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  <front>
    <journal-meta>
      <journal-id journal-id-type="publisher-id">RUSCONF</journal-id>
      <journal-title-group>
        <journal-title>Conference on Russia Papers</journal-title>
      </journal-title-group>
      <issn pub-type="epub"/>
      <issn pub-type="ppub"/>
      <publisher>
        <publisher-name>BDC</publisher-name>
      </publisher>
    </journal-meta>
    <article-meta>
      <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">2026_03_TERRY</article-id>
      <article-categories>
        <subj-group subj-group-type="heading">
          <subject>essay</subject>
        </subj-group>
      </article-categories>
      <title-group>
        <article-title>From Structure to Agent: EU Strategic Agency</article-title>
      </title-group>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <contrib-id contrib-id-type="orcid">https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1310-4138</contrib-id>
          <name>
            <surname>Terry</surname>
            <given-names>George Spencer</given-names>
          </name>
          <email xlink:href="mailto:george.terry@baltdefcol.org">george.terry@baltdefcol.org</email>
        </contrib>
      </contrib-group>
      <volume>6</volume>
      <issue>1</issue>
      <fpage>23</fpage>
      <lpage>38</lpage>
      <pub-date pub-type="ppub">
        <day>01</day>
        <month>02</month>
        <year>2026</year>
      </pub-date>
      <pub-date pub-type="epub">
        <day>28</day>
        <month>05</month>
        <year>2026</year>
      </pub-date>
      <permissions>
        <copyright-statement>Open Access ©</copyright-statement>
        <copyright-year>2026</copyright-year>
        <copyright-holder>Baltic Defence College and George Spencer Terry</copyright-holder>
        <license license-type="open-access" xlink:href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">
          <license-p>This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.</license-p>
        </license>
      </permissions>
      <abstract>
        <p>This chapter argues that Russia has systematically treated the European Union as a latent strategic actor while simultaneously working to degrade its agency. Through targeted information campaigns, elite capture, espionage, and sabotage, Moscow has exploited the Union’s structural and decisional constraints – vetoes, unanimity, and consensus-driven paralysis – rendering it rhetorically assertive but materially impotent. At the same time, the EU possesses dormant instruments capable of strategic effect: TEU 31(1), TEU 44, crisis procedures, reverse qualified-majority voting, and financial levers that could enforce compliance and coordination. Framed within the paradigm of next-generation warfare, these mechanisms could enable the Union to act collectively without radical treaty change. By mapping Russian interventions against EU institutional weaknesses, the chapter also demonstrates a conscious yet immobilised Europe, performing weakness while nonetheless remaining capable of mobilisation. It concludes that deliberate, audacious activation of existing tools, including coalitions of willing member states, conditional funding, and operationalised crisis powers could awaken the Union as a coherent strategic actor, one that can defend its interests, counter external subversion, and translate its normative authority into tangible geopolitical influence, creating the conditions for a more confident and self-directed European strategic posture.</p>
      </abstract>
      <kwd-group>
        <label>Keywords</label>
        <kwd>European Union</kwd>
        <kwd>Strategic Actor</kwd>
        <kwd>Institutionalism</kwd>
      </kwd-group>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
</article>
