Nice, France - If the United States and Russia cannot solve
the row over their respective plans to site missiles in Europe and
agree a new security treaty, Europe should do it for them.
That, at least, was the message French President Nicolas Sarkozy
gave on Friday in his capacity as current holder of the European
Union's rotating presidency.
'There should be no deployment in any enclave until we have
discussed the new geo-political terms for pan-European security ...
until then, please let's not talk about the deployment of missile
shields, which don't bring security and which complicate things,'
Sarkozy said in a double-barrelled blast at Russia and the US.
But analysts say that Europe will have no chance of defusing the
missile row or creating a new security system unless Washington wants
to - leaving the continent as dependent as ever on US power.
Sarkozy was talking at a summit with Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev in the French resort of Nice.
Much of the attention at the summit focused on US plans to site a
missile-defence system in Poland and the Czech Republic, and
Medvedev's threat to site missiles in Russia's Baltic exclave of
Kaliningrad in retaliation.
While US president-elect Barack Obama has already taken a softer
stance on the missile shield than incumbent President George W Bush,
saying that it should only be deployed if it would work, the missile
row remains one of the most sensitive issues in European security.
And Sarkozy and Medvedev ended their talks with a joint call for a
summit of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
(OSCE), whose 56 members include Russia, the US and EU states, in
mid-2009 to debate a new security treaty for Europe which would bring
a diplomatic end to the missile row.
'It would be in the interest of all to achieve this, in the
continent and beyond,' Sarkozy said.
It is the strongest endorsement by the EU's presidency to date of
a call Medvedev first made in June for a new security treaty to
outlaw the use of force in European politics.
But even before Friday's summit, analysts had decried Medvedev's
call as a thinly-veiled attempt to weaken NATO.
Details of his plan revealed in October include 'some newly
formulated pseudo-norms that obviously seek to stop NATO's
expansion,' Michael Emerson, head of security studies at the Centre
for European Policy Studies (CEPS), wrote ahead of Friday's talks.
That perception is critical, because observers also agree that, as
far as Russia and the US are concerned, the most important security
organization in Western Europe is not the EU, but NATO.
'For Russia, the main strategic actor was, is and will be
NATO,' Thomas Gomart, director of the Russia centre at the French
Institute for International Relations (IFRI) told Deutsche
Presse-Agentur dpa.
That means that no deal on security in Europe will have any
meaning unless NATO backs it - a move which would require the
approval of all alliance members, including the US, Poles and Czechs.
That, in turn, means that any US acceptance of the treaty, and any
concession on missile defence, would have to be matched by a
guarantee of the Central European states' security against all
comers, including Russia, to win their support for the deal.
'Will it work if the US agrees not to put missiles in the Czech
Republic and Poland if the Poles and Czechs then ask who will
guarantee their security? We have to think how to guarantee (their)
security,' Hans-Henning Schroeder, head of Russia studies at the SWP
German institute for international politics and security, told dpa.
And given that no European state has both the will and the
military ability to confront Russia in the Central Europeans'
defence, that means that the only country which could both end the
missile row and convince the Central Europeans to approve a new
security structure would be the US.
Despite its rhetoric, Russia has recognized that 'without the US,
there is no security in Europe,' Schroeder said.
Sarkozy might be well advised to draw the same conclusion.
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