Foreign Area Studies: Europe Major Standardization v2.0

Foreign Area Studies: Europe

Major

As a Foreign Area Studies Europe major at West Point, you will develop advanced language skills and regional expertise to lead alongside allied partners. You will prepare for service in security environments where cultural understanding shapes mission success. 

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Foreign Area Studies – Europe at West Point

Alliance structures and coalition interoperability shape operations across Europe. Officers must understand political systems and regional dynamics to lead effectively.

Foreign Area Studies – Europe prepares you to analyze transatlantic security and institutional relationships with disciplined reasoning.  

Quick Facts

  • Degree: Bachelor of Science
  • Department: English and World Languages
  • Duration: 4 years
  • Language Track Required

The West Point Advantage

You will prepare to lead Soldiers in NATO and coalition environments where coordination and credibility matter.

You will develop:

  • Alliance and security analysis
  • Professional language proficiency
  • Institutional awareness
  • Strategic communication discipline
  • Leadership grounded in accountability 

Regional understanding strengthens operational effectiveness. 


The Journey Continues: From Major to Commissioned Officer

Service comes first. Leadership grows with responsibility.

When you graduate, you commission as a Second Lieutenant in the United States Army. Your branch selection is based on Army needs, your performance, and your preferences. Europe Foreign Area Studies strengthens your ability to analyze alliance systems, understand institutional structures, and operate effectively in environments shaped by multinational coordination and strategic partnerships. 

Officers contribute through:

  • Coalition coordination within NATO and multinational formations
  • Regional security analysis focused on alliance structures and deterrence
  • Support to joint and combined exercises with partner nations
  • Strategic engagement with European military and governmental institutions 
     
Branching Pathways

Europe Foreign Area Studies provides strong preparation for branches that rely on alliance integration, regional expertise, and multinational operations. 

BranchHow This Major Strengthens You
Military IntelligenceAnalyze regional developments and assess strategic and operational risk. 
Engineer CorpsCoordinate infrastructure and operational planning with allied forces. 
Signal CorpsSupport communication and interoperability across multinational formations. 
InfantryLead Soldiers in environments where disciplined decision-making matters. 
Civil AffairsEngage institutions and populations in complex European environments. 
Foreign Area Officer (Functional Area)Apply regional expertise to long-term engagement and advisory roles. 

Additional branches and functional areas remain available based on your performance and Army requirements.

Explore Army branches

What Foreign Affairs Studies - Europe Officers Do: Across a Career

Early Career: Lead in Allied Environments

As a new officer, you lead Soldiers immediately. You are responsible for training standards, readiness, accountability, and mission execution. Regional preparation strengthens your ability to understand alliance structures, interpret institutional dynamics, and operate effectively in multinational environments.

You develop credibility by applying structured analysis and cultural awareness to real-world challenges. Your preparation enables you to coordinate with partner forces, communicate clearly, and maintain accountability for mission outcomes.

Leadership begins with disciplined execution under real constraints. 


Mid-Career: Command and Coordinate

As you advance, you may command a company or serve in roles focused on operational planning, alliance coordination, or regional engagement. Increased responsibility requires understanding political systems, institutional processes, and multinational coordination frameworks.

Many officers pursue advanced schooling or transition into functional areas such as Foreign Area Officer, Strategic Planning, or Security Cooperation. Responsibility expands from leading Soldiers to shaping how the Army integrates with allied systems.

You move from participating in alliance environments to influencing how they are structured and executed. 


Senior Career: Shape Alliance Strategy

At senior levels, officers influence multinational cooperation, alliance operations, and regional engagement priorities across the Army. You may command battalions and brigades or advise senior leaders on alliance coordination, regional dynamics, and operational risk.

Leadership evolves from tactical execution to strategic integration of coalition systems, institutional understanding, and mission requirements. Regional expertise strengthens institutional decision-making at scale. 

Post-Graduate and Advanced Development Opportunities

West Point graduates compete for nationally recognized scholarships and Army-funded graduate education.

Opportunities include:

  • Rhodes Scholarship
  • Marshall Scholarship
  • Army-funded graduate programs

Graduates of this major often pursue advanced study in European studies, international relations, or security cooperation. 

Advanced education strengthens your ability to serve at higher levels of responsibility and influence in multinational environments. 

Learn more about scholarships

Beyond Initial Service

Officers serve first in uniform. Leadership experience, cultural awareness, and disciplined judgment define the foundation of your career.

Over time, those experiences create additional opportunities in international organizations, policy development, diplomacy, and public service. West Point graduates bring regional expertise, institutional awareness, and disciplined leadership to every environment they enter. 

The foundation is built in service. The influence extends across a lifetime. 

 

Branch selection is based on Army needs, your performance, and your preferences. 

Your academic major strengthens how you operate in multinational environments where language proficiency and cultural awareness influence mission success.

Learn how branching works


Questions Prospective Cadets Ask

Clear answers to help you move forward with confidence.

Do I need prior experience in this region or language?

No. You are not expected to arrive with advanced regional or language background. The curriculum builds progressively through structured coursework and, when applicable, language study. Success depends on disciplined reading, analytical thinking, and consistent effort. 

Will this major limit my branch options?

No. All majors at West Point lead to commissioning as an Army officer. Regional expertise strengthens your preparation for multinational environments but does not restrict branch eligibility. 

Is this major academically rigorous?

Yes. Foreign Area Studies programs are writing-intensive and discussion-driven. You will analyze governance systems, security challenges, and regional dynamics while defending conclusions under scrutiny. 

Can I pursue honors or additional academic depth?

High-performing cadets may pursue honors research or, when eligible, approved dual major combinations with a World Language major. These options require strong academic standing and careful planning. 

Are immersion or exchange programs competitive?

Yes. Semester exchanges and Academic Individual Advanced Development opportunities are competitive. Selection reflects academic performance and professional readiness. 

What does it cost?

West Point provides a fully funded education, including tuition, room, and board, in exchange for service as a commissioned Army officer after graduation. cadets also receive pay and benefits while enrolled and graduate without traditional college debt. 

Do I have to declare this major before applying?

No. You apply to West Point, not to a specific major. You will explore academic options after arriving and receive advising before declaring your field of study. 

Major-Specific FAQ - Departments may choose 1 to add

Will I study a European language?

Yes. Europe majors often integrate French, German, Spanish, or Portuguese proficiency with regional analysis.

Are military academy exchanges available?

Approved semester exchanges may include study at European partner military institutions.

Does this major focus on NATO and transatlantic security?

Yes. Coursework includes structured analysis of European security institutions and alliance dynamics. 


If you are ready to lead with language and discipline, start the Application.

OR

If you are ready to lead with regional expertise and operational credibility, the next step is simple.

Start the Application.

What You Will Study

You will build a rigorous foundation in the political, economic, and security systems shaping Europe. The curriculum progresses from regional history and comparative politics to advanced study of alliance structures, supranational institutions, and transatlantic security dynamics.

You will examine how democratic institutions function, how economic integration shapes stability, and how alliances coordinate defense and policy across nations. Alongside this interdisciplinary study, you develop proficiency in French or German to interpret primary sources and engage in professional communication.

This is regional study grounded in institutional analysis, alliance awareness, and disciplined evaluation of complex multinational systems. 


How the Curriculum Builds

  1. Foundational Context
    Develop strength in European geography, modern history, and comparative politics to establish institutional and cultural understanding of the region.
  2. Advanced Application
    Analyze alliance systems, governance structures, economic integration, and regional security dynamics through upper-level seminars and structured research.
  3. Language and Regional Integration
    Integrate French or German language proficiency with interdisciplinary regional analysis. Apply language skills to evaluate policy documents, media sources, and historical materials within professional contexts.
  4. Integration & Leadership
    Conduct sustained regional analysis requiring structured argumentation, interdisciplinary evaluation, and formal presentation aligned with professional standards in governance and security

Course Highlights

  • GE341 Geography of Europe – Analyze terrain, infrastructure, and demographic systems shaping regional dynamics.  
  • HI342 Modern Europe – Examine political transformation, integration, and institutional development.  
  • SS366 Comparative Politics – Evaluate democratic governance systems and institutional performance.  
  • SS485 European Union Politics – Assess supranational governance and policy coordination.  
  • SS481 Politics of Defense Policy – Analyze alliance structures and defense coordination.  
  • SS472 International Security Studies – Examine conflict dynamics and collective security systems.  
  • LF476 or LG476 Military Speaking and Reading – Develop professional-level language proficiency in coalition contexts.  

View full DEWL course catalog


Year-by-Year Snapshot

First Year

Establish academic foundations through core curriculum and begin language development in French or German. 

Second Year

Develop regional context through coursework in geography, history, and comparative politics while strengthening language proficiency. 

Third Year

Advance into alliance systems, governance, and security studies while integrating upper-level language study and analytical writing. 

Fourth Year

Complete advanced seminars and conduct an integrative capstone project focused on regional analysis and multinational coordination. 


View Full Curriculum


Capstone and Integrative Experience

Foreign Area Studies – Europe majors complete an integrative capstone requiring analysis of a complex regional or institutional problem. You define a research question related to governance, alliance coordination, or security, conduct interdisciplinary analysis, and incorporate foreign-language sources where appropriate.

You evaluate competing explanations, assess institutional constraints, and produce structured written and oral presentations aligned with professional analytical standards.

Deliverables demonstrate your ability to integrate political, economic, and cultural understanding into disciplined regional analysis relevant to multinational operational environments. 

These culminating experiences are showcased at USMA's annual research symposium.

Learn more about the annual research symposium

Cadet Quote (example placeholder):

“Studying Europe at West Point taught me how history, politics, and culture shape real decisions. I use that perspective every day as an Army leader working with partners.”

-Cadet name, Class of XX


Faculty & Mentorship

Courses are seminar-based and emphasize structured discussion, analytical writing, and interdisciplinary evaluation. Faculty combine regional expertise with understanding of European political and security institutions.

Advisors guide course sequencing, language integration, and capstone research while aligning academic preparation with commissioning objectives and long-term specialization. 

Meet the Faculty


Expand Your Expertise

Shape your Arabic major around your interests, strengths, and long term Army goals.

MinorHow It Strengthens Your Preparation
Regional StudiesDeepen interdisciplinary regional specialization. 
International AffairsConnect European systems to global strategic dynamics. 
Terrorism StudiesBroaden analysis of extremist threats and security policy
American FoundationsReinforce comparative institutional analysis. 
Applied StatisticsStrengthen empirical evaluation of governance data. 

Possible statement about minor options not limited. Explore all minors CTA?


Dual Major Opportunities

The Department of English and World Languages offers structured pathways that allow cadets to combine certain majors within the department. Cadets may pursue a World Language major alongside a Foreign Area Studies major when academic sequencing and graduation requirements permit.

Dual majors integrate advanced language proficiency with interdisciplinary regional analysis. With faculty advising, you can design a four-year academic plan that satisfies both sets of requirements while remaining aligned with commissioning standards.

Cadets interested in a dual major should consult their Departmental Academic Advisor early to ensure proper sequencing.


If you are ready to begin your academic preparation at West Point, start the Application


For current cadets: Get guidance on selecting a major

Experience Europe in Action

As a Europe major, you combine advanced language proficiency with structured analysis of NATO, EU, and transatlantic security systems.

You train in coalition environments while building strategic regional expertise. 


Hands-On Opportunities

  • Complete semester exchanges at European military academies.
  • Participate in immersion programs in France, Germany, or Spain.
  • Conduct research using primary-language defense and policy materials.
  • Deliver formal briefings on NATO and European security structures.
  • Complete an integrative capstone linking language and strategic analysis. 

Explore DEWL Research


Unique Experiences

  • Train alongside coalition officers during exchange programs.
  • Analyze alliance structures using primary-language documents.
  • Participate in multinational seminars focused on transatlantic security.
  • Serve as a liaison in multinational academic exercises. 

Explore Enrichment Opportunities


Cadet Life in This Major

You engage in strategy-focused seminars tied to European security.

You prepare for immersion through cultural and military briefings.

You build expertise relevant to NATO coalition leadership. 


If you are ready to lead in European coalition environments, Start the Application