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EU, Britain will need strong defence cooperation: Barnier
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Sept 7, 2016


Georgia moving closer to NATO membership: Stoltenberg
Tbilisi (AFP) Sept 7, 2016 - NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg on Wednesday said ex-Soviet Georgia has moved closer to membership, in a show of support for the tiny Caucasus nation despite fierce opposition from Russia.

"You are continuing to strengthen your democracy and civic institutions and this has helped Georgia to move closer to NATO," Stoltenberg told a news conference after talks with Georgia's Prime Minister Giorgi Kvirikashvili in Tbilisi.

"You are not walking alone on your reform path. Georgia has all the necessary tools to move towards NATO membership," he added.

"We will continue to count on Georgia and we will continue to support you."

During his two-day visit Stoltenberg will chair meetings of the North Atlantic Council -- the alliance's main decision-making body -- and the NATO-Georgia Commission.

The latter body supervises the process set in motion at NATO's 2008 summit in Bucharest, where the Allies agreed that Georgia will become a NATO member.

NATO has insisted that the Bucharest decision on Georgia's eventual membership still stands, but -- wary of alienating an increasingly assertive Russia -- has so far refused to put the country on a formal membership path.

Georgia and Russia have long been at loggerheads over Tbilisi's bid to join NATO and the European Union and the spiralling confrontation culminated in a brief war in 2008 over Georgia's breakaway provinces, South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

After the war that saw Russian troops rout Georgia's small military, Moscow recognised the separatist enclaves as independent states and stationed thousands of troops there.

The EU and Britain will need strong defence and security cooperation after London pulls out of the bloc, according to Michel Barnier, the French politician tasked with leading the Brexit negotiations.

"One thing I am sure of is, as far as defence and security matters are concerned, we must and we will need to build strong and biltateral cooperation," Barnier said Wednesday during a conference on the European Union's post-Brexit security policies.

Barnier, named in July as the European Commission's chief Brexit negotiator, said he understood the British government and its political opposition "are in the same spirit, to keep the link".

Barnier said he could not begin to describe future EU-British relations as he was still pulling his team together and meeting officials from the various governments.

He takes up his position on October 1 but the Brexit talks can only begin once Britain invokes Article 50 of the Lisbon treaty, which sets the clock ticking on two-years of divorce talks. That is not expected to begin until next year.

Britain's June 23 vote to quit the 28-nation European Union shocked EU leaders who had bet on a vote to remain.

Barnier, 65, held the key European Commission financial services portfolio from 2010 to 2014, spearheading efforts to tame the eurozone debt crisis which nearly brought down the single currency project.

He was central to efforts to save the EU's stricken banks, laying down tough rules to police a new banking union system which often put him at loggerheads with the City of London, one of the world's top financial markets.

Barnier was also closely linked to curbing banker bonuses, which were widely blamed for encouraging the risk-taking culture that ultimately left the banks over-stretched and in need of massive government bailouts costing billions.

Barnier told BFM TV in France shortly after the Brexit vote that the outcome was a loss for all but stressed the common interests, "especially in everything that touches upon our collective security".

Barnier has served as an adviser to Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker on security issues as the EU reels from a series of deadly attacks claimed by Islamic State jihadis.


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