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<HR SIZE="2"><P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="7" FACE="Palatino">
Chapter 39
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="6" FACE="Palatino">
European Security after Washington,<BR>
Bremen, and Cologne
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
Secretary General of the Western European Union Jos&#233; Cutileiro
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<BR>
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B></B><B>OPENING REMARKS</B>
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<FONT COLOR="#000000" FACE="Palatino" SIZE="7">S</FONT>ince the time I started dealing with defense matters, I do not recall
 ever seeing Europeans trying to improve their performance regarding their
 security with such keenness and interest. I think a lot of the credit has
 to go to Tony Blair, who last autumn said that Europeans were lacking several
 things in this field: a common political will, which should be expressed
 in the European Union; strong military capabilities; and, less important
 from his point of view, a proper institutional fit. In other words, he
 was open to institutional changes.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B></B><B></B><B>DEVELOPING CRISIS MANAGEMENT CAPABILITIES</B>
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Institutions are much easier to deal with than the military means or the
 political will, and it is there that movement has taken place. Over the
 last few months, a combined effort has been made by countries acting through
 different organizations to allow the European Union to develop a crisis
 management capability. Part of this effort took place at the Washington
 Summit, where NATO said that it was ready to help with planning and with
 a presumption for the use of assets, building on what was done with the
 WEU. Recently in Cologne, the European Council also decided that crisis
 management capabilities should be developed with the necessary support
 elements, such as a Military Staff and a Military Committee. In the WEU,
 we have been carrying out an audit of European security capacities, which
 will be ready by the end of 1999, and, by putting it under the nations&#146;
 responsibilities, we will authoritatively highlight both what Europeans
 have and, perhaps more importantly, what they do not have.
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
All of this work is focusing on crisis management, not on defense as such.
 No one, at least at this stage, is talking about trying to promote in the
 European Union a defense capability against territorial aggression, an
 Article 5 role. Indeed even though many WEU functions will be taken over
 by the European Union, Article 5 of the WEU will not be taken over by the
 European Union.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B></B><B>FORGING A COMMON POLITICAL WILL</B>
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Regarding the creation of a common political will, obviously Europeans
 in the EU want to move forward. The first High Representative for Common
 Foreign and Security Policy has just been appointed, and, in my view, a
 better man could not have been chosen to do the job. But, obviously, forming
 a political will will be a long haul and a difficult thing. You will have
 a common political will regarding security when you have a stronger awareness
 of common interests.
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Not until very recently have Europeans shown a great capacity for this.
 However, the situation is &nbsp;improving. The fact that the European Union
 is taking over the WEU&#146;s role, plus voluntarism, the Euro, and an awareness
 that Europeans, after 10 years of the Yugoslav crisis including the current
 Kosovo crisis, should increase their capabilities, is very important.
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<B></B><B>THE NEED TO INCREASE MILITARY CAPABILITIES</B>
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As far as military capabilities are concerned&#151;and I am not only talking
 about characteristic European deficiencies such as a certain lack in satellite
 intelligence, large transport aircraft, or precision weapons, but more
 pedestrian things such as having your army ready to go and to address a
 modern crisis&#151;there has not been much movement since last autumn. I have
 learned of some reductions in overall defense budgets and some small efforts
 to modernize armed forces in order to move them from being able to deal
 with Article 5 missions to being able to deal with crisis management. The
 British probably lead the way in this; others, including the French and
 the Dutch, are doing their bit. Still others are involved in this effort
 but are doing it more slowly. But many of our countries are doing little
 as far as increasing real capacity and being able to deliver it on time.
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Much has been said about convergence criterion, an idea picked up from
 the currency that has been around for some time. Of course, in the currency
 there was a fundamental element: everyone was very keen on getting there.
 The problem with convergence criteria in the defense view is that some
 people think that others do not want to get there. That makes the criteria
 more difficult to define and certainly more difficult to enforce. But perhaps
 more work should be done on this&#151;we might find that peer pressure and the
 notion that Europeans should have a more important role to play will be
 applied in a more rational manner to resources different countries use
 for defense.
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
What we are talking about is the overall capacity of countries to meet
 their commitments&#151;their defense commitments as well as their crisis management
 commitments both within and outside the Alliance&#151;and I do not think you
 can make a neat distinction and say that we are putting this money here
 just for ESDI and then not have money for other things. &nbsp; I do not think
 it works like that. If countries spend better and perhaps more, and modernize
 and adapt their armed forces in a common structure, we will have the capacity
 for crisis management and, if necessary, the capacity for defense. Europeans
 might take part in a NATO crisis management exercise, through NATO in a
 European-led crisis management exercise, in a European-led and European-run
 crisis management exercise outside NATO, in a coalition of the willing,
 or in some other exercise with the blessing of the European Union.
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I believe Kosovo has shown, to me at least, that, while Europeans can no
 longer be considered as political lightweights, they remain very much military
 lightweights, at least as far as the first part of the exercise was concerned.
 Obviously, this was a case in which Europeans&#151;some Europeans, at least&#151;were
 as keen as the U.S. to get into action, so the political will and the political
 capacity to organize were very important. When the Yugoslav troubles began
 in 1991, Europe&#146;s political incapacity came not from lack of attention
 or technical weakness but from the fact that the most important European
 players saw the conflict in different ways and had different prescriptions
 for the ideal solution; they could not do much jointly to impose a solution
 because they had different notions of what the solution should be.&nbsp;In Kosovo
 they were together, but the post-Kosovo work will be very important. That
 is because the effort to be made by Europeans, inter alia, through the
 Stability Pact, will be an attempt to reach out to Southeastern Europe,
 to the Balkans, to promote democracy, prosperity, and security. It is an
 attempt that is long overdue.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B></B><B>CONCLUDING REMARKS</B>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
When the Cold War ended, Western Europeans concentrated more on improving
 their own internal mechanisms, making it better for themselves within the
 European Union, than on trying to help Central Europe. However now there
 is an opportunity to do this work and prevent future conflicts. Conflict
 prevention is a very unrewarding art, though, because if there is no conflict
 you may never be certain that your work prevented one. But such work, in
 the OSCE, for instance, has been extremely important. It has helped in
 different parts of Central and Eastern Europe, and it has obtained results.

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Generally it is very difficult to put together crisis prevention efforts
 because it is difficult to convince parliaments and governments and the
 public that you should go there. However, with luck and a common purpose,
 the effort that is now beginning in the Balkans may duplicate what happened
 in Western Europe after the Second World War&#151;not only the Marshall Plan,
 but the vision that eventually became the European Union. For many years,
 the Union, and the European Community before it, dealt basically with economic
 questions and had nothing to do with security. But we all know that the
 entire effort was started basically to prevent the Germans and the French
 from coming to blows with each other every 30 years. And that effort has
 worked. A similar effort in the Balkans is probably the best way to prevent
 further conflicts there.
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