is more than likely that progress on all of these issues will be uneven, punctuated by pauses,
and eventually
pushed forward only by complex compromises.
Nonetheless, it is reasonable to assume that the Economic and Monetary Union will come into being by the
year 2000, perhaps initially among six to ten of the EU's current fifteen members. This will accelerate Europe's
economic integration beyond the monetary dimension, further encouraging its political integration. Thus, by fits
and starts and with an inner more integrated core as well as a looser outer layer, a single Europe will
increasingly become an important political player on the Eurasian chessboard.
In any case, America should not convey the impression that it prefers a vaguer, even if broader,
European
association, but it should reiterate, through words and deeds, its willingness to deal eventually with the EU as
America's global political and security partner and not just as a regional common market made up of states
allied with the United States through NATO. To make that commitment more credible and thus go beyond the
rhetoric of partnership, joint planning with the EU regarding new bilateral transatlantic decision-making
mechanisms could be proposed and initiated.
The same principle applies to NATO as such. Its preservation is vital to the transatlantic connection. On this
issue, there is overwhelming American-European consensus. Without NATO, Europe not only would become
vulnerable but almost immediately would become politically fragmented as well. NATO ensures European
security and provides a stable framework for the pursuit of European unity.
That is what makes NATO
historically so vital to Europe.
However, as Europe gradually and hesitantly unifies, the internal structure and processes of NATO will have
to adjust. On this issue, the*French have a point. One cannot someday have a truly united Europe and yet have
an alliance that remains integrated on the basis of one superpower plus fifteen dependent powers. Once Europe
begins to assume a genuine political identity of its own, with the EU increasingly taking on some of the
functions of a supranational government, NATO will have to be altered on the basis of a 1 + 1 (US + EU)
formula.
This will not happen overnight and all at once. Progress in that direction, to repeat, will be hesitant. But such
progress will have to be reflected In the existing alliance arrangements, lest the absence of such adjustment
itself should become an obstacle to further progress. A significant step in that direction was the 1996 decision
of the alliance to make room for the Combined Joint Task Forces, thereby envisaging the possibility of some
purely European military initiatives based on the alliance's logistics
as well as on command, control,
communications, and intelligence. Greater U.S. willingness to accommodate French demands for an increased
role for the Western European Union within NATO, especially in regard to command and decision making,
would also betoken more genuine American support for European unity and should help to narrow somewhat
the gap between America and France regarding Europe's eventual self-definition.
In the longer run, it is possible that the WEU will embrace some EU member states that, for varying
geopolitical
or historical reasons, may choose not to seek NATO membership. That could involve Finland or
Sweden, or perhaps even Austria, all of which have already acquired observer status with the WEU.5 Other
states may also seek a WEU connection as a preliminary to eventual NATO membership. The WEU might also
choose at some point to emulate NATO's Partnership for Peace program with regard to would-be members of
the EU. AH of that would help to spin a wider web of security cooperation in Europe, beyond the formal scope
of the transatlantic alliance.
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