The Legal Foundations of a European Army

14 Pages Posted: 16 Oct 2015 Last revised: 31 Jan 2019

Date Written: October 16, 2015

Abstract

A European Army featured at the very beginning of the European integration process. In the early 1950s the "Plan Pléven" proposed to establish a European Defence Community comprising inter alia of an integrated European Defence Force. However, the plan failed and the notion of a European army disappeared from the European agenda for a long time. While the creation of a European army is controversial and not very likely in the short term, the (Common) European Security and Defence Policy developed since the late 1990s might well lead to a permanent European military force in the medium or long term. However, so far EU military missions (in Bosnia, the DRC, Mali, or the Horn of Africa), while based on a permanent intergovernmental framework and EU military bodies, have been conducted by forces made up of national Member State forces formed on an ad hoc basis. The paper will examine the legal and policy arguments for a European army and discuss how the existing legal framework under the Treaty of Lisbon would need to be reformed to permit the establishment of such an entity.

Keywords: European army, defence integration, subsidiarity, flexibility

JEL Classification: K39, K33

Suggested Citation

Trybus, Martin, The Legal Foundations of a European Army (October 16, 2015). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2675017 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2675017

Martin Trybus (Contact Author)

Birmingham Law School ( email )

Edgbaston
Birmingham, AL B15 2TT
United Kingdom
01214146330 (Phone)
01214143585 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://www.law.bham.ac.uk

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