Definition of Common foreign and security policy (cfsp)

EU English Glossary
Common foreign and security policy (CFSP)
The common foreign and security policy (CFSP) was established and is governed by Title V of the Treaty on European Union. It replaced European Political Cooperation (EPC) and provides for the eventual framing of a common defence policy which might in time lead to a common defence.

The objectives of this second pillar of the Union are set out in Article 11 of the EU Treaty and are to be attained through specific legal instruments (joint action, common position) which have to be adopted unanimously in the Council. With the entry into force of the Treaty of Amsterdam, the European Union also has a new instrument at its disposal - the common strategy - which is referred to in the Article 12 of the EU Treaty. The Treaty of Amsterdam also provided for qualified majority voting under certain conditions and since it was signed the CFSP has been developing in practice at every European Council.

The Treaty of Nice introduced the possibility, under certain conditions, of establishing closer cooperation in the field of the CFSP for the implementation of joint actions and common positions. This closer cooperation may not be used for matters with military or defence implications.

See:

Abstention, constructive (positive abstention)
Common position (CFSP) 
Common strategy (CFSP)
Coreu (CORrespondance EUropeenne)
Declaration (CFSP) 
Joint action (CFSP) 
NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation)
Pillars of the European Union 
Planning and Early Warning Unit
Political and Security Committee (PSC)
Single institutional framework 
Title V of the EU Treaty (CFSP) 
Western European Union (WEU) 


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