The Citizen (Gauteng)

EU nations make defence pact

HISTORIC STEP: 23 GOVERNMENT­S WILL COMMIT TO JOINT PROJECTS AND UP ARMS SPENDING

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Will give European Union a more coherent role in tackling internatio­nal crises.

Brussels

France and Germany edged towards achieving a 70-year-old ambition to integrate European defences yesterday, signing a pact with 21 other EU government­s to fund, develop and deploy armed forces after Britain’s decision to quit the bloc.

First proposed in the ’50s and long resisted by Britain, European defence planning, operations and weapons developmen­t now stands its best chance in years as London steps aside and the US pushes Europe to pay more for its security.

Foreign and defence ministers gathered at a signing ceremony in Brussels to represent 23 EU government­s joining the pact, paving the way for EU leaders to sign it in December.

Those government­s will for the first time legally bind themselves into joint projects, as well as pledging to increase defence spending and contribute to rapid deployment­s.

“Today we are taking a historic step,” Germany’s Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel said.

“We are agreeing on the future cooperatio­n on security and defence issues... it’s really a milestone in European developmen­t,” he said.

The pact includes all EU government­s except Britain, which is leaving the bloc, Denmark, which has opted out of defence matters, Ireland, Portugal and Malta. Traditiona­lly neutral Austria was a late addition to the pact.

Its backers say that if successful, the formal club of 23 members will give the European Union a more coherent role in tackling internatio­nal crises and end the kind of shortcomin­gs seen in Libya in 2011, when European allies relied on the US for air power and munitions.

Unlike past attempts, the US-led Nato alliance backs the project, aiming to benefit from stronger militaries.

The club will be backed by a €5 billion (R84 billion) fund for buying weapons, a special fund to finance operations and money from the EU’s common budget for defence research. Members will also be required to submit national plans and be subject to a review system identifyin­g weak spots in European armies with the goal of plugging those gaps together. – Reuters

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