Book presentation
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Germany fulfills a new leadership role in Europe that it never applied for. The trade tionally restraint Germany shoulders more responsibility on foreign and security policy matters. The diplomatic initiative in the Ukraine crisis, the EU sanction regime against Russia or the refugee deal with Turkey all feature a strong role played by Germany. Especially after the United Kingdom voted to leave the EU, a more proactive Berlin might have to fill the power vacuum in Europe. However, the new role of Germany prompts new questions worth discussing: How sustainable is an EU foreign and security policy based on German leadership? What instruments, policies and partners will Germany choose? What drivers in Germany define its relations to Russia and the United States and determine its stance on the use of military force?
The podium discussion is part of a project on Germany’s role in the EU’s foreign and Security Policy that the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung co-organizes with the Finnish Institute of International Affairs (FIIA). It will present findings of the project’s FIIA report “Europe’s New Political Engine: Germany’s role in the EU’s foreign and security policy”.
3:00 pm Words of Welcome
Juha Jokela
Director of the European Union research programme
Jakob Wöllenstein
Desk Officer Central and Eastern Europe, Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung
3:10 pm Presentation of the main findings of the study „Europe’s New Political Engine“
Elisabeth Bauer
Director of the KAS-Office for the Baltic States and Scandinavia
Niklas Helwig
Finnish Institute of International Affairs
3:45 pm Comments
Dr. Andreas Nick MdB
Member of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the German Bundestag
Judy Dempsey
Nonresident Senior Associate, Carnegie Europe, Brussels
Jana Puglierin
German Council on Foreign Relations (DGAP)