STOP NATO: ¡NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK

Irish Times
Thursday, May 31, 2001  

Rather than seeing this commercial cooperation as
necessary for European military structures, it is at
least as plausible to see commercial interests as
helping to drive public defense policy....The massive
military "upgrading" being carried out by new NATO
members, and nations preparing for RRF [Rapid Reaction
Force]participation, represents a bonanza for
armaments companies....AFRI believes that a more
progressive agenda based around the real security
needs of ordinary people - rather than those of arms
dealers and oil companies - would be advanced by the
rejection of the Nice Treaty here.



Treaty is about Militarism, not enlargement 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The case for voting against the Nice Treaty is argued
by Andy Storey, chairman of AFRI, the development
organisation 
There are very serious questions to be asked about the
claimed linkage between the Nice Treaty and EU
enlargement. As the chairman of the independent
referendum commission, Mr Justice Thomas Finlay, has
stated, the legislation for the referendum "makes no
reference to the enlargement of the EU". 

The objective information booklet produced by the
Referendum Commission does not mention enlargement,
emphasising instead that the treaty is concerned with
changes in EU decision-making procedures and with the
assumption of EU responsibility for military affairs. 

Despite this, many proponents of the treaty claim that
rejection of it in Ireland will slow the pace of EU
enlargement. Even if that were true, it would need to
be placed in the context of serious brakes already
being placed on the enlargement process by other
countries. 

The Spanish government is threatening to block
enlargement unless Spain is guaranteed continued
access to EU structural funds, a demand also being
taken up by the new Italian government. 

The French government is throwing up barriers to
Polish accession as a bargaining chip to protect the
high level of EU subsidies to French farmers. The
German and Austrian governments are insisting they
will accept new EU members only if workers from those
candidate countries are denied free access to the EU
jobs market for a prolonged period.

All of this stalling and footdragging will go on
whether Ireland accepts the treaty or not. The
argument that Ireland could single-handedly sabotage
EU enlargement by its rejection ignores the extent to
which many other EU states are already blocking
enlargement to protect their own economic interests. 

One such economic interest is, for many governments,
the arms industry. The Nice Treaty states: "The
progressive framing of a common defence policy will be
supported, as member-states consider appropriate, by
co-operation between them in the field of armaments".
Such co-operation is already apparent. 

The Financial Times recently reported that the French
government is opening up its weapons procurement
policy to other EU countries, to ensure that French
companies are viewed more favourably in their bids for
contracts from EU states. 

The French Defence Minister has framed these
initiatives against the background of the emergence of
the new EU Rapid Reaction Force (RRF), and EU-wide
procurement ventures such as the development of the
A400M military transport aircraft. 

Rather than seeing this commercial cooperation as
necessary for European military structures, it is at
least as plausible to see commercial interests as
helping to drive public defence policy.

The massive military "upgrading" being carried out by
new NATO members, and by countries preparing for RRF
participation, represents a bonanza for armaments
companies. The Irish Government, in preparation for
RRF participation, has already purchased 40 armoured
personnel carriers for £1 million each, and a further
40 are likely to be purchased, along with 80 "light
tactical" vehicles and some helicopters

Such investment diverts funds from other areas, such
as our cash-starved health services. Given that the
formal assumption of EU responsibility for military
matters is part of the Nice Treaty, such allocation of
resources is a matter of legitimate public debate.

Broader commercial considerations will also help drive
EU security policy in the coming years, for example
access to areas around the Caspian Sea, with their
rich oil and gas resources.

According to the New York Times: "The strategic
implications (of the Caspian area) hypnotise Western
security planners as completely as the finances
transfix oil executives".

There is no need for an elaborate conspiracy theory
here. EU policy is not entirely driven by these
considerations, but nor are they entirely absent from
the political calculations now being made. State
élites act on the basis of perceived self-interest, as
noted above, in relation to governments' concerns
about EU enlargement, and it is to be expected that
self-interest (and the interests of corporate
supporters) will help determine military and security
policies also. 

It is this economic self-interest that, at least in
part, underpins the militarisation of the EU confirmed
in the Nice Treaty. But this agenda does not
correspond to the interests of most Irish people, or
to the interests of many people in the applicant
countries or further afield. 

Genuine security would be better promoted by the
satisfaction of basic needs - such as food, shelter
and environmental protection - than by aggressive
militarism. AFRI believes that a more progressive
agenda based around the real security needs of
ordinary people - rather than those of arms dealers
and oil companies - would be advanced by rejection of
the Nice Treaty here. 

Andy Storey is chairman of Action from Ireland (AFRI),
an Irish organisation which lobbies on justice issues.




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