Archive / Working Paper
Europe's engagement with moderate Islamists
05/02/2009 By Kristina Kausch
Direct engagement with Islamist political movements in the Middle East and North Africa has typically been a no-go for European governments. In recent years, however, the limits of sole cooperation with authoritarian rulers in the region have become increasingly obvious. European policy-makers have started to realise that they must widen their spectrum of interlocutors if their policies are not to lose track of the realities on the ground. In spite of widespread reservations regarding the democratic credentials of certain groups, there is a sense among EU member states that the inclusion of all relevant societal actors, and especially some form of greater strategic engagement with moderate Islamists, will be unavoidable.

J. Cayetano Delgado
Non-violent, non-revolutionary Islamist parties that aspire to take power by means of a democratic process have often been portrayed as potential reform actors that carry the hopes of a volatile region for genuine democratic development and long-term stability. In spite of this changing perspective on moderate Islamists, the EU and most member states maintain their policy of excluding all organisations with an Islamist leaning from political dialogue, cooperation and funding activities. In the present study, a survey among EU government representatives and Islamist politicians on their ties and contacts to date comes to conclude that the how, when, with whom and why of engagement with Islamist actors in general remain matters of great controversy among EU governments.
This controversy has led to a lowest-common-denominator policy on the EU level that touches on the region’s hotspots, and that is likely to remain reactive rather than preventive.
Download the full version of this publication, available in English (657 kB)
Spanish (226 kB)
To read or listen to the comments of our experts in the media about this and other topics, please visit our Press section.
Keywords
Algeria Authoritarian regimes Bahrain CFSP Democracy Democracy aid Democracy promotion Democratisation Dialogue Diplomacy Egypt EU EU Foreign Policy Europe European Union France Gaza Strip and West Bank Germany Hybrid Regimes Islam Jordan Kuwait Lebanon Mediterranean Dialogue MENA Middle East Middle East and North Africa Morocco North Africa Norway Political Reform Portugal Security Spain Sweden Syria Tunisia United KingdomRelated publications
- An Islamist Government in Morocco?
- Is the European Union supporting democracy in its neighbourhood?
- Morocco: negotiating change with the Makhzen
- Planting an olive tree: the state of reform in Jordan
- Political change in the Gulf States: beyond Cosmetic Reform?
- Political Islam and European Foreign Policy
- Political Islam: ready for engagement?
- The challenges of democratisation and political reform in the Middle East: between autocracy, islamism and liberalism
Bio author: Kristina Kausch
Democracy promotion. Maghreb. Egypt. Morocco. Tunisia. Mediterranean. Political Islam.

