Framing the Advancement of the Russian Enemy : The Extent of the European Union’s Framing of Russia as a Military and Political Threat in the Aftermath of the Annexation of Crimea

University essay from Stockholms universitet/Institutionen för ekonomisk historia och internationella relationer

Abstract: This study focuses on how important foreign policy crises are interpreted and used to construct images and framing of transnational threats. Since Russia’s annexation of Crimea, Ukraine 2014, the security order in Europe and within the European Union has been affected in various ways because of how Russia is portrayed as a potential threat. Accordingly, the aim of the study is the examination of the extent of EU’s framing of Russia as a military and political threat in the annual Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) reports between 2012-2020. Through a qualitative content analysis with a quantitative conception, the aim is to identify the negative frames of demonization that can be distinguished in the CFSP reports that correlate to EU’s framing of Russia as a threat. The theories of neoclassical realism, demonization and framing are used to provide the deductive approach of indicators that construct the frames of categorization for Russia as a military and political threat within the CFSP reports. The study concludes that the EU has framed Russia as a military threat in relation to Russia’s border transgression within Ukraine, implementing the annexation of Crimea, and Georgia. Russia is also demonized as a political threat through means that intend to cause instability in neighboring states in order to influence domestic policies, for example economic-induced pressures, spread of disinformation, and different kinds of hybrid weapons.

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