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NATO...Are Its Final Days Just Ahead
NATO to be marginalized by the EU
By Lisbeth Kirk
NATO is set to be marginalized by the EU as the primary institution for
Europe, says a report compiled by US intelligence experts.
Within a general analysis on world developments over the next 15 years,
by CIA think-tank, the National Intelligence Council, the experts posed
the question: 'Could Europe become a superpower?'
"The EU, rather than NATO, will increasingly become the primary
institution for Europe, and the role which Europeans shape for
themselves on the world stage is most likely to be projected through
it", said the forecast.
"Whether the EU will develop an army is an open question, in part
because its creation could duplicate or displace NATO forces", says the
report.
While weak on military force, Europe’s strength may be in providing a
model of global and regional governance, particularly if they are
searching for a "Western" alternative to strong reliance on the United
States, the report said.
For example, an EU-China alliance, though still unlikely, is no longer
unthinkable.
Ageing Powers
However, the 120-page report also warns that the EU could break down
within the next 15 years if no major economic reforms are carried out.
Branding Japan and Europe as the "ageing" powers, the experts predict
that ageing populations and shrinking work forces will become a major
economic and political challenge for the years to come.
"Either European countries adapt their work forces, reform their social
welfare, education, and tax systems, and accommodate growing immigrant
populations or they face a period of protracted economic stasis that
could threaten the huge successes made in creating a more United
Europe", the US report warned.
Splintering Europe
The current welfare state is thought by to be "unsustainable" and the
lack of any economic revitalization could lead to the "splintering or,
at worst, disintegration of the European Union, undermining its
ambitions to play a heavyweight international role", the experts said.
A total break from the post-World War II welfare state model may,
however, not be necessary, as shown in Sweden's successful example of
providing more flexibility for businesses while conserving many worker
rights.
US on top
Going under the title, 'Mapping the Global Future', the report concluded
that no other state in the world would match the US by 2020.
In general, the emergence of China and India as new global actors will
transform the geopolitical landscape of the globe, the report predicts.
The world economy is projected to be about 80 percent larger in 2020
than it was in 2000, and average per capita income to be roughly 50
percent higher
The National Intelligence Council, (NIC) is a centre of strategic
thinking within the US Government analyzing how world developments could
evolve. This is its third long-term report.
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