Executive summary. -- Introduction. -- 1. Putting foreign policy and defense back on the table. -- 2.1 Foreign policy and defense will not return to the forefront by itself. -- 2.2 A case for putting EU-UK cooperation back on the agenda. -- 3. Options for the future. -- 3.1 A comprehensive deal. -- 3.2 A series of piecemeal agreements. -- 3.3 Eschewing formal agreements. -- 4. Charting a course. -- 4.1 Successive stages. -- 4.2 Accompanying measures
Summary
Maintaining a deep relationship between the UK and Europe is as necessary as ever. It is key that policy makers remain seized of the matter. The UK and the EU will continue to share the same geography, the same strategic environment, and the same values, a reality recognized on both sides of the Channel. Under Brexit, the EU will lose the ability to tap into the UK's substantial capabilities while the UK will no longer benefit from accessing EU instruments tailored to intervene on the Southern flank, blending development assistance and military force
Notes
"February 2021."
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references
Notes
Online resource; title from PDF title page (Atlantic Council, viewed February 17, 2021)