A journal on German & European foreign affairs, formerly BerlinPolicy, published by German Council on Foreign Relations @dgapev. English edition of @Int_Politik
With each new Trumpian twist and turn, Merz has become more convinced that Europeans—and Germany in particular—need to find new partners around the world (in addition to the transatlantic alliance).
Read @Andreas__Rinke in our spring issue: https://t.co/djKhI9DXEb
The Christian Democrats have had a mixed start to this year’s regional votes. But for Chancellor Friedrich Merz, the state of the Social Democrats is more worrying than a grab-bag of election results.
@HoffHenning's latest Berlin Cable: https://t.co/sQKvQ1v3VP
The EU needs to take secure chemical supply chains more seriously, @RANDEurope's Francesca Ghiretti writes in our spring issue. Right now, chemicals are a neglected part of Europe’s economic security.
https://t.co/cn41QwXzsJ
NEW: Great powers' use of regulatory heft, trade flows, and pure economic coercion as instruments of foreign policy has passed the highwater mark. Middle powers are likely to profit.
Read @jfriedlanderdc on the limits of economic statecraft: https://t.co/7h2UmVZz5C
NEW: The Iran war started as a war of choice, but it is now morphing into one of necessity, Iran expert @ksadjadpour tells IPQ. Now, Europeans are facing a dilemma that is not of their making.
https://t.co/t14xZOvXrU
The world is facing the end of an idealistic-normative approach to the international order. Germany needs to recalibrate its approach.
Read @markspeich in our spring issue: https://t.co/2Wn0vy7QZ8
With the logic of current US foreign policy solely based on power, the question for Europe is whether it can muster the strength, cohesion, and nerve required to shape whatever global order comes next.
Wojciech Solak in our spring issue: https://t.co/wQ4npSyuGC
One year on from Donald Trump’s return to the White House, a solid majority in Germany no longer trusts the United States. Opinions about what role the country should play in Europe, though, remain in flux.
Read @lehrer_jonathan: https://t.co/6juOEW5xdF
The best time to prevent a crisis is before it happens. But which crisis, and how long do we have?
Read @rebeccawire on Europe’s predicament: https://t.co/1uzqGvxI9I
Poland's nationalist-populist Law and Justice (PiS) party has decided to make Poland’s attitude to the EU the country’s key political cleavage. This is unprecedented and dangerous.
Read @PiotrBuras1 in our spring issue: https://t.co/skSqe2tm0i
With each new Trumpian twist and turn, Merz has become more convinced that Europeans—and Germany in particular—need to find new partners around the world (in addition to the transatlantic alliance).
Read @Andreas__Rinke in our spring issue: https://t.co/djKhI9DXEb
The future of German foreign policy? @dgapev@IPQuarterly has asked @fuecks, @markspeich & me to contribute to a short series: Fast Forward.
My argument: Germany’s foreign policy debate is too narrow. Foreign policy is also fiscal policy.
A few thoughts:
https://t.co/aCqnIaluCb
Friedrich Merz claims to have a brand-new German foreign policy—but so far, there’s been more continuity than change with his government.
What Berlin needs is a major strategy for protecting Europe’s security, @henninghoff argues in our new issue: https://t.co/nPUfwIxBrD
New from @JosephdeWeck: In the age of weapons of mass disruption, Europe's economy cannot afford to seize up every time geopolitical friction erupts. Leaders must plan for frequent upheavals, short intervals between them, and unreliable global trade flows.
https://t.co/6cb8UuKG4v
The debate about EU enlargement is fast approaching a critical phase as member states consider the question of how to facilitate Ukraine’s accession. Germany is starting to become more flexible on the subject, @MilanN_inBerlin and Nikola Xaviereff write. https://t.co/2IEeC3zM4e
Faced with a Trump administration that is treating allies as free-riders, the Japanese are trying to prove their indispensability—due to a lack of other options, writes @dgapev's Thomas Kleine-Brockhoff.
https://t.co/l4ZWwkSwpM
NEW: The European Union doesn’t think of itself as a geopolitical power in the South Caucasus. But its policies there are constraining Russia in ways that matter strategically—regardless of Brussels’ intentions.
https://t.co/IEgBzPHwSV