Oman Daily Observer

Nato European allies to jointly buy planes, set up new elite HQ

CLOSER TIES: European allies are starting to end years of competing national strategies

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BRUSSELS: European Nato allies agreed on Thursday to jointly buy planes and submarines and possibly open a new command headquarte­rs for elite troops as Europe seeks to show the United States it is serious about its own security.

In signing ceremonies at Nato, defence ministers from France and Germany said they will buy Lockheed Martin C-130J transport planes, while Germany, Belgium and Norway will join a Netherland­s-led fleet of Airbus A330 tanker planes.

“This multinatio­nal cooperatio­n through Nato is a clear way for countries to significan­tly improve their armed forces while ensuring the greatest value for money for their taxpayers,” said Rose Gottemoell­er, Nato’s deputy secretary-general.

The letters of intent, although not legally binding, are the latest sign that European allies are starting to end years of competing national strategies that have left Europe reliant on the United States to provide basics such as refuelling combat planes in the air.

New US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis warned Nato allies on Wednesday they must pay more towards their own defences or potentiall­y see less support from Washington.

Duplicatio­n is also a problem, with EU militaries owning 19 types of armoured infantry fighting vehicles, compared with one in the United States, while wasted funds amount to 25 billion euros a year, according to European Commission data.

As part of a broader push to revitalise European defence cooperatio­n in the wake of Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and the rise of militancy on Europe’s borders, France agreed to allow Belgian and Dutch jets to fly into its airspace in the case of a conflict with a foreign threat.

That means a Belgian jet pursuing an enemy plane would no longer have to turn back at the French border.

Ambitions also involve a new command centre for Dutch, Belgian and Danish special forces that could be used by other Nato nations and which many countries outside the main European military powers of Britain, France and Germany do not have. The location of the new headquarte­rs has not been decided, a Nato official said.

Other plans include Norway and Germany buying a new class of submarines, known as U212As, that more effectivel­y detect, track and fire at enemy submarines and ships on the water.

Germany also agreed to join a European multinatio­nal fleet of Airbus tankers that is led by the Netherland­s and already includes Luxembourg.

Germany also agreed joint training and deployment­s of land forces with the Czech Republic and Romania, with both countries set to provide a brigade of several thousand troops for a larger division under German leadership.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Lithuania’s Defence Minister Raimundas Karoblis, Norway’s Defence Minister Ine Marie Eriksen Soreide, German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen, Dutch Defence Minister Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaer­t, Belgium’s Defence Minister Steven Vandeput and...
— Reuters Lithuania’s Defence Minister Raimundas Karoblis, Norway’s Defence Minister Ine Marie Eriksen Soreide, German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen, Dutch Defence Minister Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaer­t, Belgium’s Defence Minister Steven Vandeput and...

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