Berlin Plus agreement: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
Minor |
m Removed category Diplomacy; Quick-adding category 21st-century treaties (using HotCat) |
||
Line 30: | Line 30: | ||
{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |
||
[[Category:Diplomacy]] |
|||
[[Category:European Union security]] |
[[Category:European Union security]] |
||
[[Category:Foreign relations of the European Union]] |
[[Category:Foreign relations of the European Union]] |
||
[[Category:NATO]] |
[[Category:NATO]] |
||
[[Category:21st-century treaties]] |
|||
[[de:Berlin Plus]] |
[[de:Berlin Plus]] |
Revision as of 07:36, 4 September 2009
The Berlin Plus agreement is the short title of a comprehensive package of agreements made between NATO and the EU on 16 December 2002.[1] These agreements were based on conclusions of NATO's 1999 Washington summit, sometimes referred to as the CJTF mechanism,[2] and allowed the EU to draw on some of NATO's military assets in its own peacekeeping operations.
Content
The Berlin Plus agreement has seven major parts:[1][3]
- The NATO-EU Security Agreement, which covers the exchange of classified information under reciprocal security protection rules.
- Assured Access to NATO planning capabilities for EU-led Crisis Management Operations (CMO).
- Availability of NATO assets and capabilities for EU-led CMOs, such as communication units and headquarters.
- Procedures for Release, Monitoring, Return and Recall of NATO Assets and Capabilities.
- Terms Of Reference for DSACEUR and European Command Options for NATO.
- Arrangements for coherent and mutually reinforcing capability requirements, in particular the incorporation within NATO's defence planning of the military needs and capabilities that may be required for EU-led military operations.
- EU - NATO consultation arrangements in the context of an EU-led CMO making use of NATO assets and capabilities.
This comprehensive framework for NATO-EU relations was concluded on March 17, 2003 by the exchange of letters by High Representative Javier Solana and the then-Secretary General of NATO Lord Robertson.[3]
Practice
Procedures
- The use of NATO assets by the EU is subject to a "right of first refusal" : NATO must first decline to intervene in a given crisis.[4]
- Approval of the use of assets has to be unanimous among NATO states. For example, Turkish reservations about Operation Concordia using NATO assets delayed its deployment by more than five months.[5]
Operations
To date, the EU has conducted two operations with the support of NATO:
- Operation Concordia in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. The EU took over from NATO's operation Allied Harmony and deployed around 300 troops to provide security to EU and OSCE monitors overseeing the implementation of the Ohrid Framework Agreement.
- EUFOR Althea in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Following NATO's decision at the 2004 Istanbul summit to terminate the mission of NATO's Stabilisation Force (SFOR) by the end of the year, the EU started its own 7,000-strong mission, EUFOR Althea, in the country with the aim to implement the military aspects of the Dayton Peace Agreement and to maintain a safe and secure environment.
See also
References
- ^ a b NATO, Berlin Plus agreement, June 21, 2006.[1]
- ^ Heritage Foundation report, October 4, 2004 : "Through the CJTF mechanism, NATO member states do not have to actively participate actively in a specific mission if they do not feel their vital interests are involved, but their opting out [...] would not stop other NATO members from participating in an intervention if they so desired." [2]
- ^ a b WORLD SECURITY INSTITUTE BRUSSELS, "NATO-EU Relations", January 16, 2006, [3]
- ^ Heritage Foundation report, March 24, 2008. [4]
- ^ Bram Boxhoorn, Broad Support for NATO in the Netherlands, 21-09-2005, [5]