Revision with unchanged content. The growth of the Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) of the European Union, and in particular its military dimension during recent years, has been the subject of much public debate. Meanwhile, the parallel development of an external intelligence structure in the Council of the EU has hardly been noticed. The present book assesses the significance of intelligence co-operation between Member States in a Union that is assuming increasing responsibility in the international security environment, and its implications for existing security alliances. It describes the founding process of the strategic intelligence assessment unit, the so-called Situation Centre (SITCEN), in the Council of the EU and seeks to explain its organisation and the types and sources of intelligence that it assesses. While the study examines the main political and practical obstacles to enhanced sharing of intelligence, it argues that the potential strengths of a fully integrated European intelligence function, within and outside the Union, make the establishment of a Central European Intelligence Agency inevitable in the long term.
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