
This followed more than a week of messy sparring among national political leaders from the bloc’s 27 member states over the legality of unilateral attacks on Iran by the United States and Israel that laid bare its divisions on geopolitics.
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On one side, mostly conservative officials who long for the fall of the regime in Tehran, regardless of the means. On the other, mainly progressives who – while shedding no tears for the Iranian hardliners – believe that endorsing breaches of international law is a dead end for a political body built on those same rules.
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At an annual conference for all of the EU’s overseas ambassadors, she asked whether “the system that we built – with all of its well-intentioned attempts at consensus and compromise – is more a help or a hindrance to our credibility as a geopolitical actor”.