BERLIN (Reuters) - The European Union should move toward forming a
common army, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said in a newspaper
interview published on Friday.
Asked how she saw the EU developing in the next 50 years, Merkel told
daily newspaper Bild: "In the EU itself we must come closer to a common
European army."
Germany holds the EU's rotating presidency for the first half of this
year.
Last year, Polish President Lech Kaczynski said his country wanted a
new 100,000-strong European Union army created to work with NATO in
trouble spots in the world or to defend Europe.Reuters Pictures
Merkel is hosting a summit this weekend in Berlin where the bloc will
celebrate its 50th anniversary and unveil a declaration setting out its
values and achievements.
Merkel hopes the so-called "Berlin Declaration" will be a springboard
for her revival of the European constitution, rejected by French and
Dutch voters in 2005.
Merkel told Bild the EU's 27 member states often spent too long
grappling with issues under the bloc's existing structure.
"To change that, we need the EU constitution, which suits the decision
mechanism of the larger EU," she said.
Germany has vowed to present a "road map" for ... more »
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Saturday, March 24
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on Sat 24 Mar 2007 06:45 PM AKDT
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