Baku-APA. France and Germany are reportedly planning to launch a joint military headquarters aimed at the eventual unification of all the European Union’s armies, APA reports quoting Press TV.
According to a report recently published by the German newspaperSueddeutsche Zeitung, French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian and his German counterpart, Ursula von der Leyen, have prepared a six-page document on the subject, which will probably be presented at an upcoming EU summit in Bratislava, RT reported on Saturday.
The document proposes the establishment of a “joint and permanent EU military headquarters” tasked with the overseas deployment of EU troops. It also outlines the establishment of EU logistics and medical commands and setting up a common satellite surveillance system.
The proposal also refers to the establishment of a “a tighter circle” within EU countries for certain military operations when achieving unanimous agreement from all members is not possible. A European officer school or at least forming a unified European military curriculum to boost “corporate spirit” is also proposed.
The document is also aimed at laying the ground work for “a relaunch of European defense,” said a French Defense Ministry source.
Its primary objective is making EU military policy “more active and more useful without substituting it for national defense bodies which remain, by definition, the key to the security of EU member states,” he added.