European Intervention Initiative

The European Intervention Initiative (EI2) is a joint military project between 14 European countries outside of existing structures, such as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the European Union's (EU) defence arm. EI2 is planned to operate a "light" permanent secretariat based on the network of military liaison officers with the French defence ministry.[1]

European Intervention Initiative
AbbreviationEI2
Formation2018
HeadquartersParis
Membership
14 armed forces

Background

The Initiative was first proposed by French President Emmanuel Macron in his Sorbonne keynote in September 2017. 9 members signed a Letter of Intent to begin work on 25 June 2018.[2] Finland joined the military project on the 7th of November 2018.[3]

Aims

The ultimate aim of the EI2 is a shared strategic culture that would enhance the ability of its members to act together on missions as part of NATO, the EU, UN or other ad-hoc coalitions. The project is intended to be resource neutral and makes use of existing assets and other joint forces available to members. EI2 seeks for enhanced interaction on intelligence sharing, scenario planning, support operations and doctrine.[1]

Participants

The participating countries is built around 13 current EU members plus Norway;[1]

The UK, which is leaving the EU, was keen to join in order to “maintain cooperation with Europe beyond bilateral ties.”[8] Italy initially was supportive but declined to sign the Letter of Intent with the other 9 members in July 2018; however, it signed the treaty[2] on 19 September 2019 following a change in the Government coalition.

There are no specific criteria to a state participating in EI2, but it is built around:[9]

  • Compatibility with the EU and NATO
  • Common vision regarding security concerns
  • Ability to deploy liaison officers
  • Long term efforts in defence
  • Commitment to European security operations
  • Ability to deploy effective capabilities.

Relationship with PESCO

EI2 seeks some synergies with the Permanent Structured Cooperation (PESCO) that has newly been established within the European Union's (EU) Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP), and PESCO projects are intended to be integrated into the EI2 where feasible.[1] France's concern is that developing the EI2 within PESCO would result in lengthy decision times or watered down ambition. This led to some tensions regarding the project between France and Germany, with the latter concerned that it would harm the EU's political cohesion. Including the EI2 within PESCO is also seen as problematic as it prevents the participation of the UK and Denmark.[2][10][11]

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gollark: What do you mean you "perceive" time as discrete? You mean you *arbitrarily think so*, or what?
gollark: Quite a lot.
gollark: > The Planck time is the unique combination of the gravitational constant G, the special-relativistic constant c, and the quantum constant ħ, to produce a constant with dimension of time. Because the Planck time comes from dimensional analysis, which ignores constant factors, there is no reason to believe that exactly one unit of Planck time has any special physical significance. Rather, the Planck time represents a rough time scale at which quantum gravitational effects are likely to become important. This essentially means that while smaller units of time can exist, they are so small their effect on our existence is negligible. The nature of those effects, and the exact time scale at which they would occur, would need to be derived from an actual theory of quantum gravity.
gollark: Oh, no, never mind, that's not it.

See also

References

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