Close EU-NATO cooperation
It is clear that capability development in NATO and the EU necessitates close coordination. 22 Allies are also EU Member States and five other EU members are close NATO partners. They all have one set of forces and capabilities each to meet the requirements of both collective defence and crisis response.
EDA plays a key role in assisting nations to develop required capabilities, strengthening the CDP and acting as an interface between Member States and the Commission. When it comes to NATO-EU cooperation on capability development, EDA therefore is a key counterpart to NATO at staff level. EDA and NATO’s two International Staff divisions in charge of capability development, the Defence Policy and Planning Division and the Defence Investment Division, have a collegiate, constructive and mutually beneficial working relationship with regular coordination meetings at all levels. This has become part of a new era of interaction between the two organisations that led, inter alia, to the Joint Declarations signed by the Presidents of the European Council and the European Commission and the NATO Secretary General to promote cooperation in areas that are crucial for the security of both the EU and NATO, such as countering hybrid warfare, cyber defence, defence capabilities, enabling military mobility, capacity building of partners and others.
European Defence reinforces European pillar of transatlantic security
In light of the growing strategic challenges facing both North America and Europe, the European nations together must increase their contribution to transatlantic security and take their fair share in ensuring security for their own continent. This means increasing defence spending (up to at least 2% of GDP by 2024) by all Allies, as pledged by their political leaders, investing in high-end capabilities and enhancing contributions to operations and missions that serve Europe’s security. The imbalance between the commitments by the US and European nations must be adjusted. With this in mind, while Collective Defence remains NATO’s sole responsibility, strengthening European Defence enhances the EU’s contribution to Europe’s security and thus reinforces the European pillar of transatlantic security. Conversely, enhanced defence spending for improved forces and capabilities developed within NATO and usable for the whole mission spectrum also benefits European Defence.
Coherence and complementarition
In this context, EDA and NATO staffs have been working to ensure that the capability priorities identified in both organisations are broadly coherent and complementary. Capabilities developed within the EU are also available to NATO and vice versa, upon nations’ decisions. Also, the biennial NDPP review of Allies’ efforts to implement their NATO Capability Targets and CARD are complementing each other in terms of output coherence – with the first focusing on nations’ individual efforts and the second highlighting opportunities for multinational cooperation and promoting convergence of capability development. The two processes and timelines are being coordinated to spare the European nations duplicative reporting. It is also essential to ensure full transparency and fullest possible involvement of Non-EU Allies in CSDP capability development, since they provide substantial contributions to Europe’s security. This has become particularly relevant in the context of Brexit as the United Kingdom’s armed forces remain among Europe ́s most capable ones.