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NUKEWARS
European Cold War defence alliance dissolved: official
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) March 31, 2010


France raises questions about NATO missile defence
Paris (AFP) March 31, 2010 - France said Wednesday it had many questions about a new costly NATO-wide missile defence system that the alliance's chief argues would help defend member-states against Iran. "We need to have a series of clarifications," said Defence Minister Herve Morin after meeting with Anders Fogh Rasmussen, secretary general of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation. The minister said he had questions about "the cost of the programme, the threat analysis, the role of the Europeans, knowing that the American proposals touch on command and control." "What threat are we responding to? What are the risks?" he asked. Rasmussen is asking NATO members to come to a decision at the alliance's summit in Lisbon in November on whether to go ahead with missile defence.

"We are facing a real threat, in particular from Iran," said the NATO chief, adding that missile defence must be defined as an alliance mission. Morin argued that European governments were already struggling with budget constraints and that missile defence should not be developed at the expense of other military capabilities such as helicopters and transport. "Missile defence should be seen as complementary to nuclear deterrence," he said. Anti-missile defence systems already in place within the NATO alliance fall under a US shield that has missile interceptors in the United States, Greenland and Britain. Plans for it to be extended into eastern Europe have raised serious concern in Russia.

The Cold War-era Western European Union defence alliance, set up in the wake of World War II, has been dissolved, the organisation's presidency said in a statement Wednesday.

The WEU was formed by Belgium, Britain, France, Luxembourg and the Netherlands in 1948 and expanded to include Germany, Italy, Spain and others, but its role disappeared with NATO and the EU providing security in Europe.

"The WEU has therefore fulfilled its historic role. That is why we, the states party to the modified Treaty of Brussels, have collectively decided to end the treaty and thereby close the organisation," the statement said.

The 10 member states have requested the presidency to wind up the organisation's operations in their entirety by the end of June 2011.

In a separate statement, Belgian Foreign Minister Steven Vanackere said: "From a budgetary point of view, maintaining the WEU became difficult to defend."

Vanackere added that he hoped the defence dialogue carried out by the WEU would continue in some form or another.

A week ago, the head of the assembly Robert Walter said "the WEU as an organisation will be wound down within a year or so."

The WEU's founding principles were "to afford assistance to each other in resisting any policy of aggression", and "to promote unity and to encourage the progressive integration of Europe".

The very year after it was formed the eclipse of the western European body began with the formation of NATO, with the key inclusion of the United States.

But it became outdated as the Cold War ended, with the 27-nation European Union and NATO presiding over a largely peaceful Europe.

According to a European diplomat, British Foreign Secretary David Miliband wrote this month to the WEU's British delegation informing it of Britain's intention to renounce the body's founding treaty within the coming days.

Including associate and observer nations, the WEU is made up of 28 countries including most of the EU members along with Iceland, Norway and Turkey.

It currently has a budget of 13 million euros (17 million dollars) and a staff of 60.

The body's inter-parliamentary assembly is based in Paris while the official headquarters moved to Brussels a decade ago.

Walter said he expected official notification of the decision to wind the body down to be made by the end of the month.

The WEU's functions have been diminishing for years.

A decision was taken in 2000 to scrap ministerial meetings, since when all decisions have been taken by written procedure.

Britain, less attached to the idea of European integration than France, Spain and others, had remained more interested in the WEU due to its nature as an intergovernmental institution.

The last nail in its coffin was the passage in December of the EU's reforming Lisbon Treaty, which includes an assistance clause and permits the creation of ad hoc inter-parliamentary groups.

Nonetheless Walter said he hoped, with London's support, that the WEU could be succeeded by a "permanent conference" of representatives of national parliaments in Europe.

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Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com
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