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Military of the European Union

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The European Union does not have its own military forces. As many EU member states are also NATO members, some EU member states cooperate on defence issues albeit principally through NATO rather than through any EU aligned organisaton (such as the Western European Union). However, the memberships of the EU, WEU and the NATO European countries are not the same. Indeed, some EU member states are constitutionally committed to remain neutral on defence issues. This article uses the word military in its U.S. English sense, i.e., of armed forces.

One of the issues that the European Constitution, which currently possesses an uncertain future, was going to address would have closed down the WEU as a separate organisation and have the EU institutions take on the WEU's defence role. The EU currently has a limited mandate over defence issues, with a role to explore the issue of European defence agreed to in the Amsterdam Treaty, as well as oversight of the European Rapid Reaction Force. However, some EU states may and do make multilateral agreements about defence issues outside of the EU structures.

In 2004 EU countries took over leadership of the mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina from NATO - see EUFOR - which was given the branding of an EU initiative as the EU sponsored the force to further the force's image of legitimacy.

See also the European Security and Defence Policy.

Contents

[edit] Military of member states

The individual member states of the EU have separate armed forces:

[edit] Acceding Countries

[edit] European military forces and groups

[edit] European Union

[edit] Trivia

  • If all member state's annual spending was taken as a bloc the figure would amount to over $220 billion, second only to the US military's $518 billion.

[edit] See also

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