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Untersuchte Arbeit: Seite: 106, Zeilen: 1-13 |
Quelle: Juncos 2005 Seite(n): 88, Zeilen: 24-32 |
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The EU's intervention in BiH, supported by significant economic assistance and using military instruments, has proved essential to endorsing the institution-building process taking place in BiH.364
In the early 1990s, the search for a negotiated solution that could stop the bloody conflict in the Former Yugoslavia was considered by both European and international observers to be the first test for the embryonic Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP). Consequently, at the beginning of the Yugoslav crisis, the Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jacques Poos, then head of the EC presidency, declared that the organization would intervene in Yugoslavia because it was "the hour of Europe, not the hour of United States". His statement summarized the high expectations among the EC members regarding the CFSP, expectations which made subsequent failure even more painful.365 364 Juncos, Ana, The EU’s post-Conflict Intervention in Bosnia and Herzegovina: (re)Integrating the Balkans and/or (re)Inventing EU?,( 2005) 6 Southeast European Politics 88-108. 365 Ibid., pp. 88-108. |
The EU’s intervention in BiH, supported by significant economic assistance and using military instruments, has proved essential to endorsing the institutional-building process currently taking place in BiH. [...]
Introduction In the early 1990s, the search for a negotiated solution that could stop the bloody conflict in the Former Yugoslavia was considered by both European and international observers to be the first test for the embryonic Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP). Consequently, at the beginning of the Yugoslav crisis, the Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jacques Poos, then head of the EC (European Community) Presidency, declared that the organization would intervene in Yugoslavia because it was “the hour of Europe, not the hour of the United States” (Gordon 1997/1998, 75). His statement summarised the high expectations among EC members regarding the CFSP, expectations which made subsequent failure even more painful. Gordon, Phillip H., 1997/1998. “Europe’s Uncommon Foreign Policy”, International Security, Vol.22, No. 3, pp. 74-100. |
Continuation from the previous page. The source is given, but it is not made clear, how much text overlap there is. The reference to Gordon is dropped. |
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