| 15.03.2007 EU-ASEAN:
Nuremberg Declaration on Enhanced Partnership adopted
Today
(15 March), the Foreign Ministers of ASEAN and the European Union
adopted the Nuremberg Declaration at the 16th ASEAN
Foreign Ministers Meeting in Nuremberg. After 30 years of good
relations, it is the political signal for closer cooperation in all
spheres. Core areas will include intensive political and security
policy cooperation, the expansion of trade and economic relations
and close interaction on fundamental global issues, such as energy
and the environment.
At the final
press conference, attended by the two Co-Chairmen, the Foreign
Ministers of Cambodia and the Federal Republic of Germany, the EU
High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy,
Javier Solana, the EU Commissioner for External Relations, Benita
Ferrero-Waldner, and the ASEAN Secretary-General, Ong Keng Yong,
Federal Foreign Minister Steinmeier therefore set the tone right at
the start. "No trace of fatigue, our partnership is coming into its
prime – and has a great future ahead of it. For we bear joint
responsibility in resolving many international problems, and we need
one another more than ever before."
Steinmeier continued, "We
Europeans and the ASEAN states are ideal partners in this task,
because hardly any other form of cooperation between states
explicitly attaches so much importance to multilateral approaches in
resolving international issues. Nowhere is this expressed more
clearly than in the ground-breaking Nuremberg Declaration we have
just jointly adopted."
From the
EU's perspective, this cooperation has a
strategic pivotal role. On the one hand, Europe no longer looks
exclusively to Japan, China and India when it turns its eyes towards
Asia. The 10 ASEAN states alone are home to 500 million people -
more than in the EU. The ASEAN states are
already an important hub in the Asia-Pacific region. Considerable
potential remains untapped, with regard to both trade and political
cooperation.
On the other
hand, Europe is playing an increasingly prominent and significant
role in this part of the world. The ASEAN states have basically
taken the same direction as the EU and are themselves therefore
looking to the Old Continent with growing interest.
In the Joint
Co-Chairmen's Statement the ASEAN states welcome the European
Union's planned accession to the ASEAN Treaty of Amity and
Cooperation (TAC). The EU and the ASEAN
states also reiterated their intention to further intensify economic
exchange and to engage in talks on free trade agreements in addition
to the ongoing global trade talks.
Other topics covered
during the in-depth consultations on current international issues
included the situations in the Middle East, Iraq and Afghanistan and
developments in Myanmar.
This more intensive
cooperation will find concrete expression in a joint plan of action,
which is to be drafted before the end of this year if at all
possible. |