Daily Mail

Germany urges France to give up its key UN seat

- By Jemma Buckley Defence Reporter

GERMANY has called for France to give up its permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council so it can be turned into an ‘EU seat’.

Finance minister Olaf Scholz said he recognised the move would ‘take some convincing in Paris’, but added that it would be a ‘bold and smart goal’.

It comes after the leaders of France and Germany backed the creation of an EU army, a proposal Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson has described as ‘crazy’.

Mr Scholz, who is also Germany’s vicechance­llor, said: ‘If we are to take the European Union seriously, the EU should speak with one voice within the UN Security Council. In the medium term, France’s seat could be converted to a seat for the EU.’

He said to lessen France’s pain, it could become ‘the permanent EU ambassador to the UN’.

Mr Scholz also said European Union government­s needed to work more closely on defence spending and creating weapons.

But his suggestion of taking France’s seat was shot down by the French ambassador to the United States, Gerard Araud.

He described it as ‘legally impossible’ and ‘politicall­y impossible’.

France has been one of the five permanent Security Council members since the body was establishe­d after the Second World War to prevent another large-scale conflict.

The permanent members, which also include Britain, China, Russia and America, comprise the victors of the war.

They are the most influentia­l in the 193-member United Nations because they hold the right to veto UN resolution­s. When Britain leaves the EU, France will be the union’s only permanent member of the Security Council.

‘Politicall­y impossible’

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