Cooperation with NATO

The "European Union-NATO Declaration on the European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP)" and the "Berlin Plus" arrangements are the basic documents for the EU-NATO strategic partnership.

ACT

EU-NATO Declaration on European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP) . Brussels, 16 December 2002 [Not published in the Official Journal].

SUMMARY

The strategic partnership established between the European Union and NATO in crisis management is founded on shared values and on the indivisibility of the security dimension in the 21st century.

Whereas NATO remains the foundation of the collective defence of its members, the European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP) has added to the range of instruments already at the EU's disposal the capacity to conduct crisis-management operations independently.

NATO and the EU reaffirm their determination to strengthen their capabilities: for NATO, reserving a stronger role for Europe will take the form of increased vitality, specifically in the field of crisis management.

Common principles

The Declaration solemnly affirms the principles on which the strategic partnership between the two organisations is founded:

Objectives

Three objectives are identified:

Berlin Plus" arrangements

The "Berlin Plus" arrangements, concluded on 17 March 2003, lay the foundations for NATO-EU cooperation in the field of crisis management: they enable the Alliance to support EU-led operations in which NATO as a whole is not committed.

The main elements of these arrangements can be summarised as follows:

Background

NATO-EU cooperation dates back to the mid-1990s in the Western Balkans. A few years later, the NATO Summit (Washington, 1999) and the Nice European Council (2000) laid the foundations for cooperation between the two organisations. This strategic partnership between the EU and NATO was formalised on 16 December 2002 through the European Union-NATO Declaration on European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP).

Last updated: 21.05.2007