I think you miss the point that many are making entirely. The strains caused by the seperation of the EU and NATO on an organisational level are increasing and far more critical now than many appreciate.
Yes I missed and am coninuing to miss that point entirely, since EU and NATO are irelevant to each other on an organisational level. You can argue that the growth of the european integration, who's mainbody is the EU, has transformed the relationship between the EU and the US from a west european "hat in the hand" position, to a much more independent European position. In which US involvement in europe are seen as mingeling much more than helpfull.
Most of the old EU always preferred to keep the organisation as a rich man's club and would have been happy to concentrate on deepening and integrating.
Factual wrong. ALL of the EU welcomed and readely posted huge amounts of money and opened our borders for the "poor" east. In fact here in Copenhagen we had a great party celebrating the unification of Europe. I think that what you are hinting at is the recurring discussion of a "one speed Europe" or "multiple speed europe". In priniciple all wants a one speed Europe, though certain countries are making that very difficult. So the most integration happy countries want a multiple speed europe, were they can integrate and the lurkewarm can stay behind, while the lurkwarm wants a one speed europe, where they are not left behind.
This was frustrated by the US/UK axis in the 90's which argued for widening rather than deepening as this would enable the EU to act as a stalking horse for NATO to be able to pick up and integrate the former WP nations (at cost mainly to the EU and not the US, who did very nicely by military sales aimed at "modernising" the ex WP's capabilities etc).
Lol, take estonia, NATO march 2004, EU may 2004. In short what a prospect member nation does the first is to get into NATO, then they can get into the EU. So it's kinda the oppositie.
US/UK allience in the EU??? I think the US has less to say in the EU than Tyrkey. NATO is a security arrangement, the EU is much more than that. Internally in the EU-sphere there is a discussion of whether the WEU should replace NATO, for the moment the side that wish to keep the US integrated in european security arrangement has the upper hand. Though stuff like the checz and polish wanting to be part of the american NMD has certainly annoyed the totallity of the EU.
Now with the US/UK influence in marked decline, the EU core is again looking at further deepening and this inevitably means reviving the EU defence force.
No, the EU millitary cooperation is a constant process of deeper integration. The question you are raising is to which degree the US is to be part of future european security arrangements. As I said, for the moment the side that wants to keep the US in, is stronger than the side that wants to keep the US out.
I
f as a part of the deepening process, the old core members felt it was right to ditch some accession members, I have no doubt that they would not hesitate, especially if they could cut security deals with the East.
I don't know what you mean by
accession members, If we are talking about members, then I think you are wrong,
I think that one important point you are missing, is that the EU is the world largest market, the world largest economy and has the largest share of the world market over any economy. That there are 400M+ Europeans. That the human development index is, together with north america, the highest in the world etc etc. To that you hold a cleptocracy with 120M inhabbitants that has a 3rd world petro-economy and the only world record is alcohol consumption per capita.