Issues Navigator

Global Challenges

Strategic Regions

Domestic Debates

Tag cloud

See All Tags

April 1, 2008 |  3 comments |  Print | E-Mail Your Opinion  

How Britain Now Runs European Security

Daniel Korski: Something odd is happening across Europe’s security landscape. In spite of British Prime Minister Brown’s euro-scepticism, and Britain’s supposed European isolation following the Iraq War, London is once again becoming the centerpiece of European security cooperation.

Britain has always been Europe's most militarily-capable power due to its history of warfare, defence spending, but also proximity to the US. Like in tennis so in military affairs, it pays off to play with a better partner and Britain has learnt a lot from the US.

But something else seems to be happening. Countries once loyal to the build-up of European defense and their military relationships with Germany are turning towards Britain.

The Netherlands, for many years wedded to its military relationship with Germany - the two armies even share equipment storages - is turning towards London. Its Navy and Royal Marines have close links with their British counterparts, forged in part by fighting the Taliban.

In Denmark, the centre-right government has gradually detached the country from its traditional Nordic anchor and moved closer to London. "There is simply no scope for cooperation with Denmark," a Swedish MP recently complained. Danish soldiers, who in the 1990s deployed to the Balkans as part of a Nordic Battle Group, now operate under British command both in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Europe's two most militarily-capable newcomers - Poland and Romania - are also privileging links with Britain. Romanian soldiers serve under British command, both on deployments and in key multinational exercises. Britain provides an adviser to the Polish government to give advice on defence planning, programming and budget management.

Britain's traditional military counterweight - France - has committed to re-joining NATO and is likely to obtain changes inside the alliance and hopes to get support for ESDP build-up.

But both these require Britain's support and French president Nicolas Sarkozy has made it clear he hopes to cement an Anglo-French axis to generate a new "critical mass" driving EU foreign and security policy when he makes a state visit to Britain next week.

Germany, meanwhile, is turning increasingly inwards. It remains unwilling to send the Bundeswher into combat in southern Afghanistan despite repeated US entreaties, and its defense budget has declined almost continuously since reunification; spending is only one percent of its GDP on defense, which puts it at the bottom end of any NATO ranking. The two US-German army corps, created in 1993, have been disbanded thus depriving the German army of the benefits of interaction with the US army.

The turn towards London has also seen a return of the "Iraq caucus" inside Europe - now more appropriately identified as the "RC South caucus" i.e. those countries deployed as part of NATO's Regional Command South, which encompasses the southernmost districts or provinces of Afghanistan. Led by Britain, this caucus is driving NATO's Afghan policy and will determine the Alliance's overarching Afghan plan, to be agreed at the Alliance's Bucharest Summit in April.

But it may only be a matter of time before its discussions turn from one theatre to joint exercises, cooperation on purchases and greater interoperability. This represents a threat to the viability of both NATO and ESDP on a number of levels.

  1. First, the concern used to be the gap between the US military and European armies. Today, the US has moved so far ahead in terms of capability and battle-field experience that European militaries cannot hope to catch up. The new danger is a clearer division inside Europe with the caucus on one side and the rest of Europe on the other.
  2. Second, as NATO's article V becomes increasingly meaningless - with so many allies refusing to come to others' aid in the fight again the Taliban - this caucus may develop a real, albeit unofficial, collective security guarantee.


These developments are not predetermined and if more countries move troops to southern Afghanistan, as many analysts predict will happen after the US presidential elections, the problem may go away.

Moreover, Britain had a similarly strong position in the early 1990s with all the Eastern European countries, as London sponsored their NATO entrance, and helped on defence reform. But the advantage was eroded because of British skepticism about ESDP.

For now, however, the pendulum has swung towards London and the reconfiguration of Europe's security landscape is a reality.

 

Daniel Korski is a senior fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations. A former British official, he was a Senior Advisor in the US State Department, and then led the Basra Reconstruction Team.

This article was originally written for the European Council on Foreign Relations and published here under the title "London Calling: How Britain now runs European security."

Related material from the Atlantic Community:

  • 72
  •  
  •  
  • No rating possible
  • No rating possible
I like this Article! What's this?

 
 
Comments
Jeppe Plenge Trautner

April 1, 2008

  • 3
  •  
  •  
  • No rating possible
  • No rating possible
I like this comment! What's this?
Daniel Korski perceptively notes that several continental European states gravitate towards the UK. In addition to their strategic alignment with the UK, four factors contribute:

* The UK remains the only European state capable of providing military-strategic and operational level military leadership in tough missions, and several lesser European actors feel politically compelled to participate in such.

* French military leadership is capable but in transition, and are for various reasons (including a linguistic barrier, and partly non-NATO doctrines, materiel and orientations) not an attractive framework for other European states.

* The European Union, uncertain of its focus, mixes in climate change, trafficking, gender issues, crime and drugs with its military efforts, and is very unlikely to become a trusted player when the lives of soldiers are at risk.

* NATO is broken, not by the new players but due to political neglect and the destruction wrought on Art. V in 2003; while "its" soldiers are fighting for their lives in Southern Afghanistan the organisation itself is still very much in peace-time mode, and merely serves as a staff school for thousands of European officers lacking the military skills required for serving in operational roles.

The net results are British leadership, further demise of NATO into an officers club, and EU's ESDP at best growing into soft security 'doing the dishes' framework. Is this a problem?

Tags: | NATO | UK | Afghanistan | ESDP |
 
Donald  Stadler

April 2, 2008

  • 0
  •  
  •  
  • No rating possible
  • No rating possible
I like this comment! What's this?
The headline seems somewhat overstated. The body of the piece seems to indicate that Britain enjoys increased influence on European security matters, which is a more accurate assessment and in my view is a well-deserved outcome from the policies pursued by Tony Blair since 1997.

Another interesting question is what effect this influence will have upon the debate surrounding the development of the European defense force. Britain has been holding this a bit at arms-length because some in continental Europe seem to believe that a 'takeover' of the British armed forces is both possible and neccessary. That is the Brits would continue to finance and man the force but policy-making and perhaps leadership would be taken over by Bruxelles. From the POV of many Brits this would be the worst of possible outcomes & a naked power grab on the part of certain Continental nations who are extremely reluctant to put their own skin into the game.

From the POV of this American this initiative seems remarkably similar to the attempted use being made of NATO - as a vehicle to control the US armed forces without cetain parties having to pony up and make a significant contribution to the alliance themselves....

Nice work if one can pull it off, but I doubt if either the US or the UK are quite that stupid.
 
Unregistered User

September 12, 2009

  • 0
  •  
  •  
  • No rating possible
  • No rating possible
I like this comment! What's this?
Hey. Nor do not saw the air too much with your hand, thus, but use all gently. For in the very torrent, tempest, and as I may say, whirlwind of passion, you must acquire and beget a temperance that may give it smoothness. Help me! Can not find sites on the: John doyle follows to be the now similar affiliate.. I found only this - [URL=http://www.ebc.com.br/Members/Sales]Sales force automation magazine[/URL]. The implication property merck & co. Strategic marketing planning were directed for company of the products, banner sales force. Best regards :-), Finola from Gabon.
 

Create Comment

Type the characters shown in the image below into the textfield.
Captcha

What are tags?

Community

Jobs / Internships

Call for Papers

Atlantic Events

Partners

User of the day

Alexus  W
Alexus W
Member since
December 14, 2009

Poll


DW-WORLD.DE


Europe
Europe
Germany




DW-TV Live DW-Radio Live