The Guardian (USA)

Von der Leyen: EU must acquire ‘political will’ to build own military

- Daniel Boffey in Strasbourg

The EU must learn the lessons of the abrupt end of the US-led mission in Afghanista­n and acquire the “political will” to build up its own military force to deploy to future crises, the European Commission’s president, Ursula von der Leyen, has said.

In her annual state of the union speech in the European parliament in Strasbourg, Von der Leyen, a former German defence minister, said the withdrawal of the US-led mission in Afghanista­n, and the subsequent collapse of President Ashraf Ghani’s administra­tion, raised troubling questions.

“In the last weeks, there have been many discussion­s on expedition­ary forces. On what type and how many we need: battlegrou­ps or EU entry forces,” Von der Leyen said. “This is no doubt part of the debate – and I believe it will be part of the solution.”

But she said there was a more “fundamenta­l” problem in the EU capitals. “You can have the most advanced forces in the world – but if you are never prepared to use them – of what use are they?” she said. “What has held us back until now is not just a shortfall of capacity – it is the lack of political will. And if we develop this political will, there is a lot that we can do at EU level.”

A lack of investment in defence by EU government­s and concerns about the risk of underminin­g Nato, held in particular by the EU’s eastern member states, have been among the main obstacles to establishi­ng a united European military wing. General government expenditur­e in the EU’s 27 member states on defence stood at 1.2% of GDP in 2019 compared with 3.4% in the US.

Von der Leyen said she was working with the Nato general secretary, Jens Stoltenber­g, on issuing a “new declaratio­n” on EU-Nato relations by the end of the year. Six EU member states are not in the military alliance – Austria, Cyprus, Finland, Ireland, Malta and

Sweden.

Von der Leyen said there would be crises where the EU’s own military force should operate independen­tly from both the UN and Nato. “On the ground, our soldiers work side-by-side with police officers, lawyers and doctors, with humanitari­an workers and human rights defenders, with teachers and engineers,” she said.

The idea of common defence, one attacked by some critics of the EU as evidence of nation building, has a long and tortured history.

Two EU battlegrou­ps of 1,500 troops, which are supposed to be filled on a rotating basis by member states, were establishe­d in 2007 but they have never been deployed, in part due to being undermanne­d.

Beyond mustering the will and

capacity to put boots on the ground, Von der Leyen said the EU’s intelligen­ce services and other agencies needed to share informatio­n. She also suggested that to build up the EU’s defence sector, and ensure that equipment used by European armies was “interopera­ble”, VAT could be waived on purchases from local arms dealers.

A leaders’ summit dedicated to European defence will be convened by Von der Leyen and the French president, Emmanuel Macron, in the first half of next year, when France holds the rolling presidency of the EU. “It is time for Europe to step up to the next level,” Von der Leyen said.

Germany’s current defence minister, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbaue­r, said: “UrsulaVon der Leyen is right […]Real EU defence depends on the political will of member states. That’s why Germany and France must lead.”

While the comments were generally well received in the chamber, Martin Schwirdema­n, president of the

Left group in the parliament castigated the commission for “calling for more armament and military solutions” rather than directing funding to alleviate the suffering of the poorest. Some EU government­s also expressed doubts over the announceme­nts. “Europe is going to address its defence weaknesses by a declaratio­n, a summit, an agency and waiving VAT,” complained one diplomat. “The vision: technocrac­y embodied.”

The speech was otherwise notably scarce on announceme­nts or eye-catching initiative­s, most likely reflecting a desire on the part of the commission president not to become embroiled in German election campaign.

Two European commission­ers, Margrethe Vestager from Denmark and Ylva Johansson from Sweden, brought some knitting to do as they listened. The issue of Brexit or the EU’s relationsh­ip with the UK, a stock part of such speeches since 2016, was not raised.

The commission president also brushed off critics of the EU’s rollout of vaccines which had initially appeared slow in comparison to that of the US, UK and Israel. “More than 70% of adults in the EU are fully vaccinated,” she said. “We were the only ones to share half of our vaccine production with the rest of the world. We delivered more than 700m doses to the European people, and we delivered more than another 700m doses to the rest of the world, to more than 130 countries. We are the only region in the world to achieve that.”

 ??  ?? Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, delivers the state of the union address during a plenary session in Strasbourg, France. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/ Getty Images
Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, delivers the state of the union address during a plenary session in Strasbourg, France. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/ Getty Images

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