It’d be interesting to see the full plan is, especially with regards to who has the final say on launches.
Obviously in the event that nukes are flying, the more people that need to vote on action the slower it will be, but I can’t imagine any country agreeing to not be represented in the decision making process.
DavidShaw90s on
“while ANO deputy leader Radek Vondráček has expressed preference for the US nuclear umbrella.”
Relying exclusively on the US nuclear umbrella in the current geopolitical climate is absolute strategic malpractice.
The idea that the entire European continent should continue to outsource its ultimate security guarantee to the unpredictable whims of a few thousand voters in American swing states is absurd. The US political system has made it abundantly clear that their foreign policy commitments can radically change every four years. Europe desperately needs its own independent insurance policy.
Macron is 100% correct to push this initiative, and it is actually refreshing to see a leader like Babiš agree with him. Since Brexit, France is the only nuclear power left in the EU. A unified European nuclear deterrent, built around the French arsenal, is the only way hostile states like Russia will ever treat the EU as a serious, independent superpower rather than just a vulnerable American proxy.
Also, the Czech Foreign Minister pointing out that “Czechia does not possess nuclear weapons” completely misses the point of a shared umbrella. Nobody is asking Prague to start enriching uranium. They are asking member states to financially and strategically integrate with the French deterrent so Europe finally has a unified, untouchable red line.
True European sovereignty does not exist without an independent European nuclear deterrent. Period.
VelvetPressure on
What worries me is democratic control: who actually holds the launch keys, and how parliaments are involved. At minimum they should publish a clear command structure, even if some parts stay classified.
sonicology on
Ukraine and Sweden both have civilian nuclear power programs, and deepening defence ties; they should work together to develop a joint nuclear deterrent.
Maybe seek cooperation with Poland and the UK, the latter of which should be looking to decouple US leverage from its nuclear deterrent.
I know what I said was unthinkable 5 years ago, but pragmatism demands that Europe has a multi-faceted nuclear deterrent, free from the risk of sabotage from a Russia-friendly government being elected in Washington (or Paris).
4 commenti
It’d be interesting to see the full plan is, especially with regards to who has the final say on launches.
Obviously in the event that nukes are flying, the more people that need to vote on action the slower it will be, but I can’t imagine any country agreeing to not be represented in the decision making process.
“while ANO deputy leader Radek Vondráček has expressed preference for the US nuclear umbrella.”
Relying exclusively on the US nuclear umbrella in the current geopolitical climate is absolute strategic malpractice.
The idea that the entire European continent should continue to outsource its ultimate security guarantee to the unpredictable whims of a few thousand voters in American swing states is absurd. The US political system has made it abundantly clear that their foreign policy commitments can radically change every four years. Europe desperately needs its own independent insurance policy.
Macron is 100% correct to push this initiative, and it is actually refreshing to see a leader like Babiš agree with him. Since Brexit, France is the only nuclear power left in the EU. A unified European nuclear deterrent, built around the French arsenal, is the only way hostile states like Russia will ever treat the EU as a serious, independent superpower rather than just a vulnerable American proxy.
Also, the Czech Foreign Minister pointing out that “Czechia does not possess nuclear weapons” completely misses the point of a shared umbrella. Nobody is asking Prague to start enriching uranium. They are asking member states to financially and strategically integrate with the French deterrent so Europe finally has a unified, untouchable red line.
True European sovereignty does not exist without an independent European nuclear deterrent. Period.
What worries me is democratic control: who actually holds the launch keys, and how parliaments are involved. At minimum they should publish a clear command structure, even if some parts stay classified.
Ukraine and Sweden both have civilian nuclear power programs, and deepening defence ties; they should work together to develop a joint nuclear deterrent.
Maybe seek cooperation with Poland and the UK, the latter of which should be looking to decouple US leverage from its nuclear deterrent.
I know what I said was unthinkable 5 years ago, but pragmatism demands that Europe has a multi-faceted nuclear deterrent, free from the risk of sabotage from a Russia-friendly government being elected in Washington (or Paris).