Military of the European Union

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The European Union is not a state and as such does not have its own dedicated military forces. There are a number of multi-national military and peacekeeping forces which are ultimately under the command of the EU. An early attempt (1952) to form a European Defence Community failed, but since then many politicians, including Guy Verhofstadt and Nicolas Sarkozy, promised to create a European military. As many of the 27 EU member states are also members of NATO, some EU states cooperate on defense policy (collective security) albeit primarily through NATO rather than through the EU or aligned group (such as the Western European Union). However, the memberships of the EU, WEU, and NATO are distinct, and some EU member states are constitutionally committed to remain neutral on defence issues. Several of the new EU member states were formerly members of the Warsaw Pact.

One of the issues that the European Constitution, which currently possesses an uncertain future, was going to address would have closed down the WEU as a separate organisation and have the EU institutions take on the WEU's defence role. The EU currently has a limited mandate over defence issues, with a role to explore the issue of European defence agreed to in the Amsterdam Treaty, as well as oversight of the Helsinki Headline Goal Force Catalogue (the 'European Rapid Reaction Force') processes. However, some EU states may and do make multilateral agreements about defence issues outside of the EU structures.

The new Treaty of Lisbon will, however, cause the Western European Union to be merged with the European Union. It also says that:

'The common security and defence policy shall include the progressive framing of a common defence policy. This will lead to a common defence, when the European Council, acting unanimously, so decides'. (TEU, Article 27) [1]

British ministers initially objected to this clause. They wrote 'We believe that the European Council will not make that decision anytime soon. It is therefore inappropriate for the Treaty to pre-judge the decision of the European Council.' However, British ministers later gave way.

On the 23 March 2007, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose country held the EU presidency at that time, gave an interview in celebration of the EU's fiftieth birthday, in which she expressed the desire for a unified EU Army.[1]

Contents

The Eurofighter Typhoon; developed by Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain
The Eurofighter Typhoon; developed by Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain

The EU primarily acts through its Common Foreign and Security Policy, though Denmark has an opt-out from this and some states are limited by neutrality issues. As a result forces under EU command have been for peacekeeping, which European states have a great deal of experience in.

See also the European Security and Defence Policy.

If all the member states' annual spending was taken as a bloc the figure would amount to over $292.7 billion, second only to the US military's $518 billion. [2] However the cumulative effect is much less than it seems due to duplication of capacities in individual militaries. There have been efforts to overcome this with joint projects such as the Eurofighter and through joint procurement of equipment.

In 2004 EU countries took over leadership of the mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina from NATO through the European Union Force (EUFOR). The mission was given the branding of an EU initiative as the EU sponsored the force to further the force's image of legitimacy. There have been other deployments such as in Gaza and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Recently the European High Representative for Foreign Policy Javier Solana has indicated the EU could send troops to Georgia, perhaps alongside Russian forces.[3]

See pages of individual forces below for details or Overseas interventions of the European Union.

Military spending in 2006, in billions of euro, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute and the European Defence Agency. The aggregated spending of the European Union Member States is by far the second largest in the world.
Military spending in 2006, in billions of euro, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute and the European Defence Agency. The aggregated spending of the European Union Member States is by far the second largest in the world.
Rank Country Defence Budget (USD)
Total Flag of Europe EU 292,700,000,000
1 Flag of the United Kingdom UK 68,136,000,000
2 Flag of France France 65,370,000,000
3 Flag of Germany Germany 52,100,000,000
4 Flag of Italy Italy 32,093,537,000
5 Flag of Spain Spain 15,792,207,000
6 Flag of the Netherlands Netherlands 10,369,920,000
7 Flag of Poland Poland 9,650,500,000
8 Flag of Greece Greece 7,648,561,000
9 Flag of Sweden Sweden 6,309,137,714
10 Flag of Belgium Belgium 3,999,000,000
11 Flag of Portugal Portugal 3,497,800,000
12 Flag of Denmark Denmark 3,271,600,000
13 Flag of Romania Romania 2,900,000,000
14 Flag of Finland Finland 2,800,000,000
15 Flag of Austria Austria 2,334,900,000
16 Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic 2,170,000,000
17 Flag of Slovakia Slovakia 1,408,000,000
18 Flag of Ireland Ireland 1,300,000,000
19 Flag of Hungary Hungary 1,080,000,000
20 Flag of Bulgaria Bulgaria 730,000,000
21 Flag of Cyprus Cyprus 384,000,000
22 Flag of Slovenia Slovenia 370,000,000
23 Flag of Luxembourg Luxembourg 231,600,000
24 Flag of Lithuania Lithuania 230,800,000
25 Flag of Estonia Estonia 155,000,000
26 Flag of Latvia Latvia 87,000,000
27 Flag of Malta Malta 44,640,000

All figures are from the List of countries and federations by military expenditures

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