At least 129 people were killed in Friday's gun and suicide attacks in the French capital, and Belgian intelligence services have come under growing scrutiny following revelations that several of the attackers lived in Belgium.
"We have to be able to trace these links wherever they are, whether it's in France or Belgium or elsewhere in Europe," Reynders said yesterday.
"Because we have to be able to look at where the perpetrators of these attacks in Paris came from and how to dismantle the existing networks."
Reynders said he had been calling for more intelligence sharing in the EU and NATO "for several years".
"I hope that after all these attacks, these dramas, there will be a change of mentality," he said.
"Whether it's the control of our external borders, or the exchange of information including sensitive information between countries, this must be done more and more in Europe."
An emergency meeting of EU interior ministers this Friday, which was called at France's request, would be a good opportunity to make progress, he added.
Defending Belgium's record, he said it was "impossible to live in a zero-risk situation when you see what is happening around the world."
He said intelligence sharing would help shore up Europe's passport-free Schengen area and push forward slow-moving plans to share 160,000 refugees around Europe.
"We can work on the relocation of refugees around Europe, but we would have to above all check who is coming, and could they pose a danger or not," he said.
A major police operation in the Molenbeek district of Brussels, a known militant hotbed, ended without finding wanted suspect Salah Abdeslam, who was born in Brussels.
Abdeslam's brother Brahim, who lived in Molenbeek, was one of the Paris attackers and blew himself up outside a cafe on Boulevard Voltaire.
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