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NATO...Are Its Final Days Just Ahead
Germany wants radical overhaul of NATO
AFP
MUNICH: Germany cast doubt this weekend about the efficiency of NATO and
called for a radical overhaul of the military alliance to help improve
transatlantic relations and adapt to new security threats.
At the Munich security conference, Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and
Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer said new means were needed to repair
the bridge across the Atlantic that has been damaged by the US-led war
in Iraq.
But NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said he thought both
the Alliance and ties between Washington and Brussels were in good
shape, although he acknowledged that his organisation could be put to
better use.
NATO "is no longer the primary venue where transatlantic partners
discuss and coordinate strategies," an ill Schroeder told defence
experts from around the world in a speech read by German Defence
Minister Peter Struck. "The dialogue between the European Union and the
United States ... in its current form does justice neither to the
Union's growing importance nor to the new demands on transatlantic
cooperation," he said.
"We should focus with even greater determination and resolve on the task
of adapting our cooperation structures to the changed conditions and
challenges." The unusually strong remarks, less than two weeks before a
NATO summit in Brussels, follow a visit to Germany early this month by
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who invited Berlin to
demonstrate that it is willing to improve its relations with Washington
Rice, whose will be followed by US President George W. Bush on February
23, urged Germany to play a greater role in Iraq following the landmark
elections there last month.
Schroeder, who vehemently opposed the US-led war to oust Saddam Hussein,
appears likely to expand Germany's role in training Iraq's overwhelmed
police and military forces within the framework of NATO. But he went
further in Munich, urging the EU and the United States to set up a panel
of senior and independent officials to analyse new ways to boost ties.
"This panel should submit a report to the heads of state and government
of NATO and the European Union by the beginning of 2006 on the basis of
its analysis and proposals. The necessary conclusions could then be
drawn," he said.
In his speech on Sunday, Fischer said the goal was not to undermine NATO
but to strengthen it. He also urged Washington to commit to multilateral
institutions, notably the United Nations since its diplomatic mauling
during the war in Iraq.
"We need to know if the United States sees itself within the UN system
or outside," he said.
De Hoop Scheffer, meanwhile, said that the Alliance was in good shape,
despite the 26-member body's own Iraq crisis, and he doubted whether the
review suggested by Schroeder would produce anything new.
"I'm not denying the rifts of course over Iraq were deep," he told AFP
on the sidelines of the annual conference. "But if I look at Iraq,
Afghanistan, our partnerships ... I think quite honestly NATO is alive
and kicking.
"The transatlantic link and transatlantic relations are in good
condition," he said. "I think the result of a high-level panel might
well be that the advice would be to re-invent NATO."
In an editorial in its Sunday edition, the Tagesspiegel newspaper said
people had been hoping that Schroeder would respond after Rice's visit
but that his speech in Munich had come as a surprise.
"Many in Munich interpreted the chancellor's remarks as being not just
critical of the Alliance, but also putting the EU above NATO as an actor
on the world stage," it said under the headline "Say That Again".
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