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Permanent Structured Cooperation

The Permanent Structured Cooperation (PESCO) is the part of the European Union's (EU) security and defence policy (CSDP) in which 25 of the 27 national armed forces pursue structural integration (the exceptions being Denmark and Malta). Based on Article 42.6 and Protocol 10 of the Treaty on European Union, introduced by the Treaty of Lisbon in 2009, PESCO was first initiated in 2017.[1] The initial integration within the PESCO format is a number of projects which launched in 2018.[2]

Permanent Structured Cooperation
  PESCO States
  Non-PESCO EU States
Formation2018
TypeFramework for structural integration within the Common Security and Defence Policy, based on Article 42.6 of the Treaty on European Union
Membership
25 member states
Websitehttps://pesco.europa.eu/

Together with the Coordinated Annual Review on Defence (CARD), the European Defence Fund and the Military Planning and Conduct Capability (MPCC) it forms a new comprehensive defence package for the EU.[1]

PESCO is similar to enhanced co-operation in other policy areas, in the sense that integration does not require that all EU member states participate.

History

Pre-activation

 
In 2009 the Treaty of Lisbon (signing depicted) entered into force, enabling permanent structured cooperation in defence between a subset of willing member states.

PESCO was first written into the European Constitution under Article III-312, which failed ratification, and then into the Treaty of Lisbon of 2009. It added the possibility for those members whose military capabilities fulfil higher criteria and which have made more binding commitments to one another in this area with a view to the most demanding missions shall establish permanent structured cooperation (PESCO) within the EU framework. PESCO was seen as the way to enable the common defence foreseen in Article 42, but the scepticism towards further integration that had arisen around the rejection of the European Constitution meant its activation was unlikely. It was termed, by President Jean-Claude Juncker, the Lisbon Treaty's "sleeping beauty".[3][4]

In the 2010s, the geopolitical landscape around the EU began to change, triggering a series of crises. The Libyan Civil War, the Syrian Civil War and the rise of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant caused the European migrant crisis. Russia intervened in Ukraine in 2014, annexing Crimea and triggering an ongoing conflict in the country over the Ukraine–European Union Association Agreement. In 2016, Donald Trump who was elected as President of the United States has been critical of NATO allies, even refusing on several occasions to back the mutual defence clause; and the United Kingdom, one of the EU's two largest military powers, voted in a referendum to withdraw from the EU.[4][5]

This new environment, while very different from the one PESCO was designed for, gave new impetus to European defence cooperation. The withdrawal of the UK, historically an opponent of that cooperation, gave further hope of success. At a rally in Bavaria, Angela Merkel argued that: “The times in which we could completely depend on others are, to a certain extent, over ... I’ve experienced that in the last few days. We Europeans truly have to take our fate into our own hands.” In late 2016, the EU put defence co-operation on its post-Brexit Bratislava and Rome declarations.[4][5]

There was some disagreement between France and Germany about the nature of PESCO. France foresaw a small but ambitious group with serious capabilities making major practical leaps forward; while Germany, weary of further divisions in the EU, wanted a more inclusive approach that could potentially include all states, regardless of their military capability or willingness to integrate. Further, for Germany, it was about building capabilities and giving a post-Brexit signal of unity, whereas France was focused on operations and looking for help for its overstretched African deployments. Their compromise was to re-imagine PESCO as a process. PESCO would be inclusive, but not all states had to take part in all projects and progress would be phased allowing the development of new, common capabilities without having to resolve larger differences on end-goals first. Further, states would not need to already have capabilities, but merely pledge to work towards them. This allowed France's idea of improving military capabilities without shutting out states who did not already attain the threshold.[6][7]

Activation

 
On 13 November 2017, Foreign and Defence Ministers from 23 EU states signed the Joint notification on setting up PESCO in a Foreign Affairs Council chaired by the High Representative for Foreign Affairs, Federica Mogherini.

On 7 September 2017, an agreement was made between EU foreign affairs ministers to move forward with PESCO with 10 initial projects.[8][9][1][10] The agreement was signed on 13 November by 23 of the 28 member states. Ireland and Portugal notified the High Representative and the Council of the European Union of their desire to join PESCO on 7 December 2017[11] and PESCO was activated by the 25 states on 11 December 2017 with the approval of a Council Decision.[12][13] Denmark did not participate as (prior to its abolition in July 2022) it had an opt-out from the Common Security and Defence Policy, nor did the United Kingdom, which withdrew from the EU in 2020.[14][15] Malta opted-out as well, due to concerns it might conflict with its neutrality.[16][17] As per Article 46 of the TEU, non-participating EU member states can request to join by notifying the Council, which will approve based on a qualified majority of participating member states.

Principles

Those Member States whose military capabilities fulfil higher criteria and which have made more binding commitments to one another in this area with a view to the most demanding missions shall establish permanent structured cooperation within the Union framework. Such cooperation shall be governed by Article 46. It shall not affect the provisions of Article 43.

— Article 42.6 of Treaty on European Union

Those states shall notify their intention to the Council and to the High Representative. The Council then adopts, by qualified majority a decision establishing PESCO and determining the list of participating Member States. Any other member state that fulfills the criteria and wishes to participate can join the PESCO following the same procedure, but in the voting for the decision only the states already part of the PESCO will participate. If a participating state no longer fulfills the criteria a decision suspending its participation is taken by the same procedure as for accepting new participants, but excluding the concerned state from the voting procedure. If a participating state wishes to withdraw from PESCO it just notifies the Council to remove it from the list of participants. All other decisions and recommendations of the Council concerning PESCO issues unrelated to the list of participants require a unanimous vote of the participating states.[3]

The criteria established in the PESCO Protocol are the following:[3]

  • co-operate and harmonise requirements and pool resources in the fields related to defence equipment acquisition, research, funding and utilisation, notably the programmes and initiatives of the European Defence Agency (e.g. Code of Conduct on Defence Procurement)
  • capacity to supply, either at national level or as a component of multinational force groups, targeted combat units for the missions planned, structured at a tactical level as a battle group, with support elements including transport (airlift, sealift) and logistics, within a period of five to 30 days, in particular in response to requests from the United Nations, and which can be sustained for an initial period of 30 days and be extended up to at least 120 days.
  • capable of carrying out in the above timeframes the tasks of joint disarmament operations, humanitarian and rescue tasks, military advice and assistance tasks, conflict prevention and peace-keeping tasks, tasks of combat forces in crisis management, including peace-making and post-conflict stabilisation[3]

Participating armed forces

The following member states have announced their intention of participating in PESCO

As per Article 46 of the TEU, the following non-participating EU member states can request to join by notifying the Council, which will approve based on a qualified majority of participating member states:

As of November 2020, third countries can also participate in PESCO. Canada, Norway, and the United States have applied to participate in the project to improve military mobility in Europe. Norway had been active in past EU military operations.[22][23] The EU governments will soon decide on the applications in a multi-stage admission process.[24]

Neutral states

PESCO includes four of the five EU states that describe themselves as neutral (Austria and Ireland) or non-aligned (Finland and Sweden), and is designed to be as inclusive as possible by allowing states to opt in or out as their unique foreign policies allow. Some members of the Irish Parliament considered Ireland joining PESCO as an abandonment of neutrality. The measure was passed, with the government arguing that its opt-in nature allowed Ireland to "join elements of PESCO that were beneficial such as counter-terrorism, cyber security and peace keeping ... what we are not going to be doing is buying aircraft carriers and fighter jets."[25] While critics of Ireland's participation point to the commitment to increase defence spending, the government has made clear that the 2% commitment is collective, and not for each state individually. The Irish government has made clear that any defence spending increase by Ireland would be minor.[26] Malta, the only neutral state not to participate, argued that it was going to wait and see how PESCO develops, in order to see whether it would compromise Maltese neutrality.[21]

In Switzerland, an opinion poll conducted two months after the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine showed support for the country joining PESCO.[27]

NATO

About four-fifths of PESCO members are also member states of NATO. One EU state (Denmark) is a member of NATO but not a member of PESCO.[28] While PESCO was formed in part due to doubts over the United States' commitment to NATO,[3] officials stress that PESCO will be complementary to NATO security rather than in competition with it. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg also highlighted how Military Mobility is a key example of NATO and EU co-operation.[29][30]

German defence Minister Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer (CDU) described third country participation in PESCO as a “breakthrough”, which also meant an “impulse” for cooperation between the EU and NATO.

Criticism and lobbying by the United States

The United States has voiced concerns and published 'warnings' about PESCO several times, which many analysts believe to be a sign that the United States fears a loss of influence in Europe, as a militarily self-sufficient EU would make NATO increasingly irrelevant.[31][failed verification][32][failed verification] Alongside better military cooperation, PESCO also seeks to enhance the defence industry of member states and create jobs within the EU, which several US politicians have criticised over fears of losing revenue from EU states (on average, the United States sells over €1 billion in weapons to EU countries per year).[33][failed verification][32][failed verification] According to Françoise Grossetête, a member of the European Parliament from 1994 to 2019, the US is lobbying strongly against increased military cooperation between EU member states, going as far as to directly invite MEPs to 'private dinners' to try to convince them to vote against any directives or laws that would seek to strengthen military cooperation within the EU.[34]

Despite opposition to PESCO, the United States expressed its desire to participate in the Military Mobility project in 2021.[35] European analysts[who?] have suggested that this might pose an attempt to undermine an independent European defence policy from within.[36][37]

Governance

PESCO has a two-layer structure:

  • Council Level: Responsible for the overall policy direction and decision-making including as regards the assessment mechanism to determine if Member States are fulfilling their commitments. Only PESCO members are voting, decisions are taken by unanimity (except decisions regarding the suspension of membership and entry of new members which are taken by qualified majority).
  • Projects Level: Each project will be managed by those member states that contribute to it, in line with general rules for project management to be developed at overarching level.

Secretariat

The European Defence Agency and External Action Service will act as PESCO's secretariat.[38]

Funding

PESCO projects will be incentivised by the European Commission’s newly established European Defence Fund.

List of projects

The first PESCO projects started with a list of 50 ideas and was whittled down to provide a short list of small-scale projects. Major armament projects are intended in the future (EU forces use 178 different weapon systems compared to 30 in the US), but initially PESCO is to be focused on smaller operations to lay groundwork.[7]

PESCO projects as of February, 2021 and participating countries by category:[39][40]

Air - Systems

Project Name Abbr Coordinator Project members Project observer
European MALE RPAS EURODRONE   Germany
European attack helicopter TIGER MARK III   France
Counter Unmanned Aerial System C-UAS   Italy
Airborne Electronic Attack AEA   Spain

Cyber - C4ISR

Project name Abbr. Coordinator Project members Project observer
European Secure Software-defined Radio ESSOR   France
Cyber Threats and Incident Response Information Sharing Platform CTIRISP   Greece
Cyber Rapid Response Teams CRRT   Lithuania
The Strategic Command and Control System for CSDP Missions ESC2   Spain
European High Atmosphere Airship Platform - ISR Capability EHAAP   Italy
SOCC for Small Joint Operations with Special Operations Forces Tactical Command and

Control capabilities

SOCC FOR SJO   Greece
Electronic Warfare Capability/Interoperability Programmer for future ISR JISR   Czech Republic
Cyber and Information Domain Coordination Center CIDCC   Germany

Enabling - Joint

Project name Abbr. Coordinator Project members Project observer
European Medical Command EMC   Germany
Network of Logistic Hubs in Europe and support to operations NetLogHubs   Germany
Military Mobility MM   Netherlands
Energy Operation Function EOF   France
Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear Surveillance as a Service CBRN SaaS   Austria
Co-Basing   France
Geo-Meteorological and Oceanographic Support Coordination Element GEOMETOC

GMSCE

  Germany
Timely Warning and Interception with Space-based Theater Surveillance TWISTER   France
Materials and Components for Technological EU Competitiveness MAC-EU   France
EU Collaborative Warfare Capabilities ECOWAR   France
European Global RPAS Insertion Architecture System GLORIA   Italy

Land - Formations - Systems

Project name Abbr. Coordinator Project members Project observer
Deployable Military Disaster Relief Capability Package DM-DRCP   Italy
Armoured Infantry Fighting Vehicle / Amphibious Assault Vehicle / Light Armoured Vehicle AIFV/AAV/LAV   Italy
Indirect Fire Support Capability EUROARTILLERY   Slovakia
Crisis Response Operation Core EUFOR CROC   Germany
Integrated Unmanned Ground System UGS   Estonia
EU Beyond Line of Sight Land Battlefield Missile Systems EU BLOS   France

Maritime

Project name Abbr. Coordinator Project member Project observer
Maritime Semi-Autonomous Systems for Mine Countermeasures MAS MCM   Belgium
Harbour & Maritime Surveillance and Protection HARMSPRO   Italy
Upgrade of Maritime Surveillance UMS   Greece
Deployable Modular Underwater Intervention Capability Package DIVEPACK   Bulgaria
Maritime Unmanned Anti-Submarine System MUSAS   Portugal
European Patrol Corvette EPC   Italy

Space

Project name Abbr. Coordinator Project members Project observer
EU Radio Navigation Solution EURAS   France
European Military Space Surveillance Awareness Network EU-SSA-N   Italy

Training - Facilities

Project name Abbr. Coordinator Project members Project observer
European Union Training Mission Competence Centre EU TMCC   Germany
European Training Certification Centre for European Armies ETCCEA   Italy
Helicopter Hot and High Training H3 TRAINING   Greece
Joint EU Intelligence School JEIS   Greece
EU Test and Evaluation Centres EUTEC   France

  Sweden

Integrated European Joint Training and Simulation Centre EUROSIM   Hungary
EU Cyber Academia and Innovation Hub EU CAIH   Portugal
Special Operations Forces Medical Training Centre SMTC   Poland
CBRN Defence Training Range CBRNDTR   Romania
EU Network of Diving Centres EUNDC   Romania

Potential

Potential future PESCO projects include the following existing intergovernmental cooperations between member states' militaries, presently outside the CSDP framework:[citation needed]

Forces and command centres:

Bodies fostering integration:

See also

Other initiatives of the Common Security and Defence Policy established after the introduction of the European Union Global Strategy:

Other 'European' defence organisations that are currently not part of the CSDP but could potentially become PESCO projects:

References

  1. ^ a b c Permanent Structured Cooperation (PESCO) - Factsheet, European External Action Service
  2. ^ http://www.consilium.europa.eu/media/32079/pesco-overview-of-first-collaborative-of-projects-for-press.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ a b c d e "Article 42(6), Article 43(1), Article 46, Protocol 10 of the amended Treaty on European Union" (PDF). Council of the European Union. 15 April 2008.
  4. ^ a b c Time for the Sleeping Beauty to wake, ECFR 15/NOV/17
  5. ^ a b Angela Merkel: EU cannot completely rely on US and Britain any more, theguardian 28 May 2017
  6. ^ Can France and Germany Make PESCO Work as a Process Toward EU Defense?, German Marshall Fund 6 October 2017
  7. ^ a b European military cooperation: How to defend Europe?, Euractiv 29 November 2017
  8. ^ "Romania to join EU's defence initiative PESCO". seenews.com.
  9. ^ . 7 September 2017. Archived from the original on 18 October 2017. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  10. ^ . www.praguemonitor.com. Archived from the original on 2017-10-12. Retrieved 2017-12-17.
  11. ^ "Permanent Structured Cooperation (PESCO) - Council Decision - preparation for the adoption". Council of the European Union. 2017-12-08. Retrieved 2017-12-12.
  12. ^ "COUNCIL DECISION establishing Permanent Structured Cooperation (PESCO) and determining the list of Participating Member States" (PDF). Council of the European Union. 2017-12-08. Retrieved 2018-02-18.
  13. ^ Defence cooperation: Council establishes Permanent Structured Cooperation (PESCO), with 25 member states participating, Council of the European Union 11 December 2017
  14. ^ "PESCO: EU paves way to defense union". Deutsche Welle. 2017-11-13. from the original on 2017-11-18. Retrieved 2017-11-16.
  15. ^ Erlanger, Steven (2017-11-13). "E.U. Moves Closer to a Joint Military Force". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on 2017-11-13. Retrieved 2017-11-13.
  16. ^ "Malta among three countries opting out of EU's new defence agreement". Times of Malta. 2017-12-11. from the original on 2017-12-12. Retrieved 2017-12-12.
  17. ^ . Deutsche Welle. 2017-12-11. Archived from the original on 2017-12-12. Retrieved 2017-12-12.
  18. ^ "V 66 Om et fælles EU-forsvar". Folketing. 2022-04-08. Retrieved 2022-06-20.
  19. ^ "Denmark votes overwhelmingly to join EU's common defence policy". The Guardian. 1 June 2022.
  20. ^ "Danes vote yes to abolish EU defence opt-out – here are the next steps". Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Denmark). 2022-06-02. Retrieved 2022-06-05.
  21. ^ a b "Malta to 'wait and see' before deciding on PESCO defence pact, Muscat says". MaltaToday.com.mt.
  22. ^ EU states poised to agree joint defence pact, Financial Times 7 November 2017
  23. ^ Foreign and security policy, Mission of Norway to the EU
  24. ^ Schiltz, Christoph B. (2021-02-28). ""Historische Entwicklung": USA wollen sich aktiv an EU-Verteidigungspolitik beteiligen". DIE WELT. Retrieved 2021-03-01.
  25. ^ "Dáil votes to join European defence organisation". RTÉ.ie. 7 December 2017.
  26. ^ "EU defence co-operation is no threat to Irish neutrality". The Irish Times.
  27. ^ Ukraine war sees Swiss challenge their age-old neutrality, BBC News, 7 May 2022
  28. ^ Member countries, NATO 12 June 2017
  29. ^ EU to sign joint defence pact in show of post-Brexit unity, Euractiv 9 November 2017
  30. ^ NATO Secretary General welcomes PESCO, stresses need for complementarity, NATO 14 November 2017
  31. ^ Zyla, Benjamin (2020). The End of European Security Institutions? The EU's Common Foreign and Security Policy and NATO After Brexit. Berlin, Germany: Springer Nature. pp. 98ff. ISBN 9783030421601.
  32. ^ a b Naumescu, Valentin (2019). The New European Union and Its Global Strategy: From Brexit to PESCO. Newcastle upon Tyne, England: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 14ff. ISBN 978-1-5275-4182-5. OCLC 1132792079.
  33. ^ "Importer/Exporter TIV Tables". sipri.org. Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. 2020. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
  34. ^ "Braucht Europa eine Armee?". YouTube. arte. 2020-05-05. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
  35. ^ "U.S. ready to help EU speed up troop movement to meet Russia challenge". Berlin/Washington: Reuters. 2 March 2021. from the original on 5 March 2021. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  36. ^ Rieker, Pernille (2021). "Differentiated Defence Integration Under French Leadership". European Foreign Affairs Review. 26: 111–126. doi:10.54648/EERR2021029. S2CID 248273479.
  37. ^ Kempin, Ronja; Stiftung Wissenschaft Und Politik (2021). "Frankreichs Außen- und Sicherheitspolitik unter Präsident Macron: Konsequenzen für die deutsch-französische Zusammenarbeit". SWP-Studie (in German). doi:10.18449/2021S04. Frankreich fürchtete insbesondere, dass die USA über eine Beteiligung an PESCO- und EVF-Vorhaben die Entwicklung der GSVP beeinflussen würden.
  38. ^ "Permanent Structured Cooperation: An Institutional Pathway for European Defence « CSS Blog Network". isnblog.ethz.ch.
  39. ^ "Council-Decision-PESCO-projects-list" (PDF).{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  40. ^ "pesco-projects" (PDF).{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

External links

  • Official website
  • Joint notification by member states to the High Representative and to the Council on PESCO, 13 November 2017
  • Permanent Structured Cooperation: what’s in a name?, European Union Institute for Security Studies
  • Description by the European Commission
  • Factsheet
  • Description by the European External Action Service
  • ETH Zurich description

permanent, structured, cooperation, pesco, redirects, here, other, uses, pesco, disambiguation, pesco, part, european, union, security, defence, policy, csdp, which, national, armed, forces, pursue, structural, integration, exceptions, being, denmark, malta, b. PESCO redirects here For other uses see Pesco disambiguation The Permanent Structured Cooperation PESCO is the part of the European Union s EU security and defence policy CSDP in which 25 of the 27 national armed forces pursue structural integration the exceptions being Denmark and Malta Based on Article 42 6 and Protocol 10 of the Treaty on European Union introduced by the Treaty of Lisbon in 2009 PESCO was first initiated in 2017 1 The initial integration within the PESCO format is a number of projects which launched in 2018 2 Permanent Structured Cooperation PESCO States Non PESCO EU StatesFormation2018TypeFramework for structural integration within the Common Security and Defence Policy based on Article 42 6 of the Treaty on European UnionMembership25 member statesWebsitehttps pesco europa eu Together with the Coordinated Annual Review on Defence CARD the European Defence Fund and the Military Planning and Conduct Capability MPCC it forms a new comprehensive defence package for the EU 1 PESCO is similar to enhanced co operation in other policy areas in the sense that integration does not require that all EU member states participate Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre activation 1 2 Activation 2 Principles 3 Participating armed forces 3 1 Neutral states 3 2 NATO 3 2 1 Criticism and lobbying by the United States 4 Governance 4 1 Secretariat 4 2 Funding 5 List of projects 5 1 Air Systems 5 2 Cyber C4ISR 5 3 Enabling Joint 5 4 Land Formations Systems 5 5 Maritime 5 6 Space 5 7 Training Facilities 5 8 Potential 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditPre activation Edit In 2009 the Treaty of Lisbon signing depicted entered into force enabling permanent structured cooperation in defence between a subset of willing member states PESCO was first written into the European Constitution under Article III 312 which failed ratification and then into the Treaty of Lisbon of 2009 It added the possibility for those members whose military capabilities fulfil higher criteria and which have made more binding commitments to one another in this area with a view to the most demanding missions shall establish permanent structured cooperation PESCO within the EU framework PESCO was seen as the way to enable the common defence foreseen in Article 42 but the scepticism towards further integration that had arisen around the rejection of the European Constitution meant its activation was unlikely It was termed by President Jean Claude Juncker the Lisbon Treaty s sleeping beauty 3 4 In the 2010s the geopolitical landscape around the EU began to change triggering a series of crises The Libyan Civil War the Syrian Civil War and the rise of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant caused the European migrant crisis Russia intervened in Ukraine in 2014 annexing Crimea and triggering an ongoing conflict in the country over the Ukraine European Union Association Agreement In 2016 Donald Trump who was elected as President of the United States has been critical of NATO allies even refusing on several occasions to back the mutual defence clause and the United Kingdom one of the EU s two largest military powers voted in a referendum to withdraw from the EU 4 5 This new environment while very different from the one PESCO was designed for gave new impetus to European defence cooperation The withdrawal of the UK historically an opponent of that cooperation gave further hope of success At a rally in Bavaria Angela Merkel argued that The times in which we could completely depend on others are to a certain extent over I ve experienced that in the last few days We Europeans truly have to take our fate into our own hands In late 2016 the EU put defence co operation on its post Brexit Bratislava and Rome declarations 4 5 There was some disagreement between France and Germany about the nature of PESCO France foresaw a small but ambitious group with serious capabilities making major practical leaps forward while Germany weary of further divisions in the EU wanted a more inclusive approach that could potentially include all states regardless of their military capability or willingness to integrate Further for Germany it was about building capabilities and giving a post Brexit signal of unity whereas France was focused on operations and looking for help for its overstretched African deployments Their compromise was to re imagine PESCO as a process PESCO would be inclusive but not all states had to take part in all projects and progress would be phased allowing the development of new common capabilities without having to resolve larger differences on end goals first Further states would not need to already have capabilities but merely pledge to work towards them This allowed France s idea of improving military capabilities without shutting out states who did not already attain the threshold 6 7 Activation Edit On 13 November 2017 Foreign and Defence Ministers from 23 EU states signed the Joint notification on setting up PESCO in a Foreign Affairs Council chaired by the High Representative for Foreign Affairs Federica Mogherini On 7 September 2017 an agreement was made between EU foreign affairs ministers to move forward with PESCO with 10 initial projects 8 9 1 10 The agreement was signed on 13 November by 23 of the 28 member states Ireland and Portugal notified the High Representative and the Council of the European Union of their desire to join PESCO on 7 December 2017 11 and PESCO was activated by the 25 states on 11 December 2017 with the approval of a Council Decision 12 13 Denmark did not participate as prior to its abolition in July 2022 it had an opt out from the Common Security and Defence Policy nor did the United Kingdom which withdrew from the EU in 2020 14 15 Malta opted out as well due to concerns it might conflict with its neutrality 16 17 As per Article 46 of the TEU non participating EU member states can request to join by notifying the Council which will approve based on a qualified majority of participating member states Principles EditThose Member States whose military capabilities fulfil higher criteria and which have made more binding commitments to one another in this area with a view to the most demanding missions shall establish permanent structured cooperation within the Union framework Such cooperation shall be governed by Article 46 It shall not affect the provisions of Article 43 Article 42 6 of Treaty on European Union Those states shall notify their intention to the Council and to the High Representative The Council then adopts by qualified majority a decision establishing PESCO and determining the list of participating Member States Any other member state that fulfills the criteria and wishes to participate can join the PESCO following the same procedure but in the voting for the decision only the states already part of the PESCO will participate If a participating state no longer fulfills the criteria a decision suspending its participation is taken by the same procedure as for accepting new participants but excluding the concerned state from the voting procedure If a participating state wishes to withdraw from PESCO it just notifies the Council to remove it from the list of participants All other decisions and recommendations of the Council concerning PESCO issues unrelated to the list of participants require a unanimous vote of the participating states 3 The criteria established in the PESCO Protocol are the following 3 co operate and harmonise requirements and pool resources in the fields related to defence equipment acquisition research funding and utilisation notably the programmes and initiatives of the European Defence Agency e g Code of Conduct on Defence Procurement capacity to supply either at national level or as a component of multinational force groups targeted combat units for the missions planned structured at a tactical level as a battle group with support elements including transport airlift sealift and logistics within a period of five to 30 days in particular in response to requests from the United Nations and which can be sustained for an initial period of 30 days and be extended up to at least 120 days capable of carrying out in the above timeframes the tasks of joint disarmament operations humanitarian and rescue tasks military advice and assistance tasks conflict prevention and peace keeping tasks tasks of combat forces in crisis management including peace making and post conflict stabilisation 3 Participating armed forces EditThe following member states have announced their intention of participating in PESCO Austria Belgium Bulgaria Croatia Cyprus Czechia Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Hungary Ireland Italy Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Netherlands Poland Portugal Romania Slovakia Slovenia Spain Sweden As per Article 46 of the TEU the following non participating EU member states can request to join by notifying the Council which will approve based on a qualified majority of participating member states Denmark as part of its EU opt outs originally did not participate in the common defence policy However following the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 the Danish parliament adopted a proposal in favour of the country participating in the Common Security and Defence Policy including the European Defence Agency and PESCO on 8 April 2022 18 Next Danish voters decided in a 1 June 2022 referendum to end that opt out 19 after which the country proceeded to consider participating in PESCO 20 Malta which wants to see how PESCO develops first since it may violate the Maltese Constitution Neutrality Clause 21 As of November 2020 third countries can also participate in PESCO Canada Norway and the United States have applied to participate in the project to improve military mobility in Europe Norway had been active in past EU military operations 22 23 The EU governments will soon decide on the applications in a multi stage admission process 24 Neutral states Edit PESCO includes four of the five EU states that describe themselves as neutral Austria and Ireland or non aligned Finland and Sweden and is designed to be as inclusive as possible by allowing states to opt in or out as their unique foreign policies allow Some members of the Irish Parliament considered Ireland joining PESCO as an abandonment of neutrality The measure was passed with the government arguing that its opt in nature allowed Ireland to join elements of PESCO that were beneficial such as counter terrorism cyber security and peace keeping what we are not going to be doing is buying aircraft carriers and fighter jets 25 While critics of Ireland s participation point to the commitment to increase defence spending the government has made clear that the 2 commitment is collective and not for each state individually The Irish government has made clear that any defence spending increase by Ireland would be minor 26 Malta the only neutral state not to participate argued that it was going to wait and see how PESCO develops in order to see whether it would compromise Maltese neutrality 21 In Switzerland an opinion poll conducted two months after the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine showed support for the country joining PESCO 27 NATO Edit About four fifths of PESCO members are also member states of NATO One EU state Denmark is a member of NATO but not a member of PESCO 28 While PESCO was formed in part due to doubts over the United States commitment to NATO 3 officials stress that PESCO will be complementary to NATO security rather than in competition with it NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg also highlighted how Military Mobility is a key example of NATO and EU co operation 29 30 German defence Minister Annegret Kramp Karrenbauer CDU described third country participation in PESCO as a breakthrough which also meant an impulse for cooperation between the EU and NATO Criticism and lobbying by the United States Edit The United States has voiced concerns and published warnings about PESCO several times which many analysts believe to be a sign that the United States fears a loss of influence in Europe as a militarily self sufficient EU would make NATO increasingly irrelevant 31 failed verification 32 failed verification Alongside better military cooperation PESCO also seeks to enhance the defence industry of member states and create jobs within the EU which several US politicians have criticised over fears of losing revenue from EU states on average the United States sells over 1 billion in weapons to EU countries per year 33 failed verification 32 failed verification According to Francoise Grossetete a member of the European Parliament from 1994 to 2019 the US is lobbying strongly against increased military cooperation between EU member states going as far as to directly invite MEPs to private dinners to try to convince them to vote against any directives or laws that would seek to strengthen military cooperation within the EU 34 Despite opposition to PESCO the United States expressed its desire to participate in the Military Mobility project in 2021 35 European analysts who have suggested that this might pose an attempt to undermine an independent European defence policy from within 36 37 Governance EditPESCO has a two layer structure Council Level Responsible for the overall policy direction and decision making including as regards the assessment mechanism to determine if Member States are fulfilling their commitments Only PESCO members are voting decisions are taken by unanimity except decisions regarding the suspension of membership and entry of new members which are taken by qualified majority Projects Level Each project will be managed by those member states that contribute to it in line with general rules for project management to be developed at overarching level Secretariat Edit The European Defence Agency and External Action Service will act as PESCO s secretariat 38 Funding Edit PESCO projects will be incentivised by the European Commission s newly established European Defence Fund List of projects EditThe first PESCO projects started with a list of 50 ideas and was whittled down to provide a short list of small scale projects Major armament projects are intended in the future EU forces use 178 different weapon systems compared to 30 in the US but initially PESCO is to be focused on smaller operations to lay groundwork 7 PESCO projects as of February 2021 and participating countries by category 39 40 Air Systems Edit Project Name Abbr Coordinator Project members Project observerEuropean MALE RPAS EURODRONE Germany Czech Republic Germany Spain France ItalyEuropean attack helicopter TIGER MARK III France Germany Spain FranceCounter Unmanned Aerial System C UAS Italy Czech Republic ItalyAirborne Electronic Attack AEA Spain Spain France SwedenCyber C4ISR Edit Project name Abbr Coordinator Project members Project observerEuropean Secure Software defined Radio ESSOR France Belgium Germany Spain Netherlands Finland France Italy Poland PortugalCyber Threats and Incident Response Information Sharing Platform CTIRISP Greece Cyprus Greece Spain Hungary Italy PortugalCyber Rapid Response Teams CRRT Lithuania Estonia Croatia Lithuania Netherlands Poland RomaniaThe Strategic Command and Control System for CSDP Missions ESC2 Spain Germany Spain Netherlands France Italy PortugalEuropean High Atmosphere Airship Platform ISR Capability EHAAP Italy France ItalySOCC for Small Joint Operations with Special Operations Forces Tactical Command and Control capabilities SOCC FOR SJO Greece Cyprus GreeceElectronic Warfare Capability Interoperability Programmer for future ISR JISR Czech Republic Czech Republic GermanyCyber and Information Domain Coordination Center CIDCC Germany France Germany Hungary Netherlands Austria Czech Republic Estonia Greece Italy Poland Portugal Spain Slovak RepublicEnabling Joint Edit Project name Abbr Coordinator Project members Project observerEuropean Medical Command EMC Germany Belgium Czech Republic Germany Spain France Italy Netherlands Hungary Luxembourg Poland Romania Slovakia SwedenNetwork of Logistic Hubs in Europe and support to operations NetLogHubs Germany Belgium Bulgaria Croatia Cyprus Germany Greece France Italy Netherlands Hungary Poland Lithuania Slovakia SloveniaMilitary Mobility MM Netherlands Austria Belgium Bulgaria Croatia Cyprus Czech Republic Estonia Finland Germany Greece France Italy Netherlands Luxembourg Latvia Hungary Poland Portugal Lithuania Romania Slovakia Slovenia Sweden SpainEnergy Operation Function EOF France Belgium Spain France ItalyChemical Biological Radiological and Nuclear Surveillance as a Service CBRN SaaS Austria Austria Croatia France Italy SloveniaCo Basing France Belgium Czech Republic Germany Spain France NetherlandsGeo Meteorological and Oceanographic Support Coordination Element GEOMETOC GMSCE Germany Austria Germany Greece France Portugal RomaniaTimely Warning and Interception with Space based Theater Surveillance TWISTER France Finland Germany Italy France Netherlands SpainMaterials and Components for Technological EU Competitiveness MAC EU France Germany Portugal France Romania SpainEU Collaborative Warfare Capabilities ECOWAR France Belgium France Hungary Poland Romania Spain SwedenEuropean Global RPAS Insertion Architecture System GLORIA Italy France Italy RomaniaLand Formations Systems Edit Project name Abbr Coordinator Project members Project observerDeployable Military Disaster Relief Capability Package DM DRCP Italy Greece Spain Croatia Austria ItalyArmoured Infantry Fighting Vehicle Amphibious Assault Vehicle Light Armoured Vehicle AIFV AAV LAV Italy Greece Slovakia ItalyIndirect Fire Support Capability EUROARTILLERY Slovakia Hungary Slovakia ItalyCrisis Response Operation Core EUFOR CROC Germany Cyprus France Germany Greece Italy SpainIntegrated Unmanned Ground System UGS Estonia Belgium Czech Republic Estonia France Finland Germany Hungary Latvia Netherlands Poland SpainEU Beyond Line of Sight Land Battlefield Missile Systems EU BLOS France Belgium Cyprus FranceMaritime Edit Project name Abbr Coordinator Project member Project observerMaritime Semi Autonomous Systems for Mine Countermeasures MAS MCM Belgium Belgium Greece Latvia Netherlands Poland Portugal RomaniaHarbour amp Maritime Surveillance and Protection HARMSPRO Italy Greece Italy Poland PortugalUpgrade of Maritime Surveillance UMS Greece Greece Croatia Cyprus Bulgaria France Italy Spain IrelandDeployable Modular Underwater Intervention Capability Package DIVEPACK Bulgaria Bulgaria Greece France RomaniaMaritime Unmanned Anti Submarine System MUSAS Portugal France Portugal Spain SwedenEuropean Patrol Corvette EPC Italy France Greece Spain ItalySpace Edit Project name Abbr Coordinator Project members Project observerEU Radio Navigation Solution EURAS France Belgium France Germany Spain Italy PolandEuropean Military Space Surveillance Awareness Network EU SSA N Italy France Greece Netherlands ItalyTraining Facilities Edit Project name Abbr Coordinator Project members Project observerEuropean Union Training Mission Competence Centre EU TMCC Germany Austria Czech Republic France Germany Spain Italy Ireland Netherlands Romania Sweden LuxembourgEuropean Training Certification Centre for European Armies ETCCEA Italy Greece ItalyHelicopter Hot and High Training H3 TRAINING Greece Greece Italy RomaniaJoint EU Intelligence School JEIS Greece Greece CyprusEU Test and Evaluation Centres EUTEC France Sweden France Sweden SlovakiaIntegrated European Joint Training and Simulation Centre EUROSIM Hungary France Germany Hungary Poland SloveniaEU Cyber Academia and Innovation Hub EU CAIH Portugal Portugal SpainSpecial Operations Forces Medical Training Centre SMTC Poland Hungary PolandCBRN Defence Training Range CBRNDTR Romania France Italy RomaniaEU Network of Diving Centres EUNDC Romania Bulgaria France RomaniaPotential Edit Further information Military of the European Union Intergovernmental cooperation Potential future PESCO projects include the following existing intergovernmental cooperations between member states militaries presently outside the CSDP framework citation needed Forces and command centres European Corps European Gendarmerie Force European Air Transport Command European Maritime Force Movement Coordination Centre EuropeBodies fostering integration European Air Group Finabel Organisation for Joint Armament Cooperation European Personnel Recovery CentreSee also Edit European Union portal War portalEnhanced cooperation European Intervention InitiativeOther initiatives of the Common Security and Defence Policy established after the introduction of the European Union Global Strategy Coordinated Annual Review on Defence CARD European Defence Fund EUGS European Union Global StrategyOther European defence organisations that are currently not part of the CSDP but could potentially become PESCO projects Movement Coordination Centre Europe European Air Group Finabel European Organisation of Military Associations Organisation for Joint Armament Cooperation European Personnel Recovery Centre European Air Transport CommandReferences Edit a b c Permanent Structured Cooperation PESCO Factsheet European External Action Service http www consilium europa eu media 32079 pesco overview of first collaborative of projects for press pdf bare URL PDF a b c d e Article 42 6 Article 43 1 Article 46 Protocol 10 of the amended Treaty on European Union PDF Council of the European Union 15 April 2008 a b c Time for the Sleeping Beauty to wake ECFR 15 NOV 17 a b Angela Merkel EU cannot completely rely on US and Britain any more theguardian 28 May 2017 Can France and Germany Make PESCO Work as a Process Toward EU Defense German Marshall Fund 6 October 2017 a b European military cooperation How to defend Europe Euractiv 29 November 2017 Romania to join EU s defence initiative PESCO seenews com EU defence ministers defence cooperation needs to be brought to a new level 7 September 2017 Archived from the original on 18 October 2017 Retrieved 17 December 2017 Czech government to join PESCO defence project Prague Monitor www praguemonitor com Archived from the original on 2017 10 12 Retrieved 2017 12 17 Permanent Structured Cooperation PESCO Council Decision preparation for the adoption Council of the European Union 2017 12 08 Retrieved 2017 12 12 COUNCIL DECISION establishing Permanent Structured Cooperation PESCO and determining the list of Participating Member States PDF Council of the European Union 2017 12 08 Retrieved 2018 02 18 Defence cooperation Council establishes Permanent Structured Cooperation PESCO with 25 member states participating Council of the European Union 11 December 2017 PESCO EU paves way to defense union Deutsche Welle 2017 11 13 Archived from the original on 2017 11 18 Retrieved 2017 11 16 Erlanger Steven 2017 11 13 E U Moves Closer to a Joint Military Force The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 2017 11 13 Retrieved 2017 11 13 Malta among three countries opting out of EU s new defence agreement Times of Malta 2017 12 11 Archived from the original on 2017 12 12 Retrieved 2017 12 12 Twenty five EU states sign PESCO defense pact Deutsche Welle 2017 12 11 Archived from the original on 2017 12 12 Retrieved 2017 12 12 V 66 Om et faelles EU forsvar Folketing 2022 04 08 Retrieved 2022 06 20 Denmark votes overwhelmingly to join EU s common defence policy The Guardian 1 June 2022 Danes vote yes to abolish EU defence opt out here are the next steps Ministry of Foreign Affairs Denmark 2022 06 02 Retrieved 2022 06 05 a b Malta to wait and see before deciding on PESCO defence pact Muscat says MaltaToday com mt EU states poised to agree joint defence pact Financial Times 7 November 2017 Foreign and security policy Mission of Norway to the EU Schiltz Christoph B 2021 02 28 Historische Entwicklung USA wollen sich aktiv an EU Verteidigungspolitik beteiligen DIE WELT Retrieved 2021 03 01 Dail votes to join European defence organisation RTE ie 7 December 2017 EU defence co operation is no threat to Irish neutrality The Irish Times Ukraine war sees Swiss challenge their age old neutrality BBC News 7 May 2022 Member countries NATO 12 June 2017 EU to sign joint defence pact in show of post Brexit unity Euractiv 9 November 2017 NATO Secretary General welcomes PESCO stresses need for complementarity NATO 14 November 2017 Zyla Benjamin 2020 The End of European Security Institutions The EU s Common Foreign and Security Policy and NATO After Brexit Berlin Germany Springer Nature pp 98ff ISBN 9783030421601 a b Naumescu Valentin 2019 The New European Union and Its Global Strategy From Brexit to PESCO Newcastle upon Tyne England Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 14ff ISBN 978 1 5275 4182 5 OCLC 1132792079 Importer Exporter TIV Tables sipri org Stockholm International Peace Research Institute 2020 Retrieved 2021 01 01 Braucht Europa eine Armee YouTube arte 2020 05 05 Retrieved 2021 01 01 U S ready to help EU speed up troop movement to meet Russia challenge Berlin Washington Reuters 2 March 2021 Archived from the original on 5 March 2021 Retrieved 2 May 2021 Rieker Pernille 2021 Differentiated Defence Integration Under French Leadership European Foreign Affairs Review 26 111 126 doi 10 54648 EERR2021029 S2CID 248273479 Kempin Ronja Stiftung Wissenschaft Und Politik 2021 Frankreichs Aussen und Sicherheitspolitik unter Prasident Macron Konsequenzen fur die deutsch franzosische Zusammenarbeit SWP Studie in German doi 10 18449 2021S04 Frankreich furchtete insbesondere dass die USA uber eine Beteiligung an PESCO und EVF Vorhaben die Entwicklung der GSVP beeinflussen wurden Permanent Structured Cooperation An Institutional Pathway for European Defence CSS Blog Network isnblog ethz ch Council Decision PESCO projects list PDF a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link pesco projects PDF a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link External links EditOfficial website Joint notification by member states to the High Representative and to the Council on PESCO 13 November 2017 Permanent Structured Cooperation what s in a name European Union Institute for Security Studies Description by the European Commission Factsheet Description by the European External Action Service ETH Zurich description Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Permanent Structured Cooperation amp oldid 1132975284, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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