1995

Enlargement of the European Union to take in Austria, Finland and Sweden

Because of their military neutrality, some European countries had stood aside from European integration, preferring to join EFTA (the European Free Trade Association). In 1991, the creation of the EEA (the European Economic Area) extended the rules of the common market to the EFTA countries. The disappearance of the Soviet Union now made it possible for these states to join the European Union. So Austria, Sweden, Finland, Switzerland and Norway (which had already applied in the early 1970s) one by one submitted their candidature for accession. Only the first three ultimately joined the European Union, bringing the number of members to fifteen.