by Colonel Richard Kemp
On Wednesday the European Parliament voted to set up a new force of 5,000 troops to allow the EU to “respond decisively... in order to assert itself as a credible security and defense actor”. The plan is to start exercising this year and have full operational capability by 2025.
This amounts to nothing more than another military white elephant. Even its name – the Rapid Deployment Capability – smacks of bureaucratic impotence. And the very idea is absurd: given the wide array of national self-interests and often fundamentally diverging geopolitical priorities among member nations, its deployment would inevitably be met with opposition by one country or another, even if – as is planned – there was no need for agreement from all members.
You just have to look at the dithering and division in the EU when Putin invaded Ukraine, which was a black and white case compared to pretty much any future conflict scenario: Germany initially sent only combat helmets to help Kyiv in its hour of need, and for months vetoed plans by other countries to donate German-manufactured tanks and other lethal weapons. So much for responding decisively.
Underlining the nonsensical thinking behind this plan, Brussels has actually had such a force at its disposal since 2007, the EU Battlegroups, each 1,500 strong and intended for exactly the same purpose as is now proposed. But they have never once been used despite several compelling opportunities to do so over those years. As the EU itself admits: “issues relating to political will, usability, and financial solidarity have prevented them from being deployed”.
This latest Brussels vanity project could be dismissed as just another waste of EU taxpayers’ money, but it has much more serious consequences. It is the latest of many attempts to create an EU army through the back door. That would be a disaster: centrally controlled, languid, neutered by 1,001 national caveats and pulled in a hundred different directions. Had an EU army been responsible for arming and training Kyiv’s forces then Ukraine would have collapsed.
What is more, even this relatively modest project will undermine the Atlantic Alliance by eroding the already paltry contributions of most European member states, which collectively generate less than 20% of Nato's overall military capability. As the European Parliament’s report on the new force makes clear, troops assigned to the Rapid Deployment Capability cannot be used by Nato in any circumstances.
But undercutting the US and Nato, which he has described as “brain-dead”, remains high on EU army enthusiast Emmanuel Macron’s agenda. On his return from Beijing last week he was openly railing against American influence and demanding European strategic autonomy, a sentiment that also has sympathy in several other EU capitals.
Such apparent efforts to fracture Western unity, with their embodiment in creating defence structures competing with Nato, are music to Putin’s and Xi’s ears. The need for solidarity against these despots has never been greater as Russia viciously assaults the EU’s next-door neighbour and China steps up its intimidation against Taiwan, a country of such far-reaching strategic importance.
This is not the moment for Brussels to pursue its long sought after trappings of a military superpower, especially through the creation of forces that will be so blatantly ineffective. Instead, the EU needs to recognise that the only feasible way to protect Europe is by doing all it can to strengthen Nato. That is best achieved through stronger, more potent and flexible sovereign armies that are accountable to their national parliaments and not controlled by unelected officials in Brussels with their obsessive urge to pull the strings on rival military command structures.
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Colonel Richard Kemp is a former infantry commander
Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin attend a presentation of a Haval F7 SUV
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