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  • The United States , NATO and the European army

    The United States , NATO and the European army
    Pol De Vos 18/04/2004
    URL : http://www.anti-imperialism.net/lai/texte.phtml?section=3DCMBC&object_id= 3D22573

    Peace NATO The United States , NATO and the European army Dr. Pol De
    Vos (Belgium) Anti-war Coordination Stop United States of Aggression
    ( www.stopUSA.be ) 18 th of April of 2004

    1. Globalisation of the economic crisis

    Over the last twenty years, we have witnessed gigantic waves of
    capital concentration on a world scale. Currently, a dozen of
    multinationals control the various sectors of the world economy. The
    world's two hundred major multinationals represent 25% of the world's
    manufacturing value. A few thousands of multinationals (on a total of
    65,000) own the major part of the means of production and set them in
    motion for the single purpose of realising a maximum of profits for
    the shareholders.

    Everywhere exploitation is intensifying. The number of workers is
    being reduced, while productivity is drastically increased. The
    workers are overexploited and underpaid. The vast majority of the
    world population is kept outside of modern industrial
    production. Developing countries are groaning under the burden of
    2,500 billion dollar in debts, while privatisation has allowed
    American and European multinationals to take over most of their wealth
    and enterprises.

    Overproduction and crisis have become a generalised phenomenon. In
    twenty years of neoliberal globalisation, short-term cures to the
    crisis have run out.

    In spite of all `gains' achieved, the United States has been
    confronted with the most serious crisis of its entire history. The US
    superpower now placesits bets mainly on the `military globalisation',
    on its overwhelming military superiority, in order to save its
    multinationals, at the expense of the rest of the world. They try to
    boost the economy through massive arms production, while ensuring a
    worldwide hegemonic position and grabbing sources of raw materials and
    markets. Also the European Union (EU) has become an imperialist
    bloc that is able to compete with the United States in the economic
    and financial fields. The Euro is challenging the position of the US
    dollar as the only international reserve currency. A transfer to the
    Euro of a significant part of the current world reserves held in
    dollars would provoke an economic earthquake. The same holds true if a
    major part of the oil trade, now in US currency, would shift to the
    Euro.

    2. Concentration of arms production in the USA and Europe The
    worldwide concentration of capital also took place in the military
    industry. From 1990 to 1998, a series of mergers and acquisitions in
    the USA led to the establishment of four large producers in the
    aerospace sector: Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon and
    Boeing. From 1998 to 2002, the rate of concentration among large
    companies slowed down, but the process continued at the level of
    subcontractors. Concentration reduced the number of 'prime
    contractors' - the end producers of major weapons systems -
    dramatically throughout the 1990s. In the USA for instance, in 1990 13
    suppliers of tactical missiles were operating. By 2000 they had merged
    into 3 major companies.

    While the process of concentration and consolidation in the US arms
    industry has been predominantly national, the arms industries in the
    Western European countries have continued the process of concentration
    beyond the national level, as a consequence of their domestic
    `markets' and their national procurement budgets being smaller. Since
    the late 1990s there have been a number of major mergers and
    acquisitions, and the formation of joint ventures in Europe . One
    result of this is the evolution of three major Western European arms
    producing companies: BAe Systems, EADS and Thales. While they were
    integrating most major arms producing capacities in the market
    segments of their respective home countries under one roof, they were
    also acquiring arms production assets abroad.

    Governments supported the concentration through the establishment of a
    wide array of joint armaments programmes, the signing of letters of
    intent and framework agreement s, and support for the creation of
    joint ventures.

    The transatlantic dimension of this internationalisation is more
    limited because of a range of issues related to technology transfer
    and - mainly - preferences for domestic procurement in the context of
    Euro-American competition.

    The concentration in military production in Europe is - like in theUS
    - part of a more global militarisation of the economy, as an essential
    element of the construction of military Europe . Different organs have
    been put in place.

    In 1993, the COARM was founded, which is the group of
    `conventionalarms exports', depending directly on the European
    Council. Its objectiveis to coordinate the exports to third
    countries. In 1995 follows the POLARM, the`European arms policy'
    group, also linked to the European Council. Its experts are tasked to
    develop a common strategy. On November 12, 1996 , the Common
    Organisation for Cooperation in the field of Armament (OCCAR) is
    created, on the initiative of the four largest countries of the Union
    : France , Germany , United Kingdom and Italy . It has the objective
    to coordinate their military industrial policies. After Boeing bought
    McDonnell Douglas in 1997, the European leaders feared to see their
    military industry overwhelmed by their American competitors.

    Airbus was in danger. In December 1997, the heads of state of Germany
    , France and the UK signed a joint declaration. They confirmed that `
    France, Germany and the UK have a same essential political and
    economic interest in ensuring that Europe has an efficient and
    competitive industry in the field of aerospace and defence
    electronics. This will make possible for Europe to improve its
    commercial position in the world, to reinforce its security and to
    ensure that it plays its full role in its own defence. We agreed on
    the urgent necessity to reorganise the industry in the field of
    aerospace and defence electronics.

    This process should include, in the aerospace sector, civil and
    military activities, and lead to a European integration based on an
    equilibrated partnership.' 1 On March 27, 1998 , the presidents of
    the societies participating in the Airbus project (DASA, British
    Aerospace and Aérospatiale) proposed to develop an integrated
    company, the European Aerospace and Defence Company (EADC). The
    agreement was signed in December 1999. EADC controls 80% of Airbus,
    which represents 50% of its sales turnover, 100% of Eurocopter, 62.5%
    of Eurofighter, 25.9% of Arianespace, 75% of Astrium, 46% of Dassault,
    etc. The (French) group Lagardère and the (German) group Daimler
    (this means the Deutsche Bank) dominate EADC.

    The European concentration leads to the constitution of some very
    powerful groups. Besides EADC there is BAe Systems, the new name for
    British Aerospace, which became the first defence industry in the
    world, after taking over the activities of systems control of Lockheed
    Martin. Its president defined his society as ` the first American
    society in Europe and the first European society in the US ' 2. Its
    weight is more important in the US than in Europe .Which is - together
    with coinciding oil interests - an important element to explain the
    British eagerness to participate in the US war against Iraq . EADS
    became the `real' European pole, but it is strongly linked to BAe
    Systems.

    These industrial developments - in the US and in Europe - induce a
    worldwide arms race. According to the Stockholm International Peace
    Research Institute, about 80% of the world's total military equipment
    is produced by NATO members (figures of 1996). The following NATO
    members are among the world's top ten military producers: the US , the
    UK , France , Germany , Italy and Canada .The US , the UK and France
    alone accounted for about 70% of the world's total arms production for
    that year.

    3. NATO's changing strategy Yugoslavia 1999: `the new strategic
    concept' After the disappearance of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw
    Pact, NATO became increasingly irrelevant as a defensive
    alliance. With the purpose of using the Alliance for its worldwide
    ambitions, the United States pushed towards a redefinition of the NATO
    doctrine. NATO should not only serve for the defence of the
    territorial integrity of its members but also for `humanitarian
    interventions' outside its territory.

    This new strategy was put into practice in the war against Yugoslavia.

    There, for the first time, NATO intervened outside the territory of
    the Treaty.

    This `new strategic concept' was ratified afterwards at a summit in
    Washington at the end of April 1999. NATO's so-called "humanitarian
    war" in Yugoslaviawas sold to the public as a means of settling
    conflicts between ethnic groups, while its real purpose was to expand
    the spheres of influence of its member states and their corporate
    allies.

    Recent escalation of ethnic contradictions in Kosovo (March 2004)
    shows the complete failure of NATO's `humanitarian' occupation.
    Kosovo's remaining minorities have no freedom of movement, live in
    ghettos and face continuous terrorist attacks and the destruction of
    their property.

    `NATO Response Force' and NATO's involvement in the `war on
    terrorism' The Prague summit of November 2002 reinserted NATO in the
    United States ' evolving strategy of world domination, now called
    `war on terrorism' . NATO is now being transformed from a
    `defence' organisation (1949) over a `defence and security'
    organisation (1999) towards an `anti-terrorism' organisation.

    NATO Secretary General Lord Robertson described the Prague decisions
    as ` a new capacity plan with strong national commitments to
    ensure the most urgent needs; concrete proposals to improve NATO's
    defence capabilities against biological and chemical weapons; a
    package of anti-terror measures that obliges the Alliance to intervene
    where and when needed; internal reforms which ensure that the enlarged
    NATO will remain an effective and flexible organisation. ' In
    this context the ` NATO Response Force' (NRF) is created, with the
    objective of ensuring mobile and flexible interventions outside NATO
    territory. This army for rapid worldwide combat interventions will
    dispose of 21,000 soldiers by 2006. 3 The concrete content of this new
    strategy was officially accepted during a NATO meeting in Brussels ,
    in June 2003. Through this fundamental reform of NATO, the alliance is
    clearly preparing itself to wage wars all over the world to ensure the
    neo-colonial order. Secretary General Robertson explained: ` This
    is a new NATO. A NATO able to meet its commitments when times get
    tough, from the Straits of Gibraltar through the Balkans to southern
    Turkey . A NATO now preparing to take on a demanding stabilisation
    mission in the Afghan capital. In short, a NATO transforming its
    membership, its relationships, its capabilities and its missions. ' 4
    He was very clear on NATO's objectives: it wants to play a central
    role in the strategy to counter all attempts of resistance and
    opposition against worldwide dominance and hegemony under US
    leadership.

    Robertson gave some examples for 2003: `We have recently ended the
    deployment of surveillance aircraft, missile defence systems and
    nuclear, biological and chemical protection units to Turkey . We
    continue to conduct extensive anti-terrorism maritime operations in
    the Mediterranean . We remain decisively engaged in the Balkans. From
    August, NATO will take the leading role in the International Security
    Assistance Force in Kabul , Afghanistan . And last week, NATO agreed
    to Poland 's request for Alliance support in the role that it is
    taking on this summer in the stabilisation of Iraq .' More money for
    weapons, less money for social security and health' The `peace and
    stability' that NATO pretends to defend is nothing but ensuring world
    hegemony by all means necessary. The reform of 2003 containsfour
    central points, as Robertson explained. First of all, a more flexible
    command structure will take the lead of the alliance: ` All
    operational commands will be under the control of the new Allied
    Command Operations, based at SHAPE in Mons , Belgium '. Second, all
    member countries made a series of concrete commitments to enhance
    their military capacities, mainly their air and marine forces.

    This will necessarily lead to an important increase of the defence
    budgets of all NATO member states. Third, there is an agreement on `
    the creation of a key new tool, the NATO Response Force. This will be
    a robust rapid reaction fighting force that can be quickly deployed
    anywhere in the world. It couldhave an early operational capability by
    autumn this year' . And finally, asRobertson explained, there is an `
    important progress on missile defence, andour terrorism and nuclear,
    biological and chemical defence packages '.

    These reforms will be implemented rapidly, and Robertson is
    optimistic: ` The world has changed fundamentally, to become more
    complex and even more dangerous than before. But NATO has kept
    pace. It has proved its resilience, strength and determination. It is
    a decisive factor in our security and in wider stability. A force for
    the future, already working for peace today .' As part of the
    `NATO Defence Capabilities Initiative', NATOmember states have
    committed themselves to increase their military abilities for
    `power projection, mobility and increased interoperability'. This
    will require significant additional military expenditures. European
    NATO countries have already increased their expenditures for military
    equipment by 11% in real terms since 1995.

    Through NATO, the US is pushing Europe towards higher military
    expenditure, while ensuring their dependence on the US . The US
    military budget reached almost 400 billion dollar in 2003, while the
    military expenses of its NATO allies totalled 165 billion dollar.

    During the NATO summit of December 2001, Secretary General Robertson
    insisted on an increase of these budgets. Italy announced an increase
    from 1.5% to 2% of its GDP and France would increase its budget for
    the acquisition of new equipment (+1.7%). In January 2003, the French
    Parliament decided on an investment of 14.6 billion Euro over 5 years.

    Belgium and Germany were criticised by NATO for using only 1.5% of
    their GDP for military expenses. Germany decided to spend 7.8 billion
    Euro per year for its defence by 2010, compared to 4.4 billion
    today. (+ 78%).

    Meanwhile, military budgets in the US and Canada have also increased
    continuously over the past years. The military budgets of NATO
    countries amounted to about 60% of the world's total military spending
    (US$798 billion) for the year 2000.


    4. NATO's future involvement in Iraq has already been decided Step by
    step, NATO is taking up a position as an occupying force in countries
    colonised by a US aggression. In Afghanistan , NATO has taken over the
    final responsibility of the occupation. This was a new qualitative
    step in NATO development. In December 2003, US Secretary of State
    Colin Powell confirmedthat all NATO allies had unanimously agreed on a
    higher degree of involvement in Iraq . ` Not one NATO-member was
    against it or gave reasons not to participate' , Powell said, ` not
    even France and Germany ' . 5 Today, 18 of the 26 NATO members have
    some kind of military presence in Iraq .

    In February 2004, US ambassador to NATO Nicholas Burns spoke about
    ` a strong political will in the Alliance to do more in Iraq
    '. Washington suggested that NATO should take over the command of the
    divisions in South-Central Iraq that are currently under the command
    of Poland . But Burns added that the increase of NATO's military
    presence in Afghanistan would be central in the discussions in the
    coming months. ` I think it is too early to discuss formally within
    NATO on a formal role in Iraq . That discussion will come later, maybe
    in spring or early summer'. 6 Following the pledge of Germany ,
    France and Belgium , NATO will only be involved after the formal take
    over of political power by the Iraqi's at the end of June this
    year. Even if the new Iraqi government will be a puppet regime
    completely dependent on the United States, such a façade government
    would open the way for a UN resolution giving a mandate to NATO for a
    so-called `peace mission'. By the end of 2004 or early 2005, NATO
    could be on the ground. Europe really wants to participate in a
    (peaceful) occupation. Not because of its desire to restore peace and
    sovereignty for the Iraqi people, but to ensureits part of the profits
    for `our' multinationals Of course, the actual developments
    in Iraq will surely and decisively influence when and how NATO is to
    participate in the occupation. But the decision has been taken. Only a
    growing strength of the Iraqi resistance, and (also) the mobilisation
    capacity of the peace movement all over the world and especially in
    Europe , could still prevent this from happening.

    5. United States versus Europe : growing contradictions Beyond any
    doubt, the US is today's only superpower with the strategy, the means
    and the policy for ensuring and maintaining world hegemony. For the
    United States , NATO remains an instrument to ensure this global
    hegemonic order.

    The US uses NATO to ensure its control over Europe and to prevent all
    attempts of insubordination to its plans. In 1995 the Pentagon stated
    that `NATO is the most important instrument for long lasting American
    leadership over the European security situation' 7. Steven Metz, an
    expert of the US Army, alerted that ` (t)he US objective has to be
    that the European defence capacity develops as a complement, while the
    leading role of the NATO remains intact'. 8 Through NATO, the United
    States continues to involve its allies in wars of aggression, like in
    Yugoslavia , Afghanistan and Iraq . Even if the Secretary General of
    NATO is always a European, the US only accepts to work with people who
    ensure that this policy be put into practice. Former NATO Secretary
    General Lord Robertson, for example, confirmed at the Defence Industry
    Conference in London , on October 14, 2002 , that ` even in 2015, and
    despite` indeed, in part because of - a more powerful Europe , the
    US will provide the indispensable core around which most military
    coalitions will be built '. 9 Current NATO Secretary General, the
    Dutch former Foreign Minister Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, will need all his
    persuasion power to rebuild transatlantic relations damaged by a row
    between the United States and France and Germanyover the US-led war in
    Iraq . But the US is confident: de Hoop Scheffer has always been a
    very strong transatlantic. `If anyone from the transatlanticcamp would
    be good at building bridges with France , he would ', a diplomatic
    source told Reuters. 10 De Hoop Scheffer was welcomed with open arms
    in the White House early 2003 for having lend Dutch political support
    to the US-led war in Iraq . He is avery suitable candidate for the
    Americans, but he is still acceptable to the Germans, the French and
    the Belgians, as the Netherlands did not support the decision to go to
    war in a military sense but only politically (even if afterwards they
    sent troops to support the occupation). He is mainly an expression of
    the existing power balance in NATO: Europe has no option but accepting
    US rule.

    The recent (and ongoing) war on Iraq shows serious contradictions
    between the United States and the European Union. They are a clear
    expression of the growing rivalry between the two Western economic
    powers. This rivalry has been growing since 1989, when the fall of the
    Soviet Union ended the sacred union against the communist
    enemy. Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt explained in February of
    2003: ` As long as the divisions of the Red Army could reach the Rhine
    in 48 hours, it was evident to maintain a blood band with our American
    cousins. But today the Cold War is over, and the contradicting
    viewpoints can be expressed more openly. From an economic point of
    view, Europe became a world power. At the international level, Europe
    takes an own profile, develops its own projects and shows its own
    ambitions. That's also what explains the tensions that appeared within
    in Atlantic Alliance .' 11 The differences of strategy between both
    economic blocs arise from the necessity for Europe to win a more
    important place in the domination of theworld, which can only be
    achieved at the expense of the United States . The United States is a
    declining economic power, caught up and even overtaken by the global
    economic power of the European Union. But US military power remains
    incomparably superior. In the end it is on this unequalled destructive
    force that US imperialism is betting in order to maintain and
    reinforce its domination and exploitation to the utmost. Europe ,
    which is progressing only very timidlyin the construction of its Euro
    Army, is trying to prevent the United States from playing its military
    cards. Not because of Europe 's dislike of weapons, but because of its
    lack of weapons.

    The militarist objectives of the European oligarchy was already made
    clear in September 1991, three months before the Maastricht summit,
    when the European Round Table made its evaluation of the 1991 Gulf
    War: `The Middle East crisis of 1990 has shown the difficulty to
    transpose our technical and economic developments on the political
    scene: there you have the European paradox, an economic giant but a
    political dwarf. Europe had interests to defend in the Gulf, and ideas
    on what was to be done. But when force was to be used, Europe had no
    decision mechanisms nor the means that would have made it possible to
    intervene. It is today an anachronism to pretend that the Union can
    manage its economic questions in a satisfactory way while leaving the
    questions of foreign policy to others' . 12 Pro-free market New York
    Times journalist Thomas Friedman showed clearly how the global economy
    is linked to the war, when in March 1999, during the war against
    Yugoslavia , he wrote: ` The hidden hand of the market willnever work
    without a hidden fist - McDonald's cannot flourish without McDonnell
    Douglas, the builder of the F-15. And the hidden fist that keeps the
    world safe for Silicon Valley's technologies is called the United
    States Army, Air Force and Marine Corps .' 13 It is not superfluous to
    recall that the European Union has seen itself as an institution at
    the service of its own multinationals, andthat ` if McDonald's needs
    McDonnell, Danone also needs Dassault '. 14 Being a military dwarf,
    Europe has to bet on the economic card to enter the Middle East . For
    instance, Germany 's exports to Iran went up from 1.6 billion in 1999
    to 2.33 billions in 2001. During the first five months of 2002, they
    increased by 17% over the previous year. Germany has become the
    biggest importer in the world of Iranian products, oil excluded.
    Europe would also like to get rid of regimes that are too independent,
    too attached to their sovereignty, too jealous of their own
    development. It would like to set up pro-European regimes in Iraq ,
    Iran , Syria and elsewhere by political means, in other words by
    strengthening the pro-European opposition groups, the so-called `civil
    society'. At the same time, however, the majority of European
    countries are aware they cannot yet do without US military
    power. Through the experience of Yugoslavia and - more sharply - the
    actual contradictions in Iraq , the European Union is more and more
    convinced of the necessity of having its own army.

    Nevertheless, NATO remains the only framework in which Europe can
    intervene militarily on a large scale in the world today.

    Therefore most European states, even if they oppose the aggression
    against Iraq , gave support to the US war efforts in Iraq in various
    ways. The US army was allowed to use all the ports, airports and other
    infrastructures of the NATO countries.

    6. NATO's expansion to the East After NATO's annexation of the Czech
    Republic , Hungary and Poland some years ago, the membership of
    Bulgaria , Estonia , Latvia , Lithuania , Romania , Slovakia and
    Slovenia recently accelerated NATO's expansion to the East.

    NATO's expansion into Central and Eastern Europe is a means of
    integrating the military forces of those countries under NATO (and
    largely US) control.As military units within NATO, the armed forces of
    the new NATO member states must submit to the demands for
    standardisation of military training, weapons and other military
    equipment. Requirements that new members standardise their military
    equipment to NATO's exacting specifications is a tremendous boon to US
    and European military industries, that will benefit greatly from these
    expanded export markets.

    New NATO member states also loose sovereignty over other important
    aspects of their armed forces, such as the command, control,
    communications and intelligence functions, which also risk being
    subsumed under the auspices of NATO standardisation.

    The reasons for NATO's eastward expansion are largely economic. For
    instance, NATO's military access and control over Eastern Europe helps
    Western European corporations to secure strategic energy resources,
    such as oil from the Caspian Sea and Central Asia . The US and Western
    European corporations will greatly benefit from NATO's control of the
    oil corridor through the Caucasus Mountains . NATO wants its troops to
    patrol this pipeline and to dominate the Armenian/Russian route to the
    Caspian Sea . The Caucasus also links the Adriatic-Ceyhan-Baku
    pipeline with oil-rich countries even farther east, in the former
    Soviet Central Asia republics of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan . Billions
    of dollars in oil may someday flow through these corridors to Western
    Europe for the benefit of Western-based oil companies.

    This NATO enlargement has an important influence on the internal
    contradictions within NATO. From Estonia to Bulgaria , the United
    States now has 10 new -- or newish -- states within NATO that
    Washington can count on for support when contradictions US-European
    contradictions intensify in the future. These countries' membership in
    NATO strengthens the US relative to Germany and France, US
    imperialism's `Old Europe' rivals. It puts US forces near Russia 's
    border, with air bases only five minutes away from St. Petersburg
    . And young workers in these countries are an additional source of
    cannon fodder for US military occupations. They are already stationed
    in Iraq , Afghanistan and Yugoslavia .

    15 But Washington had other reasons for this enlargement. Before 1989,
    the people living in seven new member states were part of the
    socialist camp. Bulgaria and Romania were independent
    countries. Estonia , Latvia and Lithuania were republics in the Soviet
    Union . Slovakia was part of Czechoslovakia . Slovenia was the richest
    republic of Yugoslavia . The people in all those countries had access
    to free education, medical care and nearly full employment. Pay
    differences were relatively small. Now education, medical care and
    everything else is subject to the `free' market, dominated by the
    Western monopolies. The few very rich people are rich because of their
    connections with those monopolies.

    There are many unemployed and otherwise very poor workers. Living
    conditions, especially for women workers, have deteriorated
    sharply. The governments, who accepted all the requirements for
    entering NATO, want the alliance membership for future protection
    should the working class in their countries revolt.

    7. A growing pressure for a European Army The European army is at the
    order of the day, because the European superpower wants to play a role
    in the struggle for the redivision of the world that was started when
    the USSR disappeared.

    The `war on terrorism' is the pretext of a common struggle where
    `Americans and Europeans are partners in common values that are beyond
    discussion' 16. No European government doubts the necessity of
    NATO. Even those who are most` European' know that, for the defence of
    their common interests, they still need - for many years - NATO and
    its infrastructure. Verhofstadt explains his concept of the European
    army as a `European pillar within NATO'. He adds: ` The
    solidarity within the Alliance risks to disappear because of its lack
    of equilibrium: one superpower and 18 states, mainly European, without
    a common line on defence matters, and of which some still think of
    being a superpower, while compared to the US, they do not weigh much.'
    But for France and Germany (and Belgium ), the European pillar of NATO
    is only a phase towards the construction of an independent European
    army comparable to that of the United States . Thus, in certain
    regions, those who are considered `terrorists' for some, are not
    necessarily the`terrorists' for others.

    The states that ensure the oil and gas for the European continent are,
    in many occasions, in conflict with Washington . These `rogue
    states', in the definition of the White House, ensure 27% of
    European oil. And this is without counting the 14% of Russia , the 3%
    of Algeria and the 2% of Venezuela , all of them countries that do not
    have very good relations with US imperialism.

    This is an essential point on which European and US interests risk to
    increasingly diverge in the future. The Middle East and Central Asia
    are more important for the oil provision of Europe than for the US
    . In this way, this part of the world is strategic for Europe (and for
    Japan , and for China , the rest of Asia and Russia ). Therefore, the
    fact that the US is interested to control this region is an
    affirmation of its desire of hegemony. While at the same time, it is
    `the' place where this supremacy could be challenged.

    The confrontation on Iraq during 2002-2003 shows the growing
    contradictions between US and European imperialism. Clearly, this has
    less to do with `weapons of mass destruction' than with the
    organisation of a new order in the Arab world.

    Thus the demand to accelerate the setting up of a European military
    force, capable of defending the interests of the European monopolies
    whenever these diverge from those of the US or another rival or
    enemy. Ten years ago, France and Germany already developed the Euro
    corps in which Belgium , Luxemburg and Spain are likewise
    participating. It was seen as the start of the future European
    army. Since then, the pillar of common foreign and security policy
    (CFSP) has been introduced in the Maastricht Treaty (1993). 17 During
    the Koln summit of June 1999, one month after the war against
    Yugoslavia , it was decided thata European `rapid intervention
    force' of 60,000 soldiers had to be created.

    But contradictions remain and are growing since the Iraq war. While
    the UK clearly seas the European army as `a pillar of NATO',
    France and Germany (and Belgium) support the constitution op a
    `European vanguard' composedof the countries that want to
    accelerate the development of a `European Security and Defence
    Policy'.

    8. Conclusion The French-German-Belgian axis affirms that the
    constitution of a European army is a necessity to develop a
    counterweight to the hegemonic policy of the US . They present Europe
    as a humane, social, ecological and multilateral alternative to the US
    . Verhofstadt: `The European Union has a moremoderate profile in the
    world than the United States , without being inferior to it. Europe is
    presented as an example of multilateral cooperation. Europe is seen as
    a continent sensible to social and ecological problems, as a continent
    that understands that its own wealth is vulnerable if most of the
    people of the world are suffering from hunger.' 18 We do not agree
    with this statement. The European Army is not a solution for the US
    war policy. It is also an imperialist army, in the service of economic
    interests of the European monopolies. Its creation increases the
    danger of war, leads to the militarisation of the economy, the
    explosion of the military budgets and the breakdown of democratic
    rights.

    If the ` Europe of the monopolies' speaks about diplomacy,
    dialogueand multilateralism, it is mainly because it has not yet the
    means to impose its views against US military power. The European past
    in Africa , Latin America , Algeria or Asia shows the ferocity of
    European imperialism when and where it was dominant. The European army
    will only accelerate the rivalry and the dangerfor a major world
    war. The more this army will be able to develop its capacity for
    foreign interventions, the more it will reinforce the political
    capacity of the EU, the more it will make possible an independent
    European policy in favour of the European multinationals, the more it
    will offer the possibility to the EU to defend its zones of influence
    against eventual competitors, e.g. the US. This can lead to important
    conflicts, as has been seen in the two previous world wars.

    One final comment. Undoubtedly, the crisis over Iraq has severely
    divided NATO. But towards the Middle East , the common interests of
    Europe and United States are - in the current situation on the ground
    in Iraq` overwhelmingly more important than what opposes US and
    EU. Both want to ensure a `stable' Middle East region. The US is
    being forced by reality to let its partners get into the business. And
    Europe is eager to do so. Notwithstanding all the rancour that might
    still exist within the alliance, NATO is undergoing a profound
    transformation into an organisation ` whose main missions are
    collective security and crisis management and whose main centre of
    activity is increasingly located in the Muslim world. NATO now
    provides security in Afghanistan . And beyond that, NATO is now
    preparing to move into the Middle East .' 19 If and how NATO will
    enter Iraq will depend on the resistance the Iraqi people develop
    towards their occupiers. ` Although NATO's current priority is
    Afghanistan and it is reluctant to enter Iraq unless the members
    united behind the idea, the principle of engaging the Middle East is
    not the subject of an argument. Rather the question is how to do so,
    i.e. the modalities of this engagement. In fact, NATO is clearly
    moving to create a stronger basis for its relations with the Middle
    East . NATO's new plan, a so called `Greater Middle East
    Initiative', will be unveiled at its forthcoming Istanbul summit in
    June .' 20 To block the US war preparations and to preserve world
    peace, the peoples of the world are right to demand the withdrawal of
    the US occupation troops from the Balkans, Afghanistan and Iraq , the
    dissolution of NATO and the dismantling of all US military bases
    abroad. The worldwide antiwar movementis growing, while enhanced US
    aggressivity and NATO's complicity will help us to reinforce its
    anti-imperialist character.

    We oppose any increase of military budgets, any development or
    production of new weapons. Not one cent, not one man for the
    imperialist army. No money for imperialist war, but for education,
    health and employment. We support the right of oppressed nations to
    defend themselves. We struggle for non-aggression pacts, with the
    purpose of preserving the sovereignty and the collective security of
    the nations.
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