. John s University: The Language Connection. Syrian Refugees: A Snapshot of the Crisis in the

The cover of the first edition Orientalism is a detail from the 19th-century Orientalist painting The Snake Charmer by Jean-Léon Gérôme ( ).

Jihadist women, a threat not to be underestimated

U.S. Admits Airstrike in Syria, Meant to Hit ISIS, Killed Syrian Troops

OTM at "The Contribution of Culture to the Implementation of the Europe 2020 Strategy" Conference in Budapest, 28th February 2011

WORKING GROUP: BACK TO THE FUTURE, EUROPEAN JEWRY Moderator: Emanuel Halperin Content prepared by: Dov Maimon

Carleton University Learning in Retirement Program (Oct-Dec 2017) Israel/Palestine: Will it ever end? Welcome. Peter Larson

Annual Review 2016 GIVING LIFE WORDS. sgm lifewords. SGM Lifewords Freely sharing the Bible s life words since

June 2018 History, people and hope in the Middle East. Philip Woods, Area Coordinator, Middle East and Europe Presbyterian World Mission

Syria's Civil War Explained

Congressional Testimony

refugees) terror Renaissance

II. From civil war to regional confrontation

Arab-Israeli Conflict. Early beginnings : 19 th century to 1947

Opening Session of the Second ADF 13 Replenishment Meeting Opening remarks

WORLD MUSLIM LEADER WARNS OF GRAVE THREAT OF A THIRD WORLD WAR

Richard van de Lagemaat Relative Values A Dialogue

International Terrorism and ISIS

/organisations/prime-ministers-office-10-downing-street) and The Rt Hon David Cameron

COUNTERING VIOLENT EXTREMISM IN SINGAPORE. Muhammad Haniff Hassan, PhD

2018 GOAL: $500,000 to Local & Global Missions

Rudolf Böhmler Member of the Executive Board of the Deutsche Bundesbank. 2nd Islamic Financial Services Forum: The European Challenge

United Flight 93 National Memorial Dedication Address. delivered 10 September 2011, Shanksville, PA

Oxford, 27 March Dr Farhan Nizami, Director of the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies,

Morocco. Hundreds of returned jihadists across the Strait of Gibraltar who intelligence officials fear pose a large, residual threat on Europe s

SAUDI ARABIA. and COUNTERTERRORISM FACT SHEET: FIGHTING AND DEFEATING DAESH MAY 2017

Syria's Civil War Explained

THE CHURCH OF SCOTLAND A CO-ORDINATED COMMUNICATION STRATEGY

SERIES: Jesus Loves People MESSAGE: Jesus Loves Terrorists SPEAKER: Skip Heitzig SCRIPTURE: Acts 9:1-16

Transcription:

Speech of the HR/VP Federica Mogherini The EU Internal-External Security Nexus: Terrorism as an example of the necessary link between different dimensions of action EU Global Strategy Conference organised by EUISS and Real Institute Elcano, Barcelona The times we live in call for unity, and for rationality. The events in Paris have shocked not just a country, the people living in Paris, but the whole continent. The hatred we are facing in Paris as well as in Bamako, in the skies of Egypt as well as in Beirut, let alone in Iraq and in Syria on a daily basis such hatred has shocked not just our continent, but the whole world. Military experts will tell you: try to understand what your adversary wants you to do, and do the opposite. We know the objectives of Dae'sh. They are trying to divide us. Division is what makes them strong. So they try to divide us inside our own societies, first of all. The diversity of our societies has made Europe's strength. It is integral part of our identity as Europeans. They want to turn it into a liability. They want our citizens to look at each other with fear and distrust. The terrorists also want to divide us from our Arab and Muslim friends, here and in our region. Dae sh is using the narrative of religion to expand their own influence, and to spread an ideology that feeds on fear. Their un-holy war has nothing to do with faith. It is a struggle for power, dressed up in the narrative of an apocalyptic clash between a self-branded Caliphate and the rest of the world. Let us move beyond this narrative, and think with our own minds. Muslim countries are on the frontline 1

of the fight against Dae'sh. Muslims are the first victims of Dae'sh. As a friend told me a few days ago, a minister of a country that knows terrorism well: they attack mosques, how can they claim to be fighting for religion? It's a pure, traditional, old, and dirty fight for power. Nothing exciting, nothing new. Nothing special. Thirdly, the terrorists want to divide the international community. They want our reaction to be disordered. They hope we will act irrationally. We know what the way forward is: only a pacified Syria heading towards national reconciliation can lay the ground for a long lasting defeat of Dae'sh. And a pacified Syria calls for a united international community. An international community that joins forces, to bring all the relevant actors to the table, and to bridge their differences. What happened on the Turkish-Syrian border two days ago is serious. But, as I told to both the Turkish and the Russian foreign ministers, we cannot throw to the wind months of common work. We need unity more than ever. If we gave up our efforts to start off a political transition, we would only be playing Dae'sh game. There is one mistake we must not make, one mistake we cannot afford today. We cannot act impulsively. We cannot act without a strategy, a vision on what we want to achieve, and how we want to get there. This is exactly what we are trying to do drafting a new European Global Strategy. The Strategy will not address each and every conflict in today's world this is not the point and it would make it quite long, I'm afraid. The new Global Strategy will describe the priorities and the principles of 2

our external action, knowing that internal and external actions have many points in common. A starting point for our work is the close link between our internal and external policies and the effect this has on our security. In a country like Spain, you have witnessed to the evolution of terrorism from a mostly internal issue to a new situation, when the international dimension of terror is much more evident. The first European capital to be targeted was Madrid. Today, foreign policy is no longer what happens in a far-away place. It affects our own life every day. This means that foreign policy can no longer be the exclusive domain of diplomats and policy makers: foreign policy concerns us all. Dealing with this brave new world is no easy task. Opposite attitudes have shaped our European debate. We have experienced the temptation, in the last years, to behave like a "regional policeman", taking the whole weight of our region on our shoulders. And not always with the right answers. On the opposite side of the debate, many have suggested that we try to lock ourselves inside our borders, hiding behind walls or fences. In times of crisis, it is tempting to turn inwards. To stick our heads in the sand and hope problems will pass. None of these attitudes work. The Global Strategy is also about finding the right way between these two poles. So let me try to sketch out a few ideas which might help us find our way. I will focus on two main principles. One is consistency, the other is responsible engagement. 3

Consistency means that our external and our internal action must be guided by the same interests and the same values. Take the refugee crisis. The image of a frightened Europe has only weakened our international standing. The refusal by someone to welcome a relatively small number of refugees has hurt our international credibility. There are much more refugees in Africa than there are in Europe: seven hundred thousand in Ethiopia, half a million in Kenya, and these countries' GDP is obviously not comparable with ours. How can we tell them to take care of their own refugee crisis, if we don't manage to address our own crisis properly? I would like to thank Spain for its balanced approach. We are working to make sure the internal and external side of our policies are consistent. My own job combines internal and external responsibilities, as it brings together the role of High Representative with that of Vice President of the Commission. Since taking office I have convened a monthly meeting of all the Commissioners in charge of a portfolio with an external dimension which is now almost everybody, from transport to health, from climate and energy to development. We have to put all of this together. And I can tell you the entire EU leadership has placed great emphasis on combining forces and working as a team, which is a challenge in itself. But this is not just about Brussels, and the European institutions. It is about Member States and citizens, and the whole of our societies. And it's not easy: think of the terrorists' strategy. They want our States to be more repressive, and our societies to break up. Will we fall into their trap, or will we stick 4

to our own values? Can we uphold a European identity that inspires people around the globe to join us, rather than fight us? Our dream of open borders in our Union is one of Europe's great achievements, a great achievement we now see questioned. So we need to ask ourselves some serious questions. Can we have open borders without sharing intelligence that is crucial to our mutual security? Last week s meeting of Justice and Home Affairs ministers decided to step up information sharing, to look into developing a European system of keeping track of passenger names, to keep even closer control of firearms that circulate in our union and tackle terrorist financing. From January 2016 we will have a European Counter Terrorism Centre run by Europol, working as a hub for the exchange of terrorism related information, including on foreign fighters. The centre will have also a specific unit dedicated to identify, track and tackle violent messages on the web. Fighting Dae sh and other extremists groups is about Syria and Iraq, it s about Libya and the Sahel, but it is also about what we do right here at home. And we see it very clearly in these difficult weeks. It is about helping young people find good jobs, and finding a place in our societies for those who feel alienated and left out. It s about sending a message of unity, of belonging, of inclusion. Defeating the terrorists' threat is our project, internally and externally. 5

We cannot shy away from our responsibility, that is consistency. On our external work, the second principle I'd like to talk about is engagement. In today's world there is no way we can isolate ourselves from the outer world. We cannot fence out our problems. Europe needs to engage, inside our region and beyond. Engagement is our key, our core interest. But such engagement cannot be solitary. No power in the world can carry the whole world on its shoulders. Many have tried, and all have failed. So Europe must promote a new kind of engagement, a more responsible one humble and proud at the same time. The two things can go together very well. Our culture tells us. Responsible engagement goes together with partnership. As I said before, unity is crucial. It is crucial at the global level, where we need to invest all our resources in making multilateralism work. And this can never be taken for granted, it requires hard work. But it is crucial at the regional level, where medium-sized powers often hold the key to peace, and have to be recognized as powers. And it is crucial at the local level, on the ground, where we must find the right partners to promote democracy, stability, national reconciliation. These are some of the ideas we are discussing as we work on our Global Strategy. But let me confess that the reason why I am here is not to update you on the work we are doing in Brussels. A strategy for Europe cannot be written only in the EU institutions. It must come from our European society: the process has to be as inclusive as we can, as open as our societies can be. 6

Today, wherever I go, I see that there is a greater demand for Europe. I know this sounds weird today. Still, I believe our citizens understand very well that Europe holds the key to solving many of our current problems. This means all of us, and I mean all of us, need to take on the responsibility to answer their calls. It's not only Brussels or capital cities. This includes Member States that are sometimes all too quick to blame current problems on a lack of response from 'Brussels', as if Brussels and the European Union were not also the Member States. The time for the blame game is over. It is time we all take our own responsibilities and do what we can to make our Union more effective, and stronger. This means also to change. The best way to make institutions stronger is to change them. We should not be afraid of change, on the contrary, we should be afraid of the lack of change. Our Union will change or will die. That is why we want to carry our work on the Global Strategy forward and outward to Member States, to our partners around the globe and, crucially, to you the policy experts and the wider public. We all have a role to play in it. This strategy is not only about foreign policy; it can be and must be about us as Europeans. About who we are, how we work together and what we share as Europeans. It is about shaping a European public opinion, on how we see the world, and how we want the world to see us. It is about our common European interest. It is about our role in the world, but it is also about us. About shaping a common European sense of direction and 7

purpose. Not just for institutions in Brussels, but for us all, as Europeans. This is a chance that we cannot miss. It's time we hold this exercise, to make a sense of community emerge in our Union. This is why I am here. I'm aware of the difficulties of our times. Still I'm convinced we have a unique chance. Europe has always grown up in moments of crisis. Our Union started just after the II World War. Sometimes we need something big and dramatic to realize how important we are to each other. None of us can face the current challenges alone and expect to succeed. We need a strategy, we need a vision, we need a true Union, we need each other. And I believe we can get out of these difficult times much stronger and united than we've ever been. It's up to us. Thank you. 8