BRUSSELS,
Belgium
Fourteen European Union countries including Germany and France have proposed a rapid military response force that could intervene early in international crises, a senior EU official said on Wednesday, two decades after a previous attempt.
The countries say the
EU should create a brigade of 5,000 soldiers, possibly with ships and aircraft,
to help democratic foreign governments needing urgent help, the official said.
EU defence ministers
will take up the idea on Thursday at a regular meeting chaired by EU foreign
policy chief Josep Borrell, who has chided the bloc for reluctance to intervene
more abroad, particularly in failing states such as Libya.
The 14 countries are
Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Germany, Greece, France, Ireland,
Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Slovenia and Spain.
First discussed in
1999, the EU in 2007 set up a combat-ready system of battlegroups of 1,500
personnel to respond to crises, but they have never been used. Those battle
groups could now form the basis of a so-called First Entry Force, part of a new
momentum towards more EU defence capabilities.
From this year, the
bloc has a joint budget to develop weaponry together, is drawing up a military
doctrine for 2022 and detailed its military weakness last year for the first
time.
“Borrell has always
said the EU needs to learn the language of power,” the official said, referring
in part to military force.
With its economic
power, the bloc has been able to boast of a “soft power” to spread influence
through trade and aid, with only limited military missions around the world.
It has traditionally
relied on US-led NATO for military action but successive US presidents, notably
Donald Trump, demanded the EU do more for its own security, particularly on its
borders, even if NATO remains committed to Europe’s defence.
Britain’s departure
from the EU has also given new urgency to the bloc’s ambitions as it can no
longer rely on London. But it is also freed from the constraints that British
governments put on EU defence development, fearing the creation of an EU army
weakening national identity.
No comments:
Post a Comment