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<title>Center for Strategic Decision Research, Peter Struck, Michele Alliot-Marie, General George Joulwan, SACEUR, General James L. Jones, SHAPE, NATO, EU, BDLI, ILA, EADS, Northrop Grumman, Under Secretary Michael Wynne, Assistant Secretary Linton Wells, Ambassador William Burns, NATO Military Committee Chairman General Harald Kujat, General Dynamics, Boeing, Global Security Terrorism, Iraq, Afghanistan, Rainer Hertrich, David Stafford</title>
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        <td width="66" height="68"><p><img src="../2004book/logo-kevin-web.jpg" width="60" height="66"></p>        </td>
        <td width="538"><div align="center"><span class="style5">22nd International Workshop on Global Security<br>
<em>Chantilly/Paris, 10-12 June 2005 </em><br>
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      <p align="center" class="style17"><strong>Table of Contents</strong></p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style18"><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="preface.htm">Preface</a></span></span></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 1 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><a href="alliotmarie.htm">French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie (English version) </a><span class="style217"><strong></strong></span><span class="style217"><strong><a href="alliotmarie-french.htm">French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie (French version) </a><a href="reid.htm">UK Defense Minister John Reid</a></strong></span><span class="style217"><strong><a href="graham.htm">Canadian Defense Minister Bill Graham </a></strong></span><span class="style219"><a href="weissingerbaylon.htm">Workshop Chairman Dr. Roger Weissinger-Baylon </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="liska.htm">Slovak Defense Minister Juraj Liska </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="erjavec.htm">Slovenian Defense Minister Karl Erjavec </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="svinarov.htm">Bulgarian Defense Minister Nikolay Svinarov </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="kujat.htm">NATO Military Committee Chair Gen Harald Kujat </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="koenig.htm">Acting US Ambassador to NATO John Koenig </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="schuwirth.htm">SHAPE Chief of Staff Gen Rainer Schuwirth </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="back.htm">Allied Joint Force Command Brunssum Cmdr Gen Gerhard Back </a></span></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 2 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style219"><a href="perrindebrichambaut.htm">French MOD Dir for Strat Affairs Amb Marc Perrin de Brichambaut </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="dipaola.htm">Italian Chief of Defense Adm Giampaolo Di Paola </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="naumann.htm">fmr German Chief of Defense Gen  Klaus Naumann </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="perruche.htm">EU Military Staff Director Gen Jean-Paul Perruche </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="klein.htm">US Assist to Secretary of Defense Dale Klein </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="gergorin.htm">EADS Exec Vice President Jean-Louis Gergorin </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="george.htm">UK Parliament Member Bruce George </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="ranque.htm">Thales Chairman &amp; CEO Denis Ranque</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="tarasyuk.htm">Ukranian Foreign Minister Borys Tarasyuk </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="fasslabend.htm">Austrian Natl Assembly Member Minister Werner Fasslabend</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="pickering.htm">Boeing Sr Vice President Amb Thomas Pickering</a></span><a href="rooseveltinstitution.htm">Roosevelt Institution </a></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 3 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="auroy.htm">French MOD DGA Force Systems &amp; Cooperation Director Patrick Auroy </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="lind.htm">Swedish Natl Armaments Director Jan-Olof Lind </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="weise.htm">German Armaments Dir Hans-Heinrich Weise </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="volkman.htm">US Under Secretary of Defense Office Intl Coop Director Alfred Volkman </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="stanhope.htm">Dep Supreme Allied Cmdr Transformation Admiral Sir Mark Stanhope </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="lahoud.htm">MBDA President &amp; CEO Marwan Lahoud </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="courtot.htm">SAFRAN Sr Vice President Francois Courtot </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="bertolone.htm">Alenia Aeronautica CEO Giovanni Bertolone </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="harris.htm">Lockheed Martin President Scott Harris </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="schneider.htm">Northrop Grumman President Kent Schneider </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="wells.htm">US Assist Secretary of Defense Linton Wells </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="vice.htm">Northrop Grumman Vice President Thomas Vice</a></span></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 4 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="novotny.htm">Czech Ambassador to India Jaromir Novotny </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="rinkevics.htm">Latvian MOD State Secretary Edgars Rinkevics</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="plangu.htm">Romanian MOD State Secretary for Policy Ion Mircea Plangu </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="kouts.htm">Estonian Defense Forces Cmdr Adm Tarmo Kouts </a></span><br>
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        <h1 align="center" class="style25">Security: How Shall We Respond To the Present Challenges?<br>
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              <td width="1">&nbsp;</td>
              <td width="348"><div align="center"><span class="style26">Vice Admiral Tarmo K&otilde;uts<br>
  Commander of the Defense Forces of Estonia</span></div></td>
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        <p class="style21">In democratic societies, the  employment of military force is always a matter of political decision. Hence,  before tackling the question about how we should respond to today&rsquo;s challenges,  the military should look for available political guidance and limitations set  by our political leaders, expanding understanding of what constitutes a  security challenge.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">To do this, let me begin by  examining two primary guiding documents: the NATO Strategic Concept of 1999 and  the European Security Strategy of 2003. &nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style27">GUIDANCE FROM THE NATO STRATEGIC  CONCEPT&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">According to the NATO  Strategic Concept, the security of the Alliance  remains subject to a wide variety of military and nonmilitary risks, which are  multidirectional and often difficult to predict. These risks include  uncertainty and instability in and around the Euro-Atlantic area and the possibility  of regional crises that could evolve rapidly at the periphery of Alliance territory.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">Some countries in and  around the Euro-Atlantic area face serious economic, social, and political  difficulties, including ethnic and religious rivalries, territorial disputes,  inadequate or failed efforts at reform, the abuse of human rights, and the  dissolution of states, all of which can lead to local and even regional  instability. The resulting tensions could lead to crises affecting  Euro-Atlantic stability, to human suffering, and to armed conflicts that could  affect the security of the Alliance by spilling over into or otherwise  affecting neighboring countries, including NATO countries, or by affecting the  security of other states. The Alliance  has committed itself to a broad approach to security, which recognizes the  importance of political, economic, social, and environmental factors in  addition to the indispensable defense dimension.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style27">GUIDANCE FROM THE EUROPEAN UNION&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">A similar approach has been  adopted by the European Union. The European Security Strategy outlines a number  of security threats to its member-states. This document also draws a baseline,  stating that large-scale aggression against any member-state is now improbable.  Instead, Europe faces new threats, which are  more diverse, less visible, and less predictable. The strategy specifies the  key threats as terrorism, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction,  regional conflicts, state failure, and organized crime, and concludes that  together these different elements confront us with a very radical threat  indeed.&nbsp;</p>
        <p align="center" class="style27">ADDRESSING THE CHALLENGES&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">What is the political  guidance for finding the ways and means to address these challenges?&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">The NATO Strategic Concept  underscores the importance of maintaining the security and stability of the  Euro-Atlantic area. An important aim of the Alliance and its forces is to keep risks at a  distance by dealing with potential crises at an early stage. The concept also  tasks the Alliance&rsquo;s  military forces, in the event of a crisis, to be ready to conduct  crisis-response operations; it also tasks them with being ready to contribute  to the preservation of international peace and security by conducting  operations in support of other international organizations, complementing and  reinforcing political actions within a broad approach to security.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">The European Security  Strategy mirrors this approach by stating that, with the new threats, the first  line of defense will often be abroad. Because the new threats are dynamic, we  must be ready to act before a crisis occurs. Conflict prevention and threat  prevention cannot start too early. The essence of both NATO and EU guidance is  to understand that preventive engagement can avoid more serious problems in the  future.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style27">Force-Planning Guidance&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">The political leaders of  both NATO and the EU have also provided the military with force-planning  guidance. That guidance outlines a vast array of new mission requirements. The  European Security Strategy states that, in contrast to the massive threat  visible during the Cold War, none of the new threats is purely military nor can  any be tackled by purely military means. Each threat, the strategy states, requires  a mixture of instruments: intelligence, police, judicial, military, and other  means. In failed states, military instruments may be needed to restore order.  Regional conflicts need political solutions but military assets and effective  policing may be required in the post-conflict phase. Forces assigned to these  tasks must be able to respond with rapid and decisive action, applying a fully  coherent approach to the whole spectrum of crisis-management operations. From  the European Union perspective, this includes humanitarian and rescue tasks,  peacekeeping tasks, and tasks for combat forces in crisis management, including  peacemaking. &nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">In military language, this  guidance tasks the military to prepare for combined joint operations, with a  strong civil-military cooperation dimension. The latter task brings forward at  least two supporting tasks: to ensure that the police component is procedurally  interoperable with the military and, perhaps even more important, that national  legislation allows putting the civilian component&mdash;police officers, rescuers,  civil administrators, and the like&mdash;temporarily under military responsibility.  (I will address the issue of civil-military interoperability in greater detail  later.)&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">In addition, joint  contingency planning must accommodate early, rapid, and robust military  intervention as a means of preventive engagement. The latter requires  maintaining earmarked troops in high readiness with pre-identified strategic  lift and logistics support capabilities. This in turn underscores the need to  establish and exercise on a routine basis appropriate multinational cooperation  and coordination mechanisms.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style27">POTENTIAL RESPONSE OPTIONS&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">When we look at the  continuum of modern security challenges and the potential available response  options, several hard questions arise.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style27">Political Intervention&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">The first line of questions  is associated with the political will to intervene. The guidance has indicated  that preventive engagement in the early stages of an evolving crisis could  avoid spillover effects and overall worsening of the situation. Our record of  decisiveness, however, is not convincingly long. Every time we see the  deterioration of a situation in some seemingly remote place, the decisions to  intervene are not made very eagerly. Our societies quite often have second  thoughts about the situation: &ldquo;Perhaps it will sort itself out somehow&rdquo; or, as  a last resort, &ldquo;Perhaps somebody else will take the lead so we don&rsquo;t have to do  anything about it.&rdquo; I believe wholeheartedly that it is important to have the  policy of preventive interventions clearly established. But to actually  implement this policy often takes a much higher degree of public support than  the political leaders can muster. &nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">Out of the scope of  problems and challenges currently facing the Euro-Atlantic community, the  international dimension of national security is, to put it mildly, not always  fully understood and accepted by the general public. As a result, the public&rsquo;s  immediate worries, mostly economic and social, tend to prevail over the more  subtle and far-reaching concerns of international security on a global scale.  Just remember the dynamics of the crisis in the Balkans about a decade ago. And  think of the recent blows the European Constitutional Agreement had to take,  largely on economic grounds. These setbacks, however, have outlined for us a  long-term objective: to educate our societies on the very complex nature of modern  security in order to ensure better understanding and public support of hard  decisions, including sending our boys into harm&rsquo;s way.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">Another point closely  linked with public support for preventive engagement deals with the national  and international legal framework within which these operations should be  launched and conducted. As I said earlier, the military has been given a task  to prepare for combined joint operations with a strong civil-military  cooperation dimension. One of the associated requirements is the legal basis  and procedural framework that will allow the establishment of clear and  efficient command and control arrangements&mdash;arrangements that actually enable  the on-scene commander to direct and coordinate activities of a multinational  task force that has both military and non-military components. (I say &ldquo;on-scene  commander&rdquo; and &ldquo;task force&rdquo; because I am convinced that in most situations  there is a phase in which the military should bear the responsibility for the  front-line coordination of an international crisis-management effort.)  Establishing a legal basis will require the review and amending of a number of  existing legal acts as well as considerable effort by our parliaments, and I  believe this will be impossible without wide public support.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style26 style28"><strong>Military Intervention&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p class="style21">The next set of questions  looks for more precise political guidance and decisions on how to organize the  military for crisis management. Political guidelines have tasked the military  to prepare for a wide spectrum of operations, from low-intensity humanitarian  and rescue tasks to peacekeeping tasks to combating terrorism to making  forcible entry in support of peacemaking efforts. This scope of military  operations sets high requirements for training, equipment, command and control arrangements,  and sustainment, including logistics support. Within existing resource  constraints it is very difficult, if not impossible, to develop a single force  structure that will be capable of meeting every imaginable contingency across  the entire spectrum of potential missions. Within the increasingly  multinational context of assembling a Combined Joint Task Force, it seems  plausible to ask: Shouldn&rsquo;t our nations take one step further and agree upon  the division of tasks? With regard to ISAF and the composition of Provincial  Reconstruction Teams, we can see this trend already in place.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">As part of this issue, some  keywords come to my mind: niche capabilities, usability, and deployability.  Within NATO, we have struggled to fill these concepts with substance. But I  think it is time to broaden this approach in order to embrace the developments  within the European Security and Defense Policy as well. Changing times and  evolving challenges call for handy and capable military instruments in both  NATO and the EU.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style26"><strong>THE NEED FOR INTEROPERABILITY&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p class="style21">There is yet another aspect  of the Combined Joint Task Force that actually encompasses its entire lifespan,  from contingency planning to recovery after successful completion of the  mission&mdash;the aspect of interoperability. Within the Alliance, interoperability has been a focal  point of doctrine development and training for quite some time. But  interoperability, or lack of it, becomes even more important in the future  composition of a task force, when not only military units from many countries  are working shoulder to shoulder but so are law enforcers, rescuers,  paramedics, and many other specialists. From long and sometimes bitter  experience we know that in any operation there are zillions of details that can  either contribute to or undermine the overall success of the mission. So I  believe it&rsquo;s time for the doctrine developers and planners in our national  research establishments, as well as those working for the NATO Transformation  Command, to come up with a fresh way of looking at how we do business in order  to accommodate our friends and colleagues from non-military sectors.&nbsp;</p>
        <p align="center" class="style26"><strong>THE FUTURE OF CRISIS-MANAGEMENT  OPERATIONS&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p class="style21">Last but not the least I  would like to say some words about how I see the focal point of future  crisis-management operations. In this discussion there are two considerations  to bear in mind: one relates to the operational planning domain and the other  to the &ldquo;grand strategy.&rdquo;&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">Let me address the  operational planning aspect first. Here I see a critical requirement to  minimize the number of civilian casualties. From the perspective of the  politically desired end-state, it is pointless to bring peace and stability to  a graveyard. Our force-employment doctrines for crisis-management operations  need to be refined to better accommodate new intelligence resources,  precision-guided ammunition, and other high-tech solutions developed and  offered to us by our colleagues and partners in the defense industry. We also  need to reconsider how we operate; we need to apply more creativity and  out-of-the-box thinking in order to attain mission objectives with fewer losses  among civilian populations and less damage to civilian infrastructure while  staying within acceptable levels of risk and avoiding casualties on the side of  the peace-bringers. We saw convincing applications of these principles in the  first phase of the Iraqi campaign, and lessons learned there should now be reflected  in our doctrines, particularly those dealing with broad, nation-building  contingencies.&nbsp;</p>
        <p class="style21">With regard to the grand  strategy, as it has been rightfully outlined in both strategic concepts, we  face a great deal of complexity. But as our time in Iraq  and the evolving circumstances in Afghanistan have proven, we must  focus on ensuring the functioning of the society. As I said in Berlin at the 21st Workshop: &ldquo;...the operation should  be focused on the restoration of local political processes and economic life...The state can operate only under the condition of a viable economy, for  otherwise there will be no means to sustain the statehood. From disappointed  and warlike environments emerge only drugs and terror.&rdquo;&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">We must also understand  that, no matter how brilliant our plan is to remove a dictator, if we do not  also have a brilliant plan to help the people to establish a new life the first  plan is insufficient. It is not enough to disarm paramilitary gangs of local  warlords if we are unable to provide these men with other means to earn their  living with dignity. It is also not enough to destroy poppy fields if we do not  give the peasants a chance to grow decent food and, more important, the chance  to sell their products to other people who may need food desperately. In short,  if we are going to take the responsibility to intervene, we must also accept  the responsibility for helping people to survive under their newly gained  freedom. Our task is to bring people new hope for the future, not simply to  stand on street corners with a rifle in hand.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style26"><strong>CONCLUDING REMARKS&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p class="style21">Many challenges face us in  our contemporary world. While only some of these are known to us and some are  yet to be unveiled, there are things we can do today in order to be better  prepared to meet the unexpected. We can:&nbsp; </p>
        <ul type="disc" class="style21">
          <li>Talk to our people, explaining and explaining       again why we need to go overseas when there is so much to do at home&nbsp; </li>
          <li>Prepare a good inventory of our capabilities&mdash;both       military and civilian&mdash;to ensure that our common response to new challenges       is timely and adequate at any given time&nbsp; </li>
          <li>Further develop the planning and execution of       standard operating procedures to ensure that all components of a task       force or reconstruction team have a common lexicon and common doctrinal       basis for facing the new challenges that every new day brings&nbsp; </li>
        </ul>
        <p class="style21">Then, enjoying wide public  support and having the right mix of instruments from all like-minded and  willing nations&mdash;a mix that enables us to plan and work together&mdash;we will truly  be able to respond to the present challenges of global security.&nbsp; </p>
        <p class="style21">&nbsp;</p>
        <p class="style21">&nbsp;</p>
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