The EU needs a bolder Balkan strategy

The EU needs a bolder Balkan strategy

The EU needs a bolder Balkan strategy

External Author(s)
Carl Bildt

Written by Carl Bildt, 01 February 2006

Issue 47 - 2006

Issue 47 - 2006 spotlight image

Issue 47 April/May, 2006

A new European approach to China

External author(s): Mark Leonard

How to build a better EU foreign policy

By Charles Grant. External author(s): Mark Leonard
File Attachment
File thumbnail: 
Bulletin issue 47
Spotlight Image
Spotlight short title: 
Bulletin 47
Author information
External Author: 
Mark Leonard

How to build a better EU foreign policy

How to build a better EU foreign policy

How to build a better EU foreign policy

External Author(s)
Mark Leonard

Written by Mark Leonard, Charles Grant, 03 April 2006

A new European approach to China

A new European approach to China

External Author(s)
Mark Leonard

Written by Mark Leonard, 03 April 2006

Unblocking EU-NATO co-operation

Unblocking EU-NATO co-operation

Unblocking EU-NATO co-operation

External Author(s)
Daniel Keohane

Written by Daniel Keohane, 01 June 2006

Making a success of the EAS

Making a success of the EAS

Written by Charles Grant, 21 May 2009

by Charles Grant

If the Irish people vote yes to the Lisbon treaty at the second attempt, and the Czechs, Germans and Poles also ratify, the EU will set up an ‘external action service’ or EAS. This new institution promises to make the Union’s common foreign and security policy more effective. But of course an EAS will not mean that the EU suddenly develops a single foreign policy on every issue. The EU’s inability to develop a coherent approach to Russia, for example, would probably not be very different if an EAS was in place. Different member-states believe that they have different interests in Russia and so disagree on how to handle it.

That said, some of the EU’s incoherence in foreign policy can be put down to its often dysfunctional institutions, notably the rotating presidency; the split between both the High Representative (currently Javier Solana) and the external relations commissioner (currently Benita Ferrero-Waldner), and their respective bureaucracies; and the fact that the current institutions do not provide EU foreign ministers with high quality analysis on a number of important subjects.

The EAS should solve some of those problems. It will be a single bureaucracy made up of the merged foreign desks of the Commission and the Council of Ministers secretariat, as well as secondees from member-states. It will be led by the new High Representative or HR, fusing the Solana and Ferrero-Waldner jobs. That individual plus the EAS will take on the tasks currently performed by the rotating presidency, in terms of external representation and foreign policy.

If the member-states get the design of the EAS right – and give it the budget it needs – it should improve EU foreign policy in four ways.

1) The EAS should help the EU to join up its foreign policies. The EU has the potential to play a powerful international role because it has such a broad range of instruments at its disposal, such as aid, trade, soldiers, policemen, humanitarian aid, rules on asylum and visas, and so on. Neither NATO nor the UN can draw on such wide-ranging capacities. But in practice the EU rarely joins up its external policies. Within the Commission there is seldom much co-operation between the various directorates-general, let alone between those directorates and the Council of Ministers. By merging parts of the Commission and the Council into a single institution, the EAS should help to join up EU foreign policy. But it will still be a challenge to ensure that other parts of those bodies – such as the trade, enlargement, justice and energy directorates of the Commission – work in harmony with the EAS.

2) The EAS should be able to provide more high quality and common analysis to EU ministers. If the 27 governments view a problem in a similar way, they are more likely to be able to hammer out a common approach to it. The current institutions sometimes succeed in encouraging common thinking. For example the EU has taken a single line on Iran’s nuclear programme in recent years, partly because of the quality of the analysis provided by the Situation Centre (which gathers intelligence from the member-states) in the Council of Ministers. The EAS will have more resources and expertise than the current array of Brussels institutions. National diplomats seconded to it should help to feed in the best analysis from national capitals.

3) The integration of the Commission’s 120-odd overseas representations into the EAS should increase the EU’s clout. At the moment they focus (naturally) on the Commission’s priorities and are of little help to Solana and his team in Brussels, or to EU foreign ministers. In order to improve their performance and enhance their expertise in areas like political reporting and hard security, senior figures from national governments should be given prominent roles in some missions. These offices will need to have positions to represent in their part of the world, which will probably encourage the EAS to develop common policies. They will play a role in co-ordinating (though not managing) the work of member-state embassies. They will represent the smaller member-states that have no embassy in the country concerned. Even large member-states such as Britain or Germany do not have embassies everywhere and may find EU missions useful. In the longer run, small and large member-states may start to rely on missions as a way of saving money: if and when a government trusts the quality of the EAS’s work, it may decide to close embassies in countries that it considers relatively unimportant.

4) The EAS will eliminate the problem that a weak presidency can undermine EU foreign policy. The Czech presidency has, by general consent, been one of the worst in memory, and not only because the government collapsed half way through. When the EU is represented by the High Representative and the EAS it will, one may hope, be spared the embarrassments it has faced in the first half of 2009.

It is inevitable that the creation of the EAS will be a bureaucratic nightmare. Each of the existing bureaucracies, as well as the member-states, will fight to protect its specific interests. The EAS will need to be shaped by men and women of vision who can look beyond those interests. Whether or not the EAS is a success will depend, in part, on how well it meets four challenges.

1) Will the EAS attract very good people to work for it? National governments must send their best and brightest. It is not self evident that they will: the UK, for example, has not always sent its top diplomats to work in the Council of Ministers secretariat. The High Representative must be the kind of politician who inspires and whom bright young people will want to work for. And he or she will need to get on well with the president of the European Council (a new post) and the Commission president. The effectiveness of both the Commission and the Council of Ministers is marred by national flags being imposed on particular jobs. The High Representative must have the freedom to appoint the best people to the key jobs (of course, every member-state must have people in the EAS). He or she will also need deputies. Solana works about 100 hours a week, but the new HR will have extra responsibilities in the Commission and in chairing the meetings of EU foreign ministers. The HR will need at least five senior deputies: for traditional diplomacy, managing military missions, generating civilian capabilities, working with the various Commission directorates, and ensuring that justice and home affairs (JHA) is integrated into external policies. Other deputies may be needed to focus on specific regions.

2) Will the EAS succeed in stitching together policy on JHA with the EU’s foreign policies? A lot of the things the EU does that matter to the rest of the world are in areas like visas, asylum, illegal immigration, organised crime, counter-terrorism, police and judicial co-operation and border controls. At the moment the EU seldom joins up policies in these areas with other external policies. For example, when the JHA directorate general negotiates an agreement on the repatriation of illegal immigrants with a third country, it can offer to discuss visa rules, but not trade, aid or non-proliferation, which are handled by other parts of the EU. The EAS needs to find a way of integrating the EU’s work on JHA with other external policies.

3) When several parts of the EU are operating in the same problem country, will the EAS manage to co-ordinate their work? When there are several EU missions in the same country they tend not to work together. For example, when the EU peacekeeping mission arrived in Bosnia it found that the EU police mission, the Commission office and the EU special representative’s office had different objectives and did not want to work with it. There was little co-ordination from Brussels. There have been similar problems in Congo and Afghanistan. In order to ensure that the various EU agencies work together in such important places, the EAS should deploy a special representative to each of them. He or she should have the authority to co-ordinate the work of the various missions on the ground.

4) Will the 27 member-states identify with the EAS and trust it to promote their interests? Most small countries will see the value of a body that can represent them in places where they lack embassies. But there is a real danger that the foreign ministries of Britain, France or Germany could see the EAS as a rival source of power and as a competitor for money and the best people. They would then work round or against the EAS. The High Representative should therefore ensure that the big countries are given the chance to send good people to fill some of the top posts in the EAS. If the HR can establish an efficient bureaucracy that produces high-quality analysis, national foreign ministries will, hopefully, learn to respect it.

Charles Grant is director of the Centre for European Reform.

Comments

Added on 29 May 2009 at 09:38 by anonymous

This is timely and basically very good but I have a couple of comments. The first is that I dislike talking of the new job as combining Solana and Mrs FW. Taken literally this implies that the new HR has nothing to do in Africa (where Commisioner Michel operates) or the Balkans (Where Commissioner Rehn is busy). The rest of what you write makes clear that this is not what you mean but here in Brussels there there are all kinds of funny ideas.

Second, you are right about needing the best people. I'm not sure if the UK is especially guilty of dumping mediocrity. The big disaster for the UK was the elimination of the "European Fast Stream" scheme which the Germans are now imitating with success. In practice the quality of the people sent from capitals has risen as the quality of the work has improved. The institutions in Brussels have a problem sometimes in using people well I think.

Third, you are right about the problem of integrating policy across pillars. This is especially bad because of the way in which agriculture is done by agriculture ministers and officials, and JAI by JAI ministers and officials. Not sure what the answer is.

I hadn't heard the story about the police in Bosnia. Maybe true - but remember: this was the first mission the EU ever did; and Ashdown was HR long before he was EUSR and took the former role far more seriously. As for EUSRS we will have to rethink their role if we have double hatteed people on the ground everywhere, running EU embassies.

A Brussels official

Added on 17 Jun 2010 at 21:29 by Website Design

Very Nice

Thanks from
http://www.osenu.com" rel="nofollow">osenu Technology Solutionz
http://www.websitedesigninindia.com" rel="nofollow">Website Design

What the economic crisis will mean for European defence

What the economic crisis will mean for European defence

What the economic crisis will mean for European defence

Written by Tomas Valasek, 05 June 2009

by Tomas Valasek

There are mounting indications that defence budgets across Europe, not very high in the first place, could fall further because of the economic crisis. This will have a three-fold impact on European militaries and missions. Some governments will be tempted to cut operations – but if done haphazardly, this risks leaving parts of the world exposed to insecurity. Multinational weapons programmes may suffer a disproportionate share of the budget cuts. And while all defence ministries will have to rationalise (and most already have) governments will need to decide whether it is worth keeping the rumps of their national militaries. Many should form joint units with neighbours instead.

There are two strong reasons to believe that defence budgets will fall dramatically. First, all European governments will see their public debts rise over the next few years. Some – like that of Latvia – are beginning to have serious trouble raising funds. Even the more sturdy economies, like the UK, have been warned by rating agencies to bring their debt under control or risk losing their gold-plated credit rating. Most European governments will have to increase taxes and cut spending in order to rebalance the books. Second, those cuts will hit defence harder than other parts of the budget. This is because many forms of government spending – like the cost of paying interest on public debt – cannot be reduced by decree. Some non-mandatory expenditures like healthcare tend to be politically explosive: no government wants to be seen to be taking risks with people’s health. So defence budgets are an obvious target for ax-wielding finance ministers. George Osborne, the UK shadow chancellor of the exchequer, warned recently that he would cut defence spending if the Conservatives won the election (which they are widely expected to do this year or next).

The looming military budget cuts will have many salutary effects. Defence establishments, with their resistance to civilian oversight and emphasis on continuity, tend to get bloated in times of relative plenty. It often takes a crisis to force meaningful reforms. France – which suffered a defence budget meltdown in 2007, even before the economic crisis unfolded in full – at last shut many of its African bases, a legacy of its colonial years. Slovakia recently cut the number of military commands from eight to three – a long overdue step that will reduce unnecessary overheads. Other European militaries, too, will come out of the crisis with more sensible structures and budgets.

But the economic crisis presents several serious risks to European defences. The easiest portion of the defence budget to cut is the part that pays for operations. Withdrawing soldiers from faraway places plays well at home (it removes young men and women from harm’s way) and is politically easier than restructuring the militaries (no one is laid off). But European governments should resist the urge to pull back their soldiers indiscriminately; this could cause conflicts to re-flare and leave vulnerable people at risk. Instead, they should stop sending overlapping missions to the same trouble spots. Because international institutions compete to fly their flag in missions abroad, it is not unusual for western governments to have multiple operations in the same place. For example, three different forces are currently fighting piracy off the coast of Somalia. That is a wasteful use of taxpayer money. The EU, NATO, and the US should roll their Somalia operations into one or two.

The budgetary crisis will force many defence ministries to cancel planned weapon buys. Their instinct will be to cut multinational programmes and protect those purchases that generate jobs at home. That could be a mistake. While much of the needed equipment can be made nationally, the truly complex systems are so expensive that defence ministries can only afford them if they share the development costs with other countries. As defence budgets shrink, such multinational approaches will only become more important. Granted, many of the collaborative programmes to date have been a disaster. The seven-nation plan to develop a new generation of military transport aircraft, the A400M, is the most glaring example. The airplane cannot fly because the engines, made by a four-nation European consortium, lack the proper certification; the plane is also said to be too heavy.

But the answer lies not in abandoning collaborative programmes. Instead, European governments need to rethink their approach to collaboration. The trouble with the A400M is not that the plane’s manufacture, EADS, lacks technical expertise (it builds one of the finest civilian aircraft in existence, the Airbus) but that participating governments have been more concerned with securing production jobs than with obtaining a good product. In return for investing in the aircraft, they have demanded that a commensurate number of production jobs to go to their country. As a result, bits of the aircraft are being built in different countries, and not necessarily in the ones most qualified to do the job. In case of the A400M, EADS executives say they wanted a US company to build the engine, but were told by participating governments to keep the jobs in Europe. European governments should accept that it makes more sense to order the needed parts from the plant with the most relevant technical expertise, no matter where it is located. The governments also need to be more ready to buy off-the-shelf components, rather than try to generate jobs by manufacturing parts from scratch.

Cuts in personnel and equipment risk turning some European militaries into ‘showcase’ forces: incapable of deploying abroad and thus irrelevant to most EU and NATO operations. It makes little sense, for example, for most European militaries to maintain supersonic air forces without access to air-to-air refueling; or to have infantry without the support units needed to feed and re-supply the soldiers in faraway places. As an excellent new study commissioned by the Nordic governments concluded, “the size of certain units may fall below a critical limit… and small and medium-sized countries [could] lose their ability to maintain a credible defence. The result could be a Europe where only countries like France, Russia, the UK and Germany have their own modern defence forces.”

There are two ways to avoid such outcome while cutting budgets. Some of the key equipment that makes modern warfare possible – like planes providing air-to-ground surveillance or military transport – needs to be jointly owned. NATO owns a common fleet of aircraft that co-ordinate air traffic, and the alliance plans to buy transport airplanes for its members to use. This allows militaries of the smaller and poorer European states that cannot afford such specialist equipment to take part in complex operations in distant places.

But joint ownership of critical resources alone may not save enough money. The time has come for European governments to consider abandoning parts of their national forces and infrastructure, and to form joint units with neighbours. It is becoming increasingly hard to justify why the 25 European members of NATO should maintain 25 separate air forces with own commands and bases, when between them they could only find a handful of much-needed helicopters for Afghanistan (most did not have any, and those who did, did not want to send them). Modern militaries do virtually all their fighting abroad, and in coalition with others. If they lack the money to equip and deploy their soldiers overseas, they need to consider radical cost-saving measures. More governments should do as Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg do (they merged parts of their air forces) or emulate the Nordic countries (which are thinking of forming joint amphibious forces).

Such ‘pooling’ is not a new idea; it has been talked about on and off for nearly a decade, but to little effect. Most European governments have found it too difficult to part with the cherished symbol of national sovereignty that is a proper army or an air force. They have held on to them as symbols even though the practical value of some military services in Europe is negligible. The US has stopped asking Europe for more forces for Afghanistan, partly because politicians do not want to send forces into harm’s way but also because few have any useful forces to deploy. The economic crisis may at last force more countries to pool their militaries. This would enable them to take part in NATO and EU operations whilst saving money. If so, the crisis will have turned out to be a blessing in disguise.

Tomas Valasek is director of foreign policy and defence at the Centre for European Reform.

Comments

Added on 05 Jun 2009 at 16:53 by anonymous

Excellent article, agree with all the points made. It will be very interesting to see whether a New Conservative Government in the UK will now see the financial benefit of European defence integration despite their critical stance on European integration. Are we finally going to have a European aircraft carrier, rather than Britannia rule the waves while the domestic finances sink the island.

Added on 06 Jun 2009 at 02:04 by anonymous

This is indeed an excellent article. The only way that smaller European nations can maintain meaningful military structures will be through cooperation and "pooling" with neighbors. My only footnote to the article is that some analysts, including this one, have suggested (in studies for the US Congress)the wisdom of such an approach for small and medium size European nations since the late 1970s -- somewhat further back than the decade suggested by Mr. Valasek.

Added on 10 Jun 2009 at 17:07 by Tomas

Thanks for the comments... Stanley, good to hear from you - you are of course right to point out that pooling is an even older idea than I wrongly stated in the blog. My apologies; and I shall correct the mistake in future reincarnations of this blog (the CER is planning a longer study on the subject).

Added on 15 Jul 2009 at 21:53 by anonymous

your article is very good and it focused different places but ı wanna asking to you Tomas;

what will europe do /or not for common european army force (EUFOR)? it is one of the aims of common security and defence policy(CSDP) of EU. Turkey have 2nd largest army in NATO, but not member of CSDP, EU countries doesn't confirm this. without Turkey, it's support in military operations, without it is useful diplomatic support and middle asia, middle east, balkans, black sea, caucasus, afghanistan, ıraq how can Europe do this? US can not give unlimited support for NATO to forever. ecnomic crisis is not unique problem of European armies. Turkey has very important experience on asymmetric warfare. EU must think twice...

Thanks for this article again

Carl Bildt and the cost of speaking plainly

Carl Bildt and the cost of speaking plainly

Carl Bildt and the cost of speaking plainly

Written by Charles Grant, 21 July 2009

by Charles Grant

Carl Bildt is better known throughout the world than most of his fellow EU foreign ministers – and many of the prime ministers, too. That is not only because he has held some senior jobs (prime minister of Sweden, and Balkan envoy for both the United Nations and the EU), but also because he is actively engaged in, and knowledgeable about, a wide range of international issues.

Someone with Bildt’s skills and experience should be the front-runner to become the EU’s new High Representative – in effect its foreign policy chief – if, as is likely, the Lisbon treaty is finally implemented at the end of this year. That treaty would merge the roles currently played by Javier Solana, the current High Representative, and Benita Ferrero-Waldner, the commissioner for external relations, into a single post at the head of a new ‘external action service’ – an embryonic EU foreign ministry.

But Bildt’s chances of being appointed High Representative are slim. This is because he tends to say what he thinks and that is not always wise in politics or diplomacy. His frank and trenchant opinions appeal to think-tankers and journalists but not always to other foreign ministers. Some of them find his confidence and cleverness, and the length of his contact book, irritating. And sometimes he conducts his own solo diplomacy, particularly when Balkan problems hot up, which can be frustrating for the country holding the EU presidency.

I must declare an interest. Carl Bildt sat on the advisory board of the Centre for European Reform until he became Swedish foreign minister in October 2006, and still attends many CER conferences. He is very much a ‘think-tankers’ foreign minister’: he likes to argue and ask questions, and he brims with ideas. He also works very hard at his job: most weekends, this youthful-looking 60-year old is at some conference or other, debating the most pressing foreign policy issues of the day. And if he is not at a conference he is on a diplomatic mission or at a summit.

His critics view Bildt as an arrogant Mr Know-it-all. But in many ways he is modest. He takes the time to speak to people who are not ‘important’, like secretaries and conference organisers, and not all politicians do that. Furthermore, most politicians will only attend a conference if they are given a speaking slot. They go to give their speech and are not particularly interested in hearing what others have to say. But Bildt is not like that. Every six months the CER and other think-tanks organise a roundtable that brings together European and American diplomats and thinkers. Bildt always turns up, even though he seldom has a speaking slot. He sits at the back taking notes, because he is genuinely interested to hear what other experts have to say.

If Bildt was serious about running for the job of High Representative he would have manoeuvred to win the support of France and Germany. But he has not done that, with the result that both Berlin and Paris are likely to block his candidacy. Germany takes the view that the EU should maintain friendly relations with Russia. So in August 2008, when Russia invaded Georgia, the Germans disapproved of Bildt’s comparison of the Russian justification for the attack on Georgia to Adolf Hitler's rationale for invading parts of Central Europe – namely the need to protect a minority. Bildt’s comment was indeed over-the-top and unwise. In fact he has a good network of contacts inside Russia, including some of those in positions of power. Nevertheless as far as several EU governments are concerned, Bildt is simply too confrontational towards Russia.

France is an even bigger problem for Bildt. Just before the recent European elections he gave an interview to Le Figaro in which he contradicted the view of President Nicolas Sarkozy that Turkey is not in Europe. “If we judge Cyprus to be in Europe, although it is as in island along Syria's shores, it is hard not to consider that Turkey is in Europe," Bildt said. That interview made Sarkozy angry and he cancelled a visit to Stockholm. To make matters worse, Bildt does not speak French fluently.

Bildt has also been implicitly critical of Sarkozy’s protectionist rhetoric – he is a true believer in free markets, free trade and the ‘Lisbon agenda’ of economic reform. You know where you are with Bildt – he is a strong backer of human rights in authoritarian countries and he believes that the countries of Eastern Europe should be free to choose their own destinies. He is also an unstinting Atlanticist; if the decision was left to him, Sweden would join NATO. Bildt’s experience in Bosnia has made him passionate about the protection of minorities. At the end of the war in Sri Lanka, when government forces were killing many Tamil civilians, he tried to fly to Colombo to make his point to the country’s leaders. But he was refused a visa.

Many EU foreign ministers would probably prefer a High Representative in the mould of Javier Solana, the incumbent. The Spaniard’s style of operating is the opposite of Bildt’s: he avoids direct confrontations with people, preferring to build a consensus through discreet personal diplomacy. The ideal High Representative would be a figure who combined Bildt’s rigorous thinking and grand strategic vision with Solana’s subtle manner and feline operating skills. But there is probably no such person.

Charles Grant is director of the Cente for European Reform

Missing another EU opportunity

Missing another EU opportunity

Missing another EU opportunity

Written by Hugo Brady, 18 November 2009
From The Guardian

Engaging Iran: A test case for EU foreign policy

Engaging Iran: A test case for EU foreign policy

External Author(s)
Steven Everts

Written by Steven Everts, 05 March 2004

Syndicate content