European Centre for Counterterrorism and Intelligence Studies, Germany & Netherlands – ECCI
EU prepares mutual defence clause trigger
Euractiv ـ NATO’s Article 5 has instant brand recognition while Article 42.7 remains a Lisbon Treaty obscurity – a state of affairs the EU aims to change
In an era when Donald Trump constantly questions NATO’s future, the EU’s diplomatic service is drawing up a manual to help countries know when and how they can trigger the bloc’s own mutual assistance clause.
Several diplomats and officials told Euractiv of plans by the European External Action Service to draw up a guide detailing what kind of resources are available from the EU if the A42.7 mechanism is triggered when a country is threatened.
Delegations are set to carry out a bureaucratic simulation to inform a future document on the triggering of the clause, as early as May this year, Euractiv has been told.
Two sources close to the file, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that they expected a sort of manual, outlining what resources capitals could pull for three different scenarios: one triggering NATO’s mutual defence clause, one triggering the EU’s 42.7, and one that would apply to both.
A third source, who also spoke under condition of anonymity, said that planning is ongoing for an ambassadors’ discussion.
Talks over the EU’s mutual assistance clause have resurfaced since Iranian drones targeted Cyprus, prompting questions among diplomats on how countries can actually use the instrument.
The EEAS is now looking to move into the implementation phase, according to three EU diplomats, though the timeline remains unclear.
To inform the final document, countries could perform some simulations where they would be asked to react to several scenarios and say whether they think article 42.7 applies, three of the sources quoted in this report said.
Article 42.7 requires EU countries to come to the a member states in need. But there is still much ambiguity over what that means.
Nikos Christodoulides, Cyprus’s President, said two weeks ago that it wanted to put the operationalisation of Article 42.7 on the agenda of the next meeting of EU leaders to held later this month.
Cyprus, one of the four EU countries that is not a NATO member, was struck by Iranian drones but did not make use of the mechanism then. Instead, some European countries bilaterally sent military assets to protect the Mediterranean country.
Christodoulides also said the mechanism has been effectively stress-tested, giving the clause “flesh and bones”.
This comes as Trump has repeatedly called into question the relevance of NATO’s Article 5, including this week after Spain closed its air space to aircrafts involved in the US and Israeli’s strikes against Iran.
So far, only one country has triggered the EU’s mutual assistance clause since it was first adopted. France in 2015 triggered the mechanism after terrorist attacks in Paris to call back some of its military deployed in missions abroad.
At that time, EU countries offered mainly logistical support, with Belgium and Germany sharing intelligence, police support and counter‑terrorism experts.
The EEAS is also drafting the bloc’s new Security Strategy comprising a threat assessment, a joint communication conceptualising the EU’s security policy, and a roadmap for implementation. It is not clear whether this strategy will also encompass references to the EU’s mutual action clause.
European Centre for Counterterrorism and Intelligence Studies, Germany & Netherlands – ECCI
