How is the EU devolved? — baker
Depends on the definition of a country, of course. The EU is usually considered a federation of states, but not a federal state. It's also pretty much a statelike entity sui generis. With the introduction of a EU citizenship, the EU technically meets all the classical requirements of a state (territory, sovereignty, citizens). The sticking point is, however, whether the EU has genuine sovereignty or merely acts on behalf of the individual member states. — Echarmion
I'd say the most important difference is that the EU lacks foreign policy and military competences, and an executive power that can represent the EU in these matters... as such it doesn't really have agency as a state would have vis a vis the rest of the world. — ChatteringMonkey
It has foreign policy on trade (it is, after all, a trade union first and foremost). The notion of an EU armed forces keeps getting floated. That would, I agree, be a big step toward state status. — Kenosha Kid
There no political and cultural unity, nor unity concerning social policy etc.. — ChatteringMonkey
Question: Do Europeans think of 'European' as a national status? Or are they Estonian Europeans, French Europeans, or Greek Europeans? This American doesn't think of anyone as "European" apart from their national status. — Bitter Crank
Even it's name tells should what it is. — ssu
The UN can have armed forces and basically could go to war against a country (like it did against North Korea), but nobody thinks it's a country. — ssu
Still I don't think there isn't more discuss at the OP's question. — ssu
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