Europe’s Self-Inflicted Irrelevance: Why the Paris Summit Is a Sideshow
The numbers tell the story of a continent that simply refuses to take its own security seriously. In 2022, the European Union’s total defense spending was just 1.3% of GDP. Some countries, like Ireland, spent as little as 0.2%. Meanwhile, Russia has ramped up its defense spending by over 40% in 2024, surpassing the combined military budgets of all European nations. China, too, continues its meteoric rise in military spending, further cementing its status as a global power capable of shaping security dynamics far beyond its borders. Europe, by contrast, remains fragmented, underfunded, and strategically incoherent.
This is why the U.S.-Russia talks in Saudi Arabia are happening without European leaders at the table. Washington and Moscow know that Europe – despite all its declarations of unity and resolve – simply does not matter in the high-stakes diplomacy that will determine Ukraine’s fate. The war in Ukraine has underscored Europe’s dependence on American military might, as European states deplete their own stockpiles to send weapons to Kyiv, only to beg Washington for replacements. The uncomfortable truth is that without American support, Europe’s ability to sustain Ukraine’s war effort would collapse almost immediately. And if the U.S. were to shift its focus elsewhere – say, to Taiwan – Europe would be left exposed.
The exclusion of Europe from these negotiations should serve as a wake-up call, but there is little reason to believe that it will be. The Paris summit itself is already plagued by internal divisions, with several EU states voicing frustration at being excluded from the Elysee Palace talks. Italy’s Giorgia Meloni has openly criticized the selective invitations, highlighting just how fractured Europe remains. Far from projecting strength, the gathering in Paris is yet another reminder that the continent cannot even coordinate among itself, let alone influence the broader global order.
Even if European leaders were given a seat at the table in Saudi Arabia, what exactly would they bring to the negotiations? They have no unified military strategy, no credible deterrence posture, and no leverage beyond empty diplomatic statements. Worse still, European capitals remain divided on fundamental questions about Ukraine’s future. Some leaders, like Emmanuel Macron, flirt with the idea of sending Western troops to Ukraine in a desperate bid to remain relevant. Others, like Germany’s Olaf Scholz, continue to drag their feet on military aid while wringing their hands over the supposed risks of escalation. Such incoherence makes Europe not only a weak actor but a liability in serious strategic discussions.
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https://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2025/02/18/europes_self-inflicted_irrelevance_1092119.html