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Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

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Žaneta Ozoliņa University of Latvia. Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?. Issues to be addressed. What does pooling and sharing mean? Why now? What has been congratulated so far? Issues of concern. Is it a new concept?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Žaneta Ozoliņa University of Latvia
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Page 1: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

Žaneta OzoliņaUniversity of Latvia

Page 2: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

Issues to be addressed

What does pooling and sharing mean? Why now? What has been congratulated so far? Issues of concern

Page 3: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

Is it a new concept?

“there is need for burden sharing, adequate defense expenditures, and increased cooperation”

When was it stated?

- 1988

Page 4: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

What does P&S mean?

Sharing of capabilities: Member States provide national capabilities to common use without multinational overhead or integrated structure

Pooling of capabilities: National capabilities for common use with multinational overhead or integrated structure

Page 5: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

What does P&S mean?

Pooling through acquisition: national capabilities do not exist and are substituted in favour of multilateral capabilities, and the multilateral organization owns the assets

Role sharing:national capabilities are relinguished on the assumption that another country will make it available when necessary. Pooling of EU Member States Assets in the Implementation

of ESDP, 2008.

Page 6: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

Is there something new? Two substantial questions

Operational effectiveness - Does the common activity lead to the same or higher degree of operational effect

Economic efficiency - Does the common activity lead to an economically constant or even more efficient use of resources compared to a national approach?

Page 7: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

What is the position of Member States?

France – supportive and critical about EU nations that “slash military spending”

Britain hesitant and skeptical (EDA) Majority neutral – “wait and see” policy All critical about Mrs Ashton

Page 8: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

Why now?

Financial crisis In-put/out-put logic Increasing tasks/decreasing funds Transformation of defence forces Transformation of institutional arrangements

and their responsibilities Strengthening national capabilities

Page 9: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

One example of the impact of financial crisis

Page 10: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

Crisis – perspective is lost

Page 11: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

What has been congratulated so far?

Regional initiatives (NORDEFCO)

List of common projects

Audit of capabilities

Page 12: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

Top 10 priorities defined Counter Improvised Explosive Device (C-IED) Medical Support Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance Increased Availability of Helicopters Cyber Defence Multinational Logistic Suppor CSDP Information Exchange Strategic and Tactical Airlift Management Fuel and Energy Mobility Assurance

Page 13: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

Issues of concern

Diversity of views on CSDP – ranging from criticism that the Member States are not delivering the military capabilities they have promised, to concern about the creeping militarisation of EU crisis management.

The EU has never deployed the EU Battlegroups. Capability generation and force generation are still not linked up.

Page 14: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

Issues of concern

The success of the EDA is limited. Started with a broad mandate, but the

Member States imposed range of limitations.

The tiny operational budget - gives limited room for maneuver.

Page 15: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

Issues of concern

The EU is losing its strategic scope. Member States still answer the question “why European security?” in different ways.

EEAS does not help to answer this question. Cooperation with NATO is decisive. What is the added value? How strategic is EU CFSP and CSDP?

Page 16: Pooling and Sharing : Ideas Whose Time Have Come?

Instead of conclusions

Each Member State should consider three key questions:

- Can national objectives be achieved without a common EU defence capacity?

- How should growing interdependencies be addressed?

- What is the price to pay to preserve national sovereignty through national capabilities?

- How to ensure effective cooperation with NATO?


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