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003 ES-MaBCM
005 20240919062909.0
008 230421s2023 fr |||||s|||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _cES-MaBCM
100 1 _9128297
_aAndersson, Jan Joel
245 1 0 _aEuropean defence partnerships
_b: stronger together
_cJan Joel Andersson
_h[Recurso electrónico]
260 _aParis
_b : European Union Institute for Security Studies
_c , 2023
300 _a8 p.
490 0 _aBrief
_v3
504 _aBibliografía: p. 8
520 _aEuropean defence is built on cooperation: between NATO and the EU; between the EU and its partners; and a myriad of multilateral and bilateral defence cooperation agreements among EU Member States and beyond. But is this intricate architecture a confusing mishmash of duplications and inefficiencies, or a web of steel providing the foundation for stronger European defence? In Europe, the EU’s most important defence partner is the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). With 21 – soon 23 – EU Member States also being NATO Allies, the two organisations are the key pillars of the European security architecture. This architecture, however, also relies on the EU’s partnerships with key countries outside the Union as well as on EU Member States’ own multilateral and bilateral defence cooperation arrangements.
610 2 7 _aUnión Europea
_2
_952895
610 2 0 _9116848
_aONU
650 7 _aCooperación militar
650 7 _aSeguridad europea
651 4 _aEstados Unidos
_9115376
856 _uhttps://mpr.bage.es/cgi-bin/koha/opac-retrieve-file.pl?id=f051a21e9e015edb181d15f2fba6c16e
_yDESCARGAR DOCUMENTO
942 _cLE
999 _c224621
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