HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
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http://asia.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/10/16/europe.straw/index.html


[Note how seamlessly the fifth paragraph - that which,
completely incongruously, is inserted in alleged
relation to Sunday's events in Bali, and which has
already been exploited to sway British public opinion
on the issue of unprovoked war against Iraq, which of
course has no conceivable connection with the event in
question - has been insinuated.
NATO uber Alles.]
  

CNN News    
Straw: Europe must up defence cash
Wednesday, October 16, 2002 
  
[Source: NATO]

CHICAGO, Illinois -- British Foreign Secretary Jack
Straw has urged European governments to raise their
defence spending in light of the new threats facing
Western nations and in order to keep pace with the
United States within NATO. 
In a speech in Chicago, Straw said European nations
needed to act now to reverse a decade-long
underfunding of the military if they were to tackle
the three scourges of international security: global
terrorism, weapons of mass destruction and state
failure. 
He said that if the U.S. continued to shoulder such a
disproportionate military burden within the alliance
it would prove a "recipe for resentment." 
Straw acknowledged that Europe did tend to exert
influence using "civilian power" -- through trade, aid
and peacekeeping -- but said this did not compensate
for its "increasingly adequate response" to current
international threats. 
Nine Britons have been confirmed dead in the bombing
on the Indonesian island of Bali on Sunday and the
British death toll is expected to be about 30. 
It was now essential that the European members of the
alliance used next month's NATO summit in Prague to
deliver on their commitment to strengthen their
military capabilities, the British minister said. 
NATO sources told CNN the issue was a critical one and
the speech, coming from a leading member nation of the
alliance, was being viewed as important and "helpful."

New threats and the need to increase military
capabilities are high on the agenda for the
forthcoming Prague talks. 
Straw said the post-Cold War threats of rogue states
and international terrorist organisations underlined
the need for a "vigorous" North Atlantic alliance at
the centre of West's security response. 
However, during the 1990s, defence spending in most
European countries -- apart from Britain and France
had dropped below 2 percent of national income
compared to around 3 percent in the United States. 
"A relationship where one side of the alliance
disproportionately shoulders the military burden is a
recipe for resentment," he said. 
NATO deputy spokesman Mark Laity told CNN the
organisation's secretary-general George Robertson had
repeatedly emphasised the need for NATO to improve its
capability and ensure Europe did not slip further
behind the United States. 
"Our efforts to improve our capabilities and adapt to
the new strategic enviroment is an overriding theme at
the moment. 
"So Mr Straw is talking about an issue which NATO as a
whole recognises we need to address and we are doing
so." 
Straw said that Europe had to understand that the
disparity between effective military contributions to
the alliance was something "it should not view with
equanimity." 
"However effective Europe becomes as a regional or
global actor, we cannot expect to make a real
difference without regular, close and systematic
co-operation with the U.S. in NATO, higher and more
focused defence spending and greater efficiency in
Europe's armed forces. 
"Europe could and should not aim to match American
spending. But it is essential for the future of the
alliance that European forces get the investment they
need to allow them to work effectively with their
American counterparts." 
Straw, who earlier on Tuesday held talks in Washington
with U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, again
emphasised the need to pursue to the war against
international terrorism with "relentless
determination" following the Bali bomb attack.  
At the same time he strongly backed U.S. demands for
Iraq to comply with the demands of the international
community to give up its weapons of mass destruction
or face military action. 
"The Iraqi regime should be left under no illusion of
the consequences of non-compliance or the depth of our
resolve." 
Support in Britain for military action against Iraq
has risen sharply since the Bali bomb attack,
according to an opinion poll published on Wednesday. 
An ICM survey for The Guardian today found that 42
percent backed action against Saddam Hussein -- a
10-point jump since last week -- with 37 percent
against. 
Only 35 percent thought that Osama bin Laden's al
Qaeda network rather than Iraq should have been the
focus of international attention. 
ICM interviewed a random sample of 1,008 British
adults by telephone on Monday. 
 


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