EU battle group reform
June 1, 2013Since 2007, the European Union has two battle groups with 1,500 soldiers each at the ready. The member states take turns sending soldiers on a half-year rotation. Usually made up of multinational troops, the battle groups are intended to be the EU's quick intervention team and able to prepare the ground for long-term missions. But the battle groups have never been deployed.
It's certainly not for a lack of conflict involving European interests, be them in Europe itself or in wider region. The battle groups aren't being deployed because there isn't political will to send the troops abroad, according to Michael Gahler, the German representative of the Christian Democratic Union in the European Parliament and security spokesperson of the EVP parliamentary group.
Gahler said he is worried that if this continues, the question of whether to keep the groups will eventually come up.
"At some point you have to wonder whether another way to do this isn't better," he told DW. The troops should be deployed, "or at some point, no one will believe in this option anymore."
Broader scope instead of abolishment?
But so far, no one really wants to abolish the battle groups as they represent Europeans' ambitions to have their own crisis forces and thus a way to stand up to the Americans, who tend to take the lead in the NATO alliance.
There's also a Europe-wide consensus, however, that the status quo cannot be maintained. In April, German Defense Minister Thomas de Maiziere suggested not only using the troops for military missions, but also for "fast training missions" or on UN assignments to "observe, advice and assist."
Gen. Patrick de Rousiers, head of the EU's military committee, was in favor of the plan. De Maizere's suggestion "worked as a catalyst for the discussion on how far the general chiefs of staff were willing to go in this direction," the general said.
At a May military committee meeting, there was a clear willingness "to advance in order to increase the European Union's ability to respond to crises," according to the French general. He didn't go into any more detail, but de Rousiers said he was thankful that de Maiziere was considering complementing, not abolishing, the battle groups.
Mali crisis a trial
The German defense minister had also presented his plan in the context of the recent conflict in Mali and said, "Now we see that there are many situations in which the EU is required to act quickly in another way."
But Mali could also have been a case for the battle groups. Instead, France took the military initiative. EU politician Gahler was one of the very few who supported a battle group mission to Mali. Not a military one at the front, but a mission "in the hinterland, where the Malian authorities were slowly rebuilding their administration. We could have fit it in with securing their sovereignty and the administrative structures." But again, "the political will just wasn't there," he added.
One problem, especially with extremely short-notice combat missions, is that many of the nations supplying the troops need a parliamentary approval for such assignments. But until such an approval can be given, the right moment for military intervention may very well have passed. Short-notice training missions, like those proposed by de Maizière, probably would not require such parliamentary approval.
More European involvement in own backyard
Battle group critics have repeatedly said the groups cover ground already addressed by NATO, especially for the NATO Response Force (NRF), and thus represent an expensive double-structure. Gahler, however, said he does not believe that a NATO divide is a possible result. He said the US is looking for a stronger European military contribution, at least for conflicts in and around Europe: "Whenever they tell us, 'Take care of your backyard,' the Americans are right."
But it seems that Europe is not yet clear on what this contribution should look like, and what role the battle groups could play. Gen. de Rousiers recently spoke about different views, mainly on the "robustness of missions." The classic combat troops aren't on the chopping block, but additional troops "that are more open and comprehensive and could maybe be used in less conflict-ridden areas" should be added, European heads of states will probably decide on the future concept for the battle groups during a summit in December.