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France wants to rejoin NATO military wing after 40 years

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  • France wants to rejoin NATO military wing after 40 years

    FRANCE WANTS TO REJOIN NATO MILITARY WING AFTER 40 YEARS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    17.06.2008 16:29 GMT+04:00

    France wants to return to NATO's integrated military command structure
    for the first time in 40 years.

    The new military and security strategy, which President Nicolas
    Sarkozy will present in public after months of internal debate,
    calls for a smaller, more mobile army, with savings spent on better
    intelligence and modern equipment.

    Building a credible European defense is a French priority, the strategy
    says. But French plans were damaged by the Irish rejection of a new
    set of rules for the 27-nation European Union that would have made
    it easier for members to cooperate on defense.

    In fact, publication of the French white paper was delayed until
    after the Irish referendum last week on the so-called Lisbon Treaty,
    to avoid providing the neutral Irish with another reason to vote no.

    The new defense doctrine, the White Book, seeks to prepare France and
    Europe for a post-Soviet world in which conventional military threats
    are downgraded compared to a multitude of complex, globalized risks,
    ranging from epidemics to terrorism and cyberwar.

    Jobs in defense will be cut, with estimates of 54,000 over the next
    six to seven years out of a current total of some 330,000. Most of
    the reductions will come from the standing army and its noncombatant
    support services, with the intention of reversing the current 60-40
    ratio of support to combat personnel.

    The cuts are politically sensitive, given local and political
    interests, but a reduction in personnel is the only way to provide
    more financial room for maneuver for acquisitions and training
    intended to create a more modern army, where threats are more likely
    to come from terrorism, cyberwarfare or missile attack than from a
    traditional invasion.

    The plan foresees raising the budget for military acquisition, for
    example, by more than 16 percent, without immediately raising defense
    spending, and spending twice as much on space, with the intention of
    creating a space-based early warning system against missile attack. A
    decision to build another aircraft carrier will be postponed and
    spending on intelligence, which is to be reorganized under a single
    chief, is expected to double.

    France's defense budget is about $57.3 billion a year.

    The plan foresees an increase of one percent over the rate of inflation
    beginning in 2012. France currently spends about 2.3 percent of its
    gross domestic product on defense; that will drop to 2 percent over
    the next 12 years.

    The plan also sets a new requirement of at least 30,000 French soldiers
    able to be deployed in combat within six months, with 5,000 soldiers on
    permanent operational alert, part of the larger goal of helping to make
    a European defense capability both credible and functional. Europe's
    goal, far from being realized, is to have 60,000 soldiers able to be
    deployed, the IHT reports.

    "France is an independent ally and free partner. I uphold the
    principles proclaimed by General de Gaulle.

    France will reserve the right to decide on its participation in
    military operations. Our military contingent will never be under NATO
    command in time of peace," the French President stated.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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