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– EuroArmy...For Peace or
War?
Polish premier: EU should be military
power
By Dana Spinant and Simon Taylor
Poland’s Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski has said he wants the
European Union to focus on becoming a military power like the US.
In an interview with European Voice, Kaczysnki said his personal view of
the future of Europe was for the EU to “constitute a power similar to
the US”.
Speaking on his first official visit abroad since becoming prime
minister in July, the Polish premier said he supported a “strong
political Europe” which should also be a “true military power…like the
US”. “If [former Serbian President Slobodan] Milosevic had had Israeli
troops he would still be laughing in the face of the world today,” he
said to illustrate the importance of military strength.
In order to concentrate more on external affairs, Kaczynski said that
the EU should restructure its budget and “phase out” agricultural
subsidies. He admitted, however, that getting agreement to this as part
of the Union’s planned review of spending in 2008-09 would be the
“toughest element of the plan”.
“My personal opinion is that we should consider a completely different
vision of Europe,” he said. “We should be down-to-earth and think about
renegotiating a few provisions of the EU constitution.”
While the EU should have “its own military force”, “deal with energy
security” and focus on “supervision of the free market”, Kaczynski said
that member states should have “much more freedom in certain domains”
and he cited the example of state aid.
“If a government wants to give aid, there should be general limits and
rules but decisions would be taken by the member state itself,” he said.
The issue of state aid is a bone of contention between the European
Commission and the Polish government. Warsaw is due to present the
European Commission with a revised plan on restructuring the shipyard
sector amid concern that the government may have provided more funding
than is allowed under EU state aid rules.
Kaczynski met European Commission President José Manuel Barroso,
European Parliament President Josep Borrell and EU foreign policy chief
Javier Solana on his visit to Brussels.
Asked to comment on the “suspicion” of his government in Brussels,
Kaczynski said: “After today’s meetings you can already say that I am
not regarding Europe with suspicion, and they [EU officials] are not
regarding me with suspicion either.”
He also dismissed claims that his government was guilty of economic
populism or nationalism. “The best measure of populism is economics,” he
said, pointing out that he had been fighting to keep Poland’s public
deficit to 30 billion zloty (€7.62bn), less than the 3% limit laid down
in the Maastricht treaty. He pledged that he would hold new elections if
this limit was not respected.
During press conferences in Brussels, Kaczynski also fended off charges
that his government was fostering intolerance, particularly towards
gays. He pointed out that Poland was one of the first countries to
outlaw discrimination against homosexuals and insisted that gays faced
no barriers to playing a full part in Polish life. “There are
homosexuals in Poland who have very high positions in politics and even
on the right of politics,” he said.
Kaczynski’s party was criticised after his brother, Lech, the Polish
president, banned a gay pride march as mayor of Warsaw. Members of the
government coalition have also made controversial remarks about gays.
Kaczynski’s visit to Brussels was aimed at improving his government’s
sometimes fraught relations with the EU’s institutions.
Speaking after a meeting with the Polish prime minister, Commission
President Barroso said he had “no reason to feel concerned about
Poland’s commitments to the common values of the EU”.
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