European defence: on the Tusks of a dilemma
Thank you.
6 February 2019
Alphen, Netherlands. 8 February. As European Council President Donald
Tusk was reserving a special place in hell for those who backed Brexit with no
plan I was a few metres away in the European Parliament giving a speech on the
military aspects of Europe’s future defence at a conference organised by the
European Conservatives and Reformist Group, with a specific focus on EU defence
ambitions. During the speech I addressed the defence implications of Brexit and
suggested that whatever ‘agreement’ is finally fashioned it will please no-one
and will likely serve as a source of intense friction between Britain and the
EU for many years to come. Mr Tusk merely confirmed that.
The important question is whether it also serves as a source of friction
between Britain and the remaining EU member-states. If it does it will
undermine the support of the British population for the defence of continental
Europe and Britain could well retreat into a form of nuclear-armed defence
isolationism. Such an outcome must be avoided at all costs, but to do just that
leaders on both sides of the Channel, even in Brussels, need to be precisely
that - leaders.
The text of my speech is below:
A European
army or a better army of Europeans?
Good
afternoon,
The essential
question all Europeans face, but many refuse to admit, is essentially simple: a
European army or a better army of Europeans? That is the only realistic
question all Europeans should be asking themselves. The key phrase I want you
to bear in mind as you consider the future of European defence is not defence
integration, but rather sovereign cohesion.
The crux of
the debate is the need for Europeans to take greater strategic responsibility
and the cost of the force that would make such ambition credible. There has also been much talk of late,
European defence always involves a lot of talk, about strategic autonomy, but
what does it mean? Strategic autonomy cannot be simply declared for it will only
emerge as a function of real European military power.
The question
about what kind of army Europeans need was implicit in the 2019 Franco-German Aachen
‘Treaty’ and the implicit tensions it revealed between Berlin and Paris. Should
the European future force be a joint force or aspire to become a common force?
The ‘answer’ in Aachen was all too typically ‘European’, an eloquent, hidden contradiction.
The treaty
called for a Franco-German Defence and Security Council that will provide “…aid
and assistance by all means at their [my
italic] disposal, including armed forces, in cases of aggression against their
territory”. In other words, for France the focus is joint forces and the
ambition collective defence. However, the Council would, at the behest of
Berlin, also help foster a “common military culture” that “…contributes to the
creation of a European army”.
It is
certainly time we Europeans took more responsibility for our own continent’s
defence. The Americans are over-stretched and could well be mired in dangers
elsewhere, Europeans face a range of emerging threats from peer state
competitors to the ongoing menace of violent fundamentalism in and around
Europe. The transatlantic relationship,
which remains the essential pillar of any meaningful defence of Europe needs Europeans
able and willing, at the very least, to act as an effective first responder in
an emergency. NATO, which must remain Europe’s main defence, will be unable to function
as either collective deterrent or collective defence unless Europeans generate
more military capability and capacity. The British, post-Brexit, may be in no
mood to seriously defend other Europeans (more of that later) whilst the
abrogation of the Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty by both the US and
Russia may well mark the beginning of the end of the rules-based system that is
rightly so important to Europeans.
In a sense,
INF encapsulates all one needs to understand about what is wrong with how too
many Europeans see ‘defence’. Those who believe in rules have no power
(Europeans), whilst those that increasingly have the power do not believe in
rules. As seventeenth century English philosopher Thomas Hobbes once said, “Covenants
without the sword of but words, and of no use to any man”.
A European Army?
A European Army? There can be no European army without a
European Government. The failed European Defence Community between 1952 and
1954 is a lesson from history. It failed because the major powers – most notably
France, Britain and the Federal Republic of Germany were simply not prepared to
abandon defence sovereignty. Has that changed? Poland? Sweden? Spain? Putting young citizens
in uniform in harm’s way is rightly the most preciously guarded responsibility
of sovereign democracy and in Europe the centre of gravity of such democracy remains
the nation-state.
Given
enduring political divisions a European Army might have some limited utility
for full-on collective defence, but precious little else. Recent operations,
such as Libya, SAHEL, and Syria etc. have highlighted many political divisions
between member-states about how and when to use force. In the absence of any automaticity
of political action no true European Army can exist. In such circumstances the more defence
efforts are integrated the less chance an integrated force would likely be used
for anything but the most extreme of emergencies.
So, what do
Europeans really need?
So, what do
Europeans really need? First, Europeans need to develop more capable,
interoperable and standardised forces to build the reach, redundancy and
resiliency that will make NATO work better and ensure the EU-NATO strategic
partnership is credible in the face of the actual threats Europeans face. Second,
Europeans must grasp that their forces will often be organised into coalitions
operating under NATO, EU or national flags. Third, the scope and capability of
any European Future Force (EFF) must be actively considered in relation to the
threats and pressures it must ease. Fourth, the EFF must be a decidedly joint
force not a common force and focussed squarely on the nation-state. A common
force would kill flexibility and from experience generate more EU lawyers than
warriors. Fifth, the EFF must be protectable and projectable and designed
specifically to strengthen the European pillar of NATO and give credence to EU-flagged
operations and thus ease burdens on the Americans.
Does current
talk about EU defence match up to the scale of the challenges Europeans face?
Does current
talk about EU defence match up to the scale of the challenges Europeans face?
No. Indeed, it is all a bit Groundhog Day. There has always been tension
between harmonisation, i.e. the creation of deep joint forces, and integration,
the move towards a common force. That
tension has repeatedly stymied progress because those member-states who have
tended to champion integration have tended to have few armed forces whilst those
who fear such integration are the ones who have such forces. Germany? The state
of the Bundeswehr puts Germany squarely in the integration camp.
Once again
the future defence of Europe seems to be mired in the swamp that stretches
between EU defence and European defence with Germany still too fearful of its
own power to lift Europeans onto the dry land of strategic stability. Even harmonisation
efforts since the Franco-British St Malo Declaration back in 1998 have been
fraught with difficulty. Past such efforts have realised results that have been,
at best, patchy. The European Rapid Reaction Force, EU Battlegroups and pooling
and sharing all met with limited success. This is because they were all
essentially cost, rather than effects-driven, lacked any inherent strategic
ambition and without US enablers formations, such as EU battlegroups, had at
best limited utility and pooling and sharing could only go so far. They all
suffered from, and revealed the extent of the essential dilemma of European
defence; what aspects of defence should be ‘European’. i.e. national, where
could the EU add real value, such as the development of ‘autonomous’ strategic
enablers, such as SIGINT and strategic lift, and who would decide and how to
use the forces and resources so generated?
PESCO, CARD
and the European Defence Fund?
PESCO, CARD
and the European Defence Fund (EDF)? They
are good as far as they go but…PESCO’s 17 joint projects are useful, but will do
little to ease reliance on over-pressed US forces for anything but the most permissive
of European operations or lay the ground for a defence-relevant European future
force. EDF has a budget of €5.5bn per
year that will help promote some synergies and efficiencies. However, and to
put EDF in context, the UK defence equipment budget per annum is some €20bn per
year. Moreover, the introduction of the fund could also corrupt the European
defence industrial market and slow, rather than accelerate, consolidation of
the European Defence and Technological Industrial Base (EDTIB) and innovation within
it. Other people’s money does that if it is not accompanied by clear goals and
mechanisms for compliance.
Even further
European defence harmonisation will have consequences for smaller European powers
that must be understood. Take the Netherlands for example. Its small but good
army is close to the Germans, its small but good navy is close to the British
and its small but good air force is close to the Americans. In other words, the
Netherlands needs all three to agree to act in strategic alignment if its force
is to be anything other than a small gendarmerie force.
Yes, I am
suggesting PESCO, CARD, EDF et al go further but…
What choice
do we Europeans really have?
What choice
do we Europeans really have? We can either continue with an analogue EU-led
army of Europeans that just bolts together a lot of European legacy stuff… or,
we can collectively build an information-led digital 5D future defence that
counters disinformation, destabilisation, disruption, deception and destruction.
The military core of that defence will demand a twenty-first century European
future force at its deterrence and defence core that masters the cross-domains
of air, sea, land, cyber, space, information and knowledge. Such a force would
only be realised if it is also built on a European defence and technological
industrial base that embraces the revolution in military technology and the
application to the battlespace of Artificial Intelligence, big data, machine-learning,
quantum-computing et al.
THAT is the
only real European Future Force ‘choice’ we have as Europeans and such a choice
can only be realised with the European nation-state and the EU in harness, not
in implicit competition. The new/old problem with the current new/old European
defence debate is that still too many in Brussels and elsewhere see defence as
THE Trojan horse to progressively undermine the sovereign European nation-state
in favour of some vacuous and at best partial EU super-state. Europe will NEVER
defend itself if the implicit ‘war’ being fought is between the EU and its
member-states.
Brexit, NATO
and European defence
Last night I
attended a reception at which many of the great and good from this House
(European Parliament) were also present. At one point a speaker referred to
Britain as ‘…a small island off the north-west coast of Europe’. Everyone
laughed, except me. One could feel the condescension. Oh, those poor little
British lost in their post-imperial fantasy. Get over it! The speaker was
clearly a geographer not a strategist! Now, I do not for a moment
under-estimate the lose-lose strategic implications of Brexit for all of us,
which is why I campaigned for Remain in the 2016 referendum. But, like many
decent but pragmatic Remainers I am getting tired of such ignorance and the
arrogance.
First, there
are very few in Britain who harbour post-imperial, post-Brexit fantasies. Second,
Britain remains a major economic and military actor. Third, Britain has
Europe’s most advanced military and intelligence nexus. Fourth, given the
growing importance of coalitions to defence in Europe the importance of Britain
as a command force to the defence of Europe will increase not decrease. Those
of you with such views need to get over your anti-British prejudice and quickly
as you cannot expect to insult the British people and, at the same time, expect
them to help defend you. Your choice.
Irrespective
of Brexit the defence-strategic choices of the British hardly suggest the British
Army of the Rhine reborn. Britain is building new fleet aircraft carriers,
nuclear ballistic missile submarines, new nuclear attack submarines, new
frigates and a host of F-35 strike aircraft do not a Continental Strategy make.
The British Army is the smallest it has been since Napoleonic times and could
fit inside Wembley Stadium.
The implications
for an ever-more important NATO? We may be witnessing the beginning of a
re-pillaring of NATO as it divides into a Yankosphere & a Eurosphere.
Brexit will certainly push in that direction if the current tensions endure. I
would counsel against such divisions because all it would likely realise is a
small cluster of Europeans just about hanging onto America’s strategic
coat-tails, and a Eurosphere comprised of the strategically left-behind. Such a divide would over time kill NATO and
replace it with what?
Europeans
must think about future war if we are to deter it!
The motto of
the Royal Navy is ‘Si vis pacem para bellum’ - if you want peace prepare for
war. I am not suggesting we prepare overtly for war but we Europeans must at
least begin to seriously think as Europeans about war. Europe is at a strategic
tipping point and must return to defence fundamentals, credible deterrence and
dialogue and do so from a position of legitimate and genuine strength,
including a credible military component.
All of the above
implies the move towards some form of modular army of Europeans built around the
further harmonisation of national forces. Far from denying that I would welcome
it. BUT, it needs a proper plan. The first step would be for Europeans to
conduct a strategic audit so we know who has what and why with the aim of
seeing how existing resources might be applied more efficiently and
effectively. Then we need to consider
properly the sustained and systematic application of resource where it can make
the most difference. In 2017, Admiral Giampaolo di Paola and I published a
paper entitled Equipping & Affording
European Defence. Using European Defence Agency figures the message was clear
where a fundamental problem with the future defence of Europe can be found. European Defence R&T is only 2% of total
defence spending. And, whilst European collaborative defence R&T might equal
some 20% of total defence R&T spending in Europe, it is still only 0.4% of
total defence spending. China? Russia? India? US?
Sovereign cohesion? Spending better what we Europeans spend now on defence, spending coherently and in line with what the future defence of Europe needs not what we would like. Then, spend together on what is missing and vital with a clear vision of Europe's objective - to deter war, not to have to fight it.
Let me finish
with a warning from Robert Schuman. “World peace cannot be safeguarded without
the making of creative efforts proportionate to the dangers with threaten it”.
Thank you.
Julian
Lindley-French,
European Parliament,
6 February 2019