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– EuroArmy...For Peace or
War?
High-tech weapons help Europe to close
military gap with US
By Anthony Browne, Brussels Correspondent
THE European Union is to develop unmanned drones, new armoured vehicles
and advanced communication systems in a strategy to become a military
superpower and close the defence technology gap with the United States.
The programme involves setting up a joint EU fighter-pilot training
programme and co-ordinating the testing of military equipment on proving
grounds and in wind tunnels.
The initiatives from the newly-created European Defence Agency represent
the EU’s first step in military research and development. They are aimed
at transforming the EU from being solely a political power, in charge of
policies such as agriculture and trade, to a military one, capable of
sending troops around the world to enforce a foreign policy agreed by
its member states.
The strategy has proved controversial to EU members such as the Irish
Republic and Sweden, who fear that their traditional neutrality is being
threatened, as well as in Britain, where there has been concern that it
will undermine Nato and its close military relationship with the United
States.
Nick Witney, the British chief executive of the European Defence Agency,
set up last month, explained his plans to boost Europe’s “defence,
technological and industrial base” by co-ordinating the military
activity of EU members.
“Europe does not have the defence capabilities that it ought to. I want
to see what we can do to get more bang for the buck than is already
provided and I am sure we can go a long way applying all the separate
defence lines across Europe more coherently,” he said.
Concern about Europe’s military weakness came to the fore in the 1990s
when it was unable to prevent civil war in the Balkans. Since then, the
European Union has been developing a common foreign policy and set up
the EDA to increase its military power.
Mr Witney said: “(Europe) set itself the relatively modest initial
ambition to be able to put 60,000 troops in the field for two months and
keep that level of force there for a year, and frankly failed to do
that.
“When you think that we have two million men and women under arms in
Europe and you link that to €160 billion (£115 billion) of defence
expenditure across Europe it suggests money is not being well spent.”
Part of the problem, he said, was that Europe’s armies, as well as being
fragmented, are still focused on fighting battles with the Soviet Union
and have failed to move “to the information age” of warfare.
“Is it really useful that we spend money in Europe maintaining in
service 11,000 main battle tanks? Would it not be better to concentrate
on more modern technologies such as communication? Modern warfare
depends on intelligence.”
Because countries are duplicating armed forces, the EU has “too much of
the old expensive platform assets. We probably have collectively too
many fighter aircraft, too many naval hulls, too many battle tanks.”
The defence industries making the equipment are duplicated — there are
half a dozen tank manufacturers across Europe. Many member states are
separately trying to develop a new drone (an unmanned aircraft for
reconnaissance) and new armoured vehicles. It is one of Mr Witney’s
first tasks to put these many programmes together.
Previous European military projects have been uncoordinated, and plagued
with problems: the Eurofighter is hugely over budget; the Airbus A400M
transporter plane is severely delayed; and the Horizon frigate has been
abandoned.
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