International Coorporation
Concerning the discussion of international coorperation in aquisition of weapons.
Since it's given that it's mostly the US that's driving the evolution of weaponsystems, We have to realise that this evolution of weapons naturally takes place accordingly to the cababilities and possibilities of a $10 trillion economy. It's almost given that this evolution of arms doesn't favour a $1 trillion economy.
The situation is comparable to the evolution/introduction of siege cannons in medival europe. Before the siege cannons thieves, robbers and warlords (also known as "the nobillity") could sit in their high castles and do as they pleased. It was nearly impossible for the central power to reign them in. After the cannon, a - at the time - very high tech and enourmously costly weapon system, those castles lost their millitary function, and the new castles/fortresses needed to defend against cannons, were so large and expensive to build that only a central power could do it. Partly in that way the nobillity lost their position and the socity changed.
So countries like f.ex. the large european countries can might aswell just realise that they can't keep up with the US on their own. Germany can't build the full suite of GPS, NMD, Carriers, Fighters etc etc it is too demanding for the smaller economy.
The european countries can first of all choose between two things; Either they give up and do like the nobillity of old OR they coorporate. If they choose coorporation there are two options: A transatlantic or a European coorporation.
While many things can be said about the nature of those two models of coorporation,
I think that there is one objective truth: If you coorporate with the US you don't have a political leverage on the US. That's natural, it's not because americans are bad people - they just don't need you, when it comes down to it.
In the European coorperation it's very different and the european countries has a huge political leverage on each other. Just consider the most idependent of the lot, France. If you want to make the french uneasy, you just start talking about getting rid of EU farm subsidies...
Ofcourse, from a national point of view, a down side of coorporation is that you "loose" national independence. I write "loose" in citation marks, since, in reality, you can't loose something you don't have.
Concerning the discussion of international coorperation in aquisition of weapons.
Since it's given that it's mostly the US that's driving the evolution of weaponsystems, We have to realise that this evolution of weapons naturally takes place accordingly to the cababilities and possibilities of a $10 trillion economy. It's almost given that this evolution of arms doesn't favour a $1 trillion economy.
The situation is comparable to the evolution/introduction of siege cannons in medival europe. Before the siege cannons thieves, robbers and warlords (also known as "the nobillity") could sit in their high castles and do as they pleased. It was nearly impossible for the central power to reign them in. After the cannon, a - at the time - very high tech and enourmously costly weapon system, those castles lost their millitary function, and the new castles/fortresses needed to defend against cannons, were so large and expensive to build that only a central power could do it. Partly in that way the nobillity lost their position and the socity changed.
So countries like f.ex. the large european countries can might aswell just realise that they can't keep up with the US on their own. Germany can't build the full suite of GPS, NMD, Carriers, Fighters etc etc it is too demanding for the smaller economy.
The european countries can first of all choose between two things; Either they give up and do like the nobillity of old OR they coorporate. If they choose coorporation there are two options: A transatlantic or a European coorporation.
While many things can be said about the nature of those two models of coorporation,
I think that there is one objective truth: If you coorporate with the US you don't have a political leverage on the US. That's natural, it's not because americans are bad people - they just don't need you, when it comes down to it.
In the European coorperation it's very different and the european countries has a huge political leverage on each other. Just consider the most idependent of the lot, France. If you want to make the french uneasy, you just start talking about getting rid of EU farm subsidies...
Ofcourse, from a national point of view, a down side of coorporation is that you "loose" national independence. I write "loose" in citation marks, since, in reality, you can't loose something you don't have.