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Commentary
Strategic Europe

The Right Prize for the Right Organization

The EU has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize today. It is the right prize for the right organization at the right time.

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By Jan Techau
Published on Oct 12, 2012
Strategic Europe

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The EU has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize today. It is the right prize for the right organization at the right time.

There are clearly two reasons for the Nobel Committee's decision. One is the acknowledgement of the EU's unique contribution to peace, stability, and reconciliation on the European continent following the Second World War. Alongside NATO, which kept the western part of the continent free from Soviet aggression, it was the EU that delivered internal consolidation and new ways of cooperation between erstwhile and traditional enemies in Europe.

At the end of the cold war, the EU's enlargement policy offered new chances to Central and Eastern European states after their long ordeal behind the iron curtain. The EU peace project can't be praised enough for these accomplishments.

The second reason is clearly political. The Peace Prize has always been a political one. It gives the EU a morale boost at a time when it has been shaken to its core. The prize is an encouragement to the EU to continue its peace-generating integration work. It is a reminder to eurosceptics to consider the real merits of the union they so despise, and it is an appeal to Europe to finally become a serious strategic player in the world.

In that sense, the award is also an aide-memoir to Europeans that they carry a responsibility few others must shoulder: to pacify their own, historically unstable continent, and to be a force for good in the world.

About the Author

Jan Techau

Director, Europe Team, Eurasia Group

Techau is director with Eurasia Group's Europe team, covering Germany and European security from Berlin. Previously, he was director of Carnegie Europe.

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Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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