French President Nicolas Sarkozy has
asked Britain to provide an aircraft carrier and Germany to lend frigates and
supply ships to establish a European naval fleet, the news magazine Der Spiegel
reported Saturday.
Sarkozy, who takes over the European Union presidency on July 1, had briefed
German Chancellor Angela Merkel during a meeting Monday at Straubing, Germany about the fleet plan, the magazine said in its issue to hit the streets Monday.
Previous efforts to establish European Union defence units have mainly involved
land forces.
Carrier groups are the most potent forces on the seas, since they can bombard
distant land targets whereas a protected flagship is difficult or impossible to
destroy using planes or submarines.
The flagship would be a British aircraft carrier, because France's carrier, the Charles de Gaulle, must dock frequently for repairs. Budget limits
mean that Sarkozy cannot decide till 2012 on building a second French aircraft
carrier or more nuclear submarines, reported dpa.
Spiegel said he also briefed Merkel on cost-cutting plans to reduce the French
armed forces by about 35,000 to 220,000 men and to take the gendarmerie
paramilitary police off the defence budget and onto the interior budget.