European Union–NATO relations
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The European Union (EU) and the NATO, North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) are two main treaty-based Western world, Western organisations for cooperation between member states, both headquartered in Brussels, Belgium. Their natures are different and they operate in different spheres: NATO is a purely intergovernmental organisation functioning as a military alliance, which serves to implement article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty on collective territorial defence. The EU on the other hand is a partly supranational and partly intergovernmental ''sui generis'' entity akin to a confederation that entails wider economic and political European integration, integration. Unlike NATO, the EU pursues a Common Foreign and Security Policy, foreign policy in its own right—based on consensus, and member states have equipped it with tools in the field of defence and crisis management; the Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP) Structure of the Common Security and Defence Policy, structure. The memberships of the EU and NATO are distinct, and some EU member states are traditionally neutral on defence issues. The EU and NATO have respectively Member state of the European Union, 27 and Member states of NATO, 31 member states, of which 22 are members of both. Another four NATO members are EU applicants—Albania, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Turkey—and another one, the United Kingdom, is a Brexit, former EU member. Iceland and Norway have opted to remain outside of the EU, but do participate in the European Single Market as part of their European Economic Area (EEA) membership. EU member Sweden has applied to NATO and is being ratified as a member, leaving four non-NATO states in the EU: Austria, Cyprus, Ireland, and Malta. Several EU and NATO member states were formerly members of the Warsaw Pact. The EU has its own mutual defence clause in Articles 42(7) and 222 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU) and the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), respectively. The Command and control structure of the European Union, CSDP command and control structure is however much smaller than the Structure of NATO#Military command structure, NATO Command Structure (NCS), and the extent to which the CSDP should evolve to form a full defence arm for the EU that is able to implement the EU mutual defence clause in its own right is a point of contention, and the United Kingdom (UK) has objected to this. At the UK's insistence in the negotiations leading to the Treaty of Lisbon, Article 42.2 of TEU also specifies that NATO shall be the main forum for the implementation of collective self-defence for EU member states that are also NATO members. The 2002 Berlin Plus agreement and 2018 Joint Declaration provide for cooperation between the EU and NATO, including that that NCS resources may be used for the conduct of the EU's CSDP missions.


History


1948–1951: Common origins, where NATO cannibalises intra-European initiatives

The Western Union (alliance), Western Union, established to implement the 1948 Treaty of Brussels signed by Belgium, France, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and the United Kingdom, represents a precursor to both NATO and the EU's defence arm, the Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP).


1954: Failure to establish an autonomous European pillar in NATO

Had its founding treaty not failed to acquire ratification in the French Parliament in 1954, the European Defence Community would have entailed a pan-European military, divided into national components, and had a common budget, common arms, centralized military procurement, and institutions. The EDC would have had an integral link to NATO, forming an autonomous European pillar in the Atlantic alliance.


1996–present: Tensions and mutual interests as EU gains autonomous defence structures

Following the establishment of the ESDI and the St. Malo declaration, United States Secretary of State, US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright were among others who voiced concern that an independent European security pillar could undermine NATO, as she put forth the three famous D's:


Eastern enlargement


Present cooperation

The Berlin Plus agreement enables List of military and civilian missions of the European Union, EU operations to be planned and conducted at the military strategic and operational level with recourse to assets and capabilities in the Structure of NATO#Military command structure, NATO Command Structure (NCS). In such an event, an Operational Headquarters (OHQ) would be set up within NATO's Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE) in Mons, Belgium. SHAPE is the main headquarters of Allied Command Operations (ACO). When the NCS provides the OHQ, the Supreme Allied Commander Europe#Deputy, Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe (DSACEUR) acts as Operation Commander (OpCdr). The Berlin Plus agreement requires that the use of NATO assets by the EU is subject to a "right of first refusal", i.e. NATO must first decline to intervene in a given crisis, and contingent on unanimous approval among NATO states, including those outside of the EU. For example, Turkish reservations about Operation Concordia using NATO assets delayed its deployment by more than five months.Bram Boxhoorn, ''Broad Support for NATO in the Netherlands'', 21-09-2005, The European External Action Service's (EEAS) European Union Military Staff, Military Staff (EUMS), situated in the Kortenberg building in Brussels, has a permanent NATO liaison team and runs a permanent EU cell at NATO's Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE) in Mons.


Comparison


Command structures

The CSDP entails alliance, collective self-defence amongst member states. This responsibility is based on Article 42.7 of TEU, which states that this responsibility does not prejudice the specific character of the security and defence policy of certain member states, referring to policies of neutrality. See Neutral country#European Union, Neutral country§European Union for discussion on this subject. According to the s:Consolidated version of the Treaty on European Union/Title V: General Provisions on the Union's External Action Service and Specific Provisions on the Common Foreign and Security Policy#SECTION 2: PROVISIONS ON THE COMMON SECURITY AND DEFENCE POLICY, Article 42.7 "If a Member State is the victim of armed aggression on its territory, the other Member States shall have towards it an obligation of aid and assistance by all the means in their power, in accordance with Article 51 of the United Nations Charter. This shall not prejudice the specific character of the security and defence policy of certain Member States." Article 42.2 furthermore specifies that NATO shall be the main forum for the implementation of collective self-defence for EU member states that are also NATO members. The EU does not have a permanent military command structure similar to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) Allied Command Operations (ACO), although it has been agreed that ACO resources may be used for the conduct of the EU's CSDP missions under the Berlin Plus agreement. The Military Planning and Conduct Capability (MPCC), established in 2017 and to be strengthened in 2020, does however represent the EU's first step in developing a permanent military OHQ. In parallel, the newly established European Defence Fund (EDF) marks the first time the Budget of the European Union, EU budget is used to finance multinational defence projects.


European Union


NATO


Membership

The memberships of the EU and NATO are distinct. The EU and NATO have respectively Member state of the European Union, 27 and Member states of NATO, 31 member states, of which 22 states are members of both. The five EU member states which are not members of NATO (Austria, Cyprus, Republic of Ireland, Ireland, Malta and Sweden) held positions of neutrality (international relations), neutrality during the Cold War, which they have since maintained. However, all but Cyprus are now members of NATO's Partnership for Peace. Cyprus is the only EU member state that is neither a full member of NATO nor participates in the Partnership for Peace. Any treaty concerning Cyprus' participation in NATO would likely be blocked by Turkey because of the Cyprus dispute. The 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine reignited debate surrounding NATO membership in several countries, with Finland and Sweden both applying for NATO membership. Of the 31 NATO member states, 29 are European states. The 7 European states which are NATO members but not EU members includes four states that have applied for EU membership (Albania, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Turkey), as well as the United Kingdom which is a Brexit, former EU member. The two others—Iceland and Norway—have opted to remain outside of the EU, however participate in the European Single Market, EU's single market. Several EU member states were formerly members of the NATO rival Warsaw Pact.


See also

*Foreign relations of the European Union *Foreign relations of NATO *European Union–United States relations *Council of Europe–European Union relations *Canada–European Union relations *Iceland–European Union relations *Norway–European Union relations *Turkey–European Union relations *Ukraine–European Union relations *United Kingdom–European Union relations *Austria–NATO relations *Cyprus–NATO relations *Finland–NATO relations *Ireland–NATO relations *Malta–NATO relations *Sweden–NATO relations *Ukraine–NATO relations *Brexit *Western European Union *Potential superpowers#European Union, European Union as a potential superpower *Enlargement of the European Union *Enlargement of NATO *European army *Neutral member states in the European Union *Strategic autonomy *Neutral and Non-Aligned European States


References


External links


NATO article on EU relationsEU factsheets on NATO relations

EDC Treaty (unofficial translation) see pg 2

EDC information on European Navigation

NATO AND THE EUROPEAN UNION: A DEFENSIVE RELATIONSHIP
{{DEFAULTSORT:NATO realtions European Union and third organisations, NATO Transatlantic relations NATO relations Foreign relations of the European Union