Things have changed on the international political stage, and the European in particular, that gives the European Union an unprecedented opportunity to mould and shape its own military and foreign policy in a way that makes it possible for the EU to deal with crisis on the European continent and elsewhere without American interference writes Israel Rafalovich.
A key lesson is that the EU has to be the one that will call the shots in matters of security, foreign policy as well as the economy. Bearing in mind, that there are tendencies in the EU not to view the European Union and its Security System as a supplement to NATO but as its replacement.
Let me underline for the thousand and one time. NATO is a relic of the past and no new “strategic concept” can revive the irrelevance of NATO. It should have been dissolved when the Warsaw Pact closed its shop.
Today, more then ever before, the European Union must take responsibility for its security interests in a way that will result in defence integration and reinforce defence cooperation among EU member states. It should be the EU’s assertion of sovereignty that its security is better assured by a dominating European Union and should seek to become e serious counterpart to the United States.
The unity among EU member states, is a fundamental condition for the EU Security System to be successful. By directing the efforts of the participating countries on the common purpose of a European Union defence the military force must coordinate more intensively and effectively with each other than it is the case today.
This means, developing structures and capabilities which are relevant to the current conditions and are of sufficient scale and capability in key enabling areas/:Drones, Helicopters, air-to-air refueling, satellites communications.
Greater emphasis should be places on capabilities that can help project military power in more challenging operational environment, such as long-range strike, undersea warfare, stealthy airliner combat systems, special operation forces, cyber warfare, space defence and satellite weapons this in order to achieve the goals of a coherent European Union security policy that also connects economic interests with strong defence capabilities as a tool to shore up the EU substantial economic power.
The EU must encourage EU leadership in research and development of defence industries in order not to be dependent on hardware from the United States, South Korea or Israel. Mistrust of the United States runs deep in EU quarters and the European Union has to decide to what extent and what forum, if at all, the United States should remain politically and militarily engaged.
One of the common reaction that is held against the American foreign policy is that the United States never ratified the Comprehensive Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT). Unanimity dominate among Europeans and their partners in Asia and Africa, that the United States because of its nuclear policy does not have the credentials to preach to others how they have to act.
EU member states should be working more forcefully for the creation of the new sovereign EU army under combined EU command and control that will be capable and powerful military force. They have to sit together set priorities and asses the state of defence. In order to strengthen the defences of the Eastern part of the EU and contribute to deterrence there, the EU should pay great attention to ‘Air-Land’ capabilities like, air combat, air defence, heavy armour artillery, cyber-defence and energy based weaponry. They should also emphasis situational awareness and surveillance capabilities.
Member states have to show their capability in policing and sharing efforts and keeping an eye out for possibilities of pooling military capabilities. They will also have to be ready to contribute to a EU military coalition in time of need according to their capabilities, and they will need to find ways to share resources or buy equipment together.
The Rapid Reaction Forces and the EU battle groups that have been since 2007, but have never been used, should be the base of the new army that will enable the EU to shoulder international political and military responsibilities.
The well-being of the EU security System and its members must have priority. It should be based on solidarity against all forms of external threats. This should be the basis of a common security and mutual assistance in the event of crisis or war. The political and economic instruments which only the EU can provide will be indispensable to obtaining long-term peace and stability.
Therefore, all EU intervention in whichever framework should coordinate
as closely as possible with the EU. The most important requirement is the willingness of France to extend its assurance of nuclear protection to countries belonging to the EU Security System.
France’s nuclear forces were set up with the declared objective of guaranteeing France’s independent security and at the same time to overcome the political status quo in Europe. Both, the strategic and political expedience of French nuclear weapons always depended on the respective international constellation.
The French security is based on the nuclear guarantee provided by a “flexible response”. The real significance of the French force is rooted in its
It is the French determination to employ this policy in the interests of a
common EU defence.
The question is whether France will let itself to be tied to the common nuclear
risks, by offering the EU its nuclear umbrella. France has stressed that French conventional forces form an integrated system of deterrence together with the pre-strategic and strategic nuclear components.
According to the French opinion, practically demonstrated solidarity in the
fields of conventional weapons and the continuing of nuclear uncertainties
are not mutual exclusives.On the contrary, they are two sides of the same coin.
It should be underlined that, without adequate integration into a common EU
security System, French nuclear power cannot fulfil the function of strengthening a unified EU Security System.
For France, the close linkage of its conventional forces with it own pre-strategic and strategic potential which includes the capability to threaten the first use of nuclear weapons forms the basis for a European security capability.
If the ability to project force is now a sign of an independent EU foreign and
security policy, than the EU has at last to get more bold and resolute in its action. It is also an opportunity for the EU as well as a challenge to be able to walk alone on the international stage without American crutches.
The EU is needed on the international stage and should play a decisive role in
calming conflicts, and should become a counter balance to the United States on the world stage. The European Union must change the diplomatic dynamic on the international stage if it wants its leadership to be accepted and avoid its entire foreign policy
losing it credibility.
There is only the hope that courage and political imagination will secure the EU
future in this changing world.