Huh? I am not sure what you mean. Maybe you are simply misinterpreting what was said.
Sorry, but that is a gross misrepresentation what is happening. It has nothing to do at all with setting up their own security policy. It is a continuation of plans that have been discussed both between governments and in the current convention to create a EU charter. It is a continuation of actions several of the governments involved have been engaged in for over a decade.
No one is sidelining anyone in your cite. To claim so is either a statement of ignorance or a deliberate lie.
a)Several of the countries involved already HAVE joint forces, especially France and Germany.
b)Anyone is free to join. The claim that other nations were ‘not invited to the meeting’ is bogus. It was repeatedly stated that anyone was welcome.
c)The main point here is to go beyond the joining just of actual forces (which, as mentioned, already exists), but also of staff, to streamline deployment procedures and make a case-by-case decision on chains of command, logistics etc. unnecessary. Which is precisely what is making joint European military deployment sluggish.
d)The skepticism cited is pretty meaningless. The UK is objecting to any measure leading to more integration as a rule. The claim that a joint headquarter would undermine NATO is obviously bogus, given that the EU is already now engaged in a military operation independently of NATO, namely the peacekeeping in Macedonia, and that such operations need to be coordinated efficiently. As for the other so-called skeptics, note that no specific scepticism is being cited, and that the Netherlands only has a commissionary government at this point in time.
e)The fact that the UK as the largest military power in the EU will not be included at this point in time is one that has no influence whatsoever on the credibility. That doesn’t mean the least that others cannot field a credible force. Quite the contrary, joint efforts can lead to specialization and allow members to focus on their strengths.
f)I didn’t say that France has to act through the EU on security, I said to interact with France on the Security field, the US will have to go through the EU. Inside out is not the same as outside in. France, for example, when deploying troops to overseas territories, as a matter of fact has to enter agreements with other nations to enter ports on the way to refuel, and it always has had defense agreements with a number of african nations. That has nothing to do with transatlantic security policy.
Nevertheless, your cite in no way interferes with anything I said, since the joint forces are seen as a EU army.
g)I was referring to the efforts by the US that have already happened as we speak as having been perceived as petty, because they were incompetent testimonies of ignorance and of pettiness. Not that any attempts would be perceived as petty.
But hey, I am sure you can find a reason why favoring a country that has stopped all arms exports to the US and denied transit rights over one that has merely fulfilled its obligations under the UN charter is NOT petty, huh?