"I strongly believe it is absolutely possible to strengthen European defence without duplicating efforts by NATO," alliance chief Jens Stoltenberg said.
"EU leaders have (also) conveyed that this is not about the EU doing collective defence, the EU building structures that would compete with NATO," Stoltenberg said after EU foreign affairs head Federica Mogherini met NATO defence ministers in Brussels.
Mogherini has drawn up a Global Strategy which says the EU should seek "strategic autonomy" to face multiple security threats, ranging from conventional to hybrid warfare, from the Ukraine crisis to Syria, from poverty in Africa to massive migrant flows.
Mogherini today insisted this was not the case at all.
"Let me clarify that immediately -- I have to do that again and again -- first of all we are not planning a European army," she said as she arrived for the defence ministers meeting.
"We are not planning to have any headquarters, as for instance NATO has SHAPE," she said, referring to the alliance's military HQ.
At the same time, Mogherini said the EU does have civilian and military operations, such as in Africa or in the Mediterranean, and needs to improve command and control centres to run them.
Britain, a major power itself, has traditionally opposed any idea of a European army or EU military arm but after the shock Brexit vote, France and Germany said the bloc should be more ambitious.
Britain's defence minister Michael Fallon said yesterday there could be no question of the EU taking on NATO's collective defence mantle, and there was "very strong opposition to that kind of duplication" in the bloc.
German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen meanwhile said there was room -- and benefit -- for both in an increased EU defence effort.
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