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<HR SIZE="2"><P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="7" FACE="Palatino">
Chapter 9
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="5" FACE="Palatino">
European Defense Needs: Challenges and Answers
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
State Secretary of German Ministry of Defense Dr. Walther St&#252;tzle<FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" FACE="TIMES" SIZE="3">
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<BR>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
<FONT COLOR="#000000" FACE="Palatino" SIZE="7">F</FONT>rom listening to the speeches and reading the papers that have been submitted,
 I have come to the conclusion that by now everything that can be said has
 been said. So, I have decided not to read my prepared speech and offer
 instead a few observations as an introduction to what I hope will be a
 lively discussion.
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B>APPRECIATING OUR PROGRESS</B>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
My first observation is that we are still not in the habit of reminding
 ourselves of the enormous progress that we have made. We seem to know all
 our deficiencies, but we do not seem to appreciate the headway that we
 have made. Clearly, I am biased, but I will tell you that I was in the
 crowd that listened to John F. Kennedy in 1963 at the Schonberg Rathaus.
 General Polk was the United States Commander in Berlin at that time. Had
 anyone said to me then that on 5 June 2000, I would be sitting in the Palace
 Hotel in West Berlin( that was no longer West Berlin, but Berlin) to participate
 in a NATO Workshop with countries from all over Europe, the United States
 and North America, and that we would be talking about NATO&#146;s future with
 an ever-increasing number of members&#151;with the Principal First Deputy Defense
 Minister of the Czech Republic reminding us that we are not being speedy
 enough&#151;if someone had said this to me in 1963, I would have smiled and
 probably would have said, &#147;Why don&#146;t you go and see your doctor?&#148;
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
It is reality today. This city is united, this country is united, and the
 interesting thing is that the people of this country, our partners, friends,
 and allies, do not put a question mark next to NATO. They have accepted
 the change and they have also accepted the institutions that actually brought
 about the change.
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
If we are unable to celebrate our own achievements, let us note the fact
 that our people, who are perhaps less sophisticated but in most cases much
 better than we are, know of them. They want us to continue with NATO and
 with the transatlantic relationship, and they want us to remember who brought
 the change about and what made us, in the end, prevail. This, I think,
 is very encouraging, because most of us have forgotten&#151;though I have not&#151;those
 gospel writers and preachers along our road who said that NATO would fall
 apart; that there is no need for the United States to stay in Europe; that
 there is no need for soldiers, for integration, for expensive military
 structures or complicated, sophisticated military equipment and armaments.
 All of this has disappeared, except of course in small circles, as there
 should be in democracies.
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
You may be interested to learn about why I could not be here for the opening
 session of the Workshop on June 3. Minister Scharping had asked me to go
 to Hamburg to serve on a panel at the Catholic Church convention. It was
 great fun, because it was very different from when I was in Hamburg in
 1981, in a different capacity, but also at a church convention. It was
 an informed, educated, well-structured, interest-minded debate, with pros
 and cons. And there was no serious question mark next to the basic principles
 of bipartisan policy, and no one raised questions about the existence of
 the Alliance, only about the internal dealings within the Alliance. I add
 this so that we do not forget that one of the defense needs we should keep
 in mind is taking note of the attitude of the majority of our people, and
 seeing to it that a lack of question marks remains the majority attitude.
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B>CONTINUING OUR JOURNEY</B>
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
The history of the Alliance is a history of reconstruction and reconciliation.
 It is a history of progress, as manifested within the framework of our
 discussions this morning, in the Atlantic Alliance, and in what then was
 the European Economic Community. It is also a history of failure and setbacks.
 One project that marked that failure probably more than any other (in the
 context of our discussions at this NATO Workshop) was the European Defense
 Community effort that failed in 1954, for reasons of which we all are aware.
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
Why do I revive this memory? For one reason only: because, with the Cold
 War behind us, we have started our journey, our Alliance journey, into
 what I call a period of transition&#151;a period that has yet to have a name
 and that is not taking place in completely charted waters. But we still
 have the courage to enter these waters, and we have the instruments and
 the will to see us through.
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
As we continue our journey, it is very fitting that we are holding the
 first NATO Workshop of this new millennium in Berlin, because it was in
 West Berlin in 1996 when NATO decided on its fundamental concepts: that
 the Alliance is ready to accept the future, to accept the responsibility,
 to accept that there is an emerging European Union and to no longer see
 the Atlantic Alliance traveling one way and the European Economic Community
 traveling in another. That is the umbrella under which those who worked
 with the Treaty of Amsterdam see the future of the Union. That is <I>the</I> single
 most fundamental change in post-war European history, apart from, of course,
 the prerequisite to all of this, the end of the Cold War. Europe decided
 to take its fate into its own hands, but not without the North American
 umbrella above it. That made Cologne and Helsinki possible. And it was
 in that spirit that the headline goals finally came to replace all of our
 headaches about the defense future of the European Union.
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
Now, I am fully aware that quite a few of our observers&#151;and all of them
 have my sympathy and my understanding&#151;think that 55,000 to 60,000 reaction
 forces are not sufficient given the needs most recently highlighted in
 Kosovo. But let me say again that if someone in 1994 or in 1995 had argued
 that in December of 1999 Europeans would sit in Helsinki (which is not
 yet a NATO member) and talk about serious defense issues, agree on a headline
 goal, make heads of state and government not only ratify language but make
 bureaucrats and civil servants actually address their attention to numbers
 and capabilities and put a time tag on it&#151;if someone had forecast that
 in 1994, a number of people, some in this room, would have seriously doubted
 it. &#147;Finlandization&#148; was the word in the &#145;70s. That was always wrong. But
 now, Finlandization has a very positive, future-oriented, defense-loaded
 meaning, which I think all of us should welcome as major progress.
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B>LEARNING FROM KOSOVO</B>
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
Now, even though I am not saying anything new, I would still like to talk
 about the three key lessons of Kosovo as I see them.
</FONT></P>
<UL>
<LI><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
The first lesson is that, throughout the Kosovo campaign, people have accepted
 the idea that, despite the end of the Cold War, we are still in need of
 a very solid defense. Now, that is not easily said in a country whose federal
 budget has a very special sub-budget that covers only the expenses serving
 the federal debt. Actually, the sub-budget services the interest rate,
 but this amount is almost double the size of the defense budget. In a country
 that must shoulder this rather heavy burden and, in one way or another,
 would have to cut it back to make military reform possible, this idea cannot
 be taken for granted. Certainly, it was not so before the campaign started,
 but this new attitude lasted throughout the campaign and still determines
 the situation&#151;which is no small achievement.
</FONT></LI>
<LI><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
The second lesson learned, which had immediate consequences for European
 defense, is that there was not &#147;too much America&#148; but that there was &#147;too
 little Europe.&#148; I had many occasions to talk with the Supreme Allied Commander
 Europe and I can testify that he took the European view as much to heart
 as he took any other important view, including that of his own nation.
 But it was very clear to him, as it was clear to us, that there was not
 too much America, but too little Europe.
</FONT></LI>
<LI><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
The third lesson is that there is no lack of transatlantic military capabilities,
 but only the lack of a concept to translate the marvelous military success
 into lasting political progress. Here is a point that is not addressed
 only to political leaders: I think we must protect our forces in many ways.
 We must not send them into situations in which they cannot deliver. We
 must not send them out without knowing how to get them back. And we must
 not send them on military missions in which they score the military success
 but then find that the political side of the spectrum is not able to translate
 their success into lasting political progress. Kosovo is <I>not</I> a military
 exercise, it is a political exercise. To cut a very long story short (it
 has 610 years of history), the principle that is at stake here is: Does
 Helsinki apply to the Balkans or not? Does 1975&#151;which gave us <I>the</I> single
 most important breakthrough in post-war European security history, the
 renunciation of force principle&#151;apply to the Balkans or not? Our forces
 are there to protect the political effort, to give the political leaders
 adequate room to breathe, to construct, to build, and to provide for social
 and political development. But they should not be expected to serve there
 endlessly if they do not see the appropriate political progress.
</FONT></LI>
</UL>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
Why do I mention this? Because it introduces a new, political element into
 the issues of European defense needs and defense answers and into transatlantic
 leadership and requirements&#151;and that element is <I>patience</I>. We are dealing
 with a problem that needs attention and focus, but also patience. Now obviously,
 not endless patience, but a little patience. We cannot expect to correct
 the issues of 610 years within a year or two, but all of us should work
 hard to generate that patience, not alone but in Congress, because it cannot
 be done without the United States.
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B>CONCLUDING REMARKS</B>
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
European defense has entered a period in which it is reshaping itself under
 the umbrella of the Atlantic Alliance. We know from experience that our
 American friends will accept us as partners only if we are competitive.
 That has been a fundamental requirement ever since John F. Kennedy actually
 encouraged us to get our act together. So we are finally becoming competitive.
 But there is an element of danger in this course, and that is the possibility
 of misunderstanding. Competition is very healthy as long as it does not
 derail into destructive rivalry. We must not allow competition&#151;be it in
 the field of technology, in economic relationships, or in any other field&#151;to
 turn into dangerous and destructive rivalry, yet we must protect it. If
 we do not allow competition, there will be no partner equal to the United
 States.
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
This calls for a very careful handling of the political process and for
 remembering something that is completely forgotten: wherever and whenever
 the United States and Europe have allowed each other to compete, they ended
 up being each other&#146;s single biggest investment partner. This fact has
 resulted in the NATO area being the largest in the world with a non-war
 guarantee&#151;an area of shared values and shared responsibility, an area where
 Europeans are the most important investment partner for the United States
 and the United States is the most important investment partner for Europeans.
</FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
As the European Union continues to reshape itself, we must all keep in
 mind that our Alliance is about values, about defense, and about jobs.
 So wherever you go, and whenever you are questioned about the future of
 NATO, you can, without question and without checking numbers, state with
 great confidence, &#147;Under the NATO umbrella there is economic development,
 and economic development means jobs. And jobs are social security. And
 social security is democracy. And democracy is the future that we want
 to offer to those countries that do not yet belong to the Alliance.&#148;
</FONT></P>
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