The 1990s saw the collapse of the USSR and, with it, the disappearance of a potential threat. China, for its part, was enjoying economic growth but had yet to become a military power. At the time, therefore, the United States had a de facto monopoly over world power. The West dominated the world, and crises were managed through the UN. In the absence of any real existential threat, Europe relaxed its strategies and its defence went from being the State’s “main reason for existence” to a “necessary budgetary evil”. Even though a new threat, Islamic terrorism, emerged during this time, this state of affairs continued until 2010.