MEPs to debate EU-NATO relations for first time Wednesday

Published: 18 February 2009 y., Wednesday

NATO
In a troubled world wracked with terrorism, environmental destruction and where failed states threaten havoc, the EU and NATO should develop a closer relationship, according to a report to be debated by MEPs Wednesday. It calls for both sides to avoid competition and develop greater cooperation in crisis-management operations. It also calls on the EU to develop its own security and defence capabilities. However, some MEPs are critical of more EU involvement in NATO.

The debate about the parliament's first ever report on the EU-NATO relationship is sure to be contentious. It comes as the military alliance prepares to celebrate 60 years in April.
 
"NATO is the backbone of European security"
 
The report - adopted by MEPs on the Foreign Affairs Committee - says that NATO has a fundamental role in the security architecture of Europe.
 
Finnish-born MEP Ari Vatanen, who is guiding the report through parliament, said, "not only is NATO the backbone of European security but 94% of the EU's population live in States that are members of the alliance."
 
Mr Vatanen, who sits as an MEP for France added: "The EU's raison d'être is peace-building and its mosaic-like composition gives it a unique potential to intervene in different parts of the world to reduce human suffering. But it can only fully realise its potential by developing a strong transatlantic tie and a complementary relationship with NATO."
 
On some of the institutional blocs to further cooperation between countries he said, "it is really important that any incompatibility between membership of the EU and non-membership of NATO be addressed so as not to hinder effective EU-NATO cooperation."
 
"Will lead to a further militarization"
 
Not everyone agrees. Long time peace activist Tobias Pflüger along with 7 other members of the leftist GUE/NGL group in Parliament have laid down a "minority opinion" on the report and is opposed to closer links.
 
The member of the Foreign Affairs Committee said, "military alliances like NATO are by their very nature exclusive organisations and therefore create front lines between members and non-members."
 
"Every effort to strengthen NATO via a closer cooperation with the European Union increases the potential for international conflicts. It will also lead to a further militarization of the EU's foreign policy and accelerate the tendency to use military force in order to 'solve' conflicts," he said.
 
"I argue for a civilian EU that spends its money for civilian and social purposes instead for military means - thereby enabling it to challenge the roots of conflicts - especially poverty," said Mr Pflüger, who was an anti-nuclear campaigner in the 1980s.
 
Watch the debate live
 
Parliament will discuss EU-NATO relations on Wednesday (at around 1600 CET), along with other aspects of EU foreign relations with foreign policy Chief Javier Solana. Watch online via the first link below.   

 

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Suspected pirates attack navy ship

Eleven suspected pirates apparently mistook a French naval ship for a commercial vessel and, according to the French Defence Ministry, prepared for attack. more »

China quarantines to contain flu

Authorities delivered supplies to people at Metropark hotel, where travellers have been quarantined for a week after a Mexican guest tested positive for the H1N1 flu. more »

Philippines floods kill ten

The cyclon has battered several provinces in the Bicol region, forcing thousands to flee their homes. more »

Italian PM to divorce - reports

Reports that Silvio Berlusconi's wife Veronica wants a divorce surfaced in the country's Sunday newspapers. more »

Swine flu kiss risk

Citizens of Lebanese Republic here are being advised to stop the customary greeting of friends and family with social kisses to avoid the threat of swine flu. more »

Key US senator switches parties

Moving Democrats closer to a 60-vote Senate majority that would allow them to break Republican procedural roadblocks, Pennsylvania Republican Senator Arlen Specter said he has switched parties and will begin working with Democrats immediately. more »

Round-up of April plenary session 21-24 April

The penultimate Parliamentary session of the 2004-2009 term took place in Strasbourg from 21-24 April. more »

Energy Commissioner Andris Piebalgs welcomes the agreement of the three Baltic States on the route of the electricity interconnection project between them and Sweden

Energy Commissioner, Andris Piebalgs, welcomed the agreement signed today between the Prime Ministers of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia to start without delay, the implementation of a Baltic-Swedish electricity link. more »

Western Balkans: reaffirmed European perspective to stabilise the region

The prospect of future EU membership for countries of the Western Balkans is the primary guarantor of stability and a driver of reforms, say MEPs in a report drafted by Anna Ibrisagic (EPP-ED, SE) and adopted on Friday in Strasbourg with 305 votes in favour, 23 against and 12 abstentions. more »

Paraguay's presidential scandal

The third woman in 2 weeks has claimed that Paraguay's bishop-turned-president Fernando Lugo fathered her child. more »