EU leaders announce intention to collectively
rearm in face of Putin threat
Versailles declaration says Russia’s war in Ukraine
has heralded ‘tectonic shift in European history’
Daniel
Boffey in Brussels
Fri 11 Mar
2022 18.20 GMT
EU leaders
have announced their intention to collectively rearm and become autonomous in
food, energy and military hardware in a Versailles declaration that described
Russia’s war as “a tectonic shift in European history”.
At a summit
in the former royal palace, the 27 heads of state and government said on Friday
that the invasion of Ukraine had shown the urgent need for the EU to take
responsibility for its own security and to rid itself of dependencies on
others.
Speaking at
a press conference in the palace’s Galerie des Batailles, in which France’s
military achievements are celebrated in painting and sculpture, France’s
Emmanuel Macron said the Versailles treaty of 1919 had divided Europe but that
today leaders were uniting. He described Russia’s aggression as a “tragic
turning point”.
“We can see
how our food, our energy, our defence are all issues of sovereignty,” he said.
“We want to be open to the world but we want to choose our partners and not
depend on anybody.”
He added:
“The Versailles declaration is linked to the fact that sovereignty in Europe,
which might have been thought of by some as a slogan or a French fantasy, is
seen by all today as crucial.”
Macron
defended the decision not to offer fast-track EU membership for Ukraine, which
was criticised overnight by the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy. “The
answer is no,” Macron said of the request from the war-stricken country, but he
added that the EU was mobilising all its economic power to help the Ukrainian
government and that the “European path” was open.
Lithuania’s
president, Gitanas Nausėda, said there was a “flavour of disappointment” to the
decision for a number of EU member states but that the bloc would return to the
issue.
The
Versailles declaration was said to be the “initiation” of European defence by
Charles Michel, the European Council president.
The leaders
agreed to “invest more and better in defence capabilities and innovative
technologies” by substantially increasing defence expenditures and through
tighter cooperation and coordination of their armed forces and procurement.
While EU member states spend more than three times the Russian defence budget,
there are limited tie-ups and multiple overlaps in capabilities.
The
European Commission has been given a new role to find weaknesses in Europe’s
defences and to advise on investment.
Macron said
Olaf Scholz’s decision to set aside €100bn (£84bn) for defence and Denmark’s
decision to put its opt-out on EU security mechanisms to a referendum showed
the seriousness of the moment. The EU is also doubling its funding of military
equipment destined for Ukraine to €1bn.
“About 10
days ago, Germany decided to make historical investments and Denmark made a
historic choice deciding to ask the people if they want to come back to the
European defence and security project,” Macron said. “Everywhere you look
historic choices are being made.”
A deadline
of 2027 has been set for freeing the EU from dependency on Russian gas, oil and
coal. In 2021, the EU imported 155bn cubic metres of natural gas from Russia,
accounting for about 45% of its gas imports and close to 40% of the bloc’s
total gas consumption.
Ursula von
der Leyen, the European Commission president, said the commission would produce
proposals by mid-May on how to achieve the target. In order to prepare for next
winter, plans will also be made to coordinate European countries’ fragmented
network of gas stocks. Von der Leyen said in future underground stocks would
have to be filled to at least 90% by the start of October each year.
Macron and
Scholz are due to speak to Vladimir Putin in what the French president said
would be a “demanding dialogue”, with the EU threatening tougher economic
sanctions should Russia’s president make a move against Kyiv, the Ukrainian
capital.
Shortly
after leaders left Versailles, a new round of measures was announced by the G7,
with Von der Leyen citing the failure to respect agreements over humanitarian
corridors as being a motivating factor.
Russia is
being denied most-favoured-nation status for its markets under World Trade
Organization rules, which will mean tariffs being imposed on its goods, and
Moscow risks having its representatives thrown out of the International Monetary
Fund and the World Bank.
After some
resistance from Italy, the EU is also banning exports of any luxury goods to
Russia, “as a direct blow to the Russian elite”, Von der Leyen said.
“Those who
sustain Putin’s war machine should no longer be able to enjoy their lavish
lifestyle while bombs fall on innocent people in Ukraine,” she added.
The EU will
no longer import iron and steel goods from the Russian Federation and there
will be a ban on European investments across Russia’s energy sector.
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