Changing approaches to security / Working Paper
A New Agenda for US-EU Security Cooperation
21/01/2010 By Megan Chabalowski, Daniel Korski, Daniel Serwer

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Through the ups and downs of the US-European security relationship, including stark disagreements over conflicts such as the Bosnian War in the mid-1990s and the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, there has been growing desire on both sides for more practical collaboration on conflict prevention and crisis management not only within a NATO framework, but also directly between the US and the European Union (EU).
On the eve of the fifteen-year anniversary of the New Transatlantic Agenda, which
forms the basis of the US-EU relationship, three scholars – Daniel Korski, Daniel Serwer and Megan Chabalowski, one European and two Americans – examine the history of the relationship, US and EU security capabilities and lay out an agenda for the future.
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Keywords
EU EU Foreign Policy Europe Security USBio author: Megan Chabalowski
Megan Chabalowski is research assistant at the United States Institute of Peace.
Bio author: Daniel Korski
Daniel Korski is senior policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations.
Bio author: Daniel Serwer
Daniel Serwer is vice president for centers of peacebuilding innovation.

