The Approach of the eu and the us to Combating Terrorism in Relation to Human Rights Master Thesis


The Approach of the EU and the US to Combating Terrorism in Relation to Human Rights



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The Approach of the EU and the US to Combating Terrorism in Relation to Human Rights

-Master Thesis-




The Approach of the EU and the US to Combating Terrorism in Relation to Human Rights

-Master Thesis-

Ivana Broučková UČO 268179


Supervised by: Mgr. Hubert Smekal M.A., Ph.D.

Brno 2009

I hereby declare that this thesis I submit for assessment is entirely my own work and has not been taken from the work of others save to the extent that such work has been cited and acknowledged within the text of my work.

Date: April 28th 2009 Signature:




Table of Contents

The Approach of the EU and the US to Combating Terrorism in Relation to Human Rights 1

-Master Thesis- 1

The Approach of the EU and the US to Combating Terrorism in Relation to Human Rights 2

-Master Thesis- 2

Introduction 6

I. The Origins of Terrorism and 9/11 10

1.1Defining terrorism 10

1.29/11- the day the world changed 14

1.4The spill over 18

II. US and counter-terrorism 20

2.1 The US response to 9/11 20

3.1 The EU as an actor in the international arena 34

3.3 The Intra-European Schism and the EU Security Strategy 58

3.4 Madrid 60

3.5 London 65

3.6 The Achilles’ heel in EU’s efforts to counter terrorism 73

George W. Bush, Remarks at the FBI National Academy in Quantico, Virginia: 11 July, 2005. 87



V. Human rights and counter-terrorism or Human rights vs. counter-terrorism? 91

5.1 The big picture 91

5.2 The War on Terror 97

5.3 The US may be the crook but Europe is no saint 112



Conclusions 143

List of abbreviations 153

BUSH, George W. Remarks at the FBI National Academy in Quantico, Virginia: 11 July, 2005. 157



Introduction

As this thesis was being finalized, the world was overwhelmed by the shockingly detailed memoranda that were declassified under the new US administration. This may well have an impact on the way people view counter-terrorist policies, since more of than not the measures that are taken are gravely disproportionate, which in turn has devastating effects on the protection of human rights. The main reason behind all this is 9/11, an event that had far-reaching repercussions this on the development of decisions in cross-cutting policy areas across the globe.

This thesis is divided into two main parts, each consisting of several sub-themes. In 2002, Robert Kagan wrote that the reason why Europe and the US have different perceptions and different policies towards the same issue is because ‘Americans are from Mars and Europeans are from Venus’1, an analogy which he used simply to express that the way they approach problems and general policies are not the same most, if not all, of the time and that there is in fact very little that these two approaches have in common. Although I did not intend to rely on this comparison or way of reasoning, it did provide me with an impulse to dig deeper into this issue to see whether there might indeed be some truth to it. To this end, the first part of this thesis will serve to provide an empirical account of the policies that the US and the EU engaged in when confronted with terrorism, particularly after the September 11th attacks. A separate chapter within this part will also be devoted to distinguishing the policies or ideas that show or represent convergences on the one hand and divergences on the other.

The second part of this thesis topic is devoted to human rights. In the process of researching, I came across something that perhaps even increased my motivation about dealing with this topic and that I think is worth mentioning here. Possible it was because of the search terms I inserted into search engines or the terms which I focused on and limited myself to when reading articles and book chapters, that I found an overwhelming amount of material on the relationship between counter terrorism and human rights. But more likely, it was because this particular relationship has become the centre of attention for many scholars but also the general public, who in some cases experiences a great many changes in their societies since the dawn of the new era of terrorism.

My first assumption is based on the supposition that there are substantial differences between the EU and US approaches to terrorism. The main reason behind these differences lies in the composition of their security frameworks. The United States, composed of fifty states is a federal entity whereas the EU, composed of twenty seven individual member states which retain decision making powers, is at its best a supranational entity. To this end, I am making a sub-hypothesis where I hope to show that part of the reason for this is that within the EU itself, the attitudes towards terrorism are diversified and thus it is assumed that due to these differences, the EU member states will be less reluctant to act in a unified manner. In turn, this will lead to the cooperation between the EU and US of which a coordinated international counter-terrorism strategy would be a result, highly unlikely (second sub-hypothesis). In addition, the second hypothesis is presented as the statement that the balance between combating terrorism and protecting human rights has not been found in either the EU or the US.

In order to validate the first hypothesis as well as its two components I will, as thoroughly as is deemed relevant, describe the immediate reactions of the US2 and EU to the 9/11 attacks and from then on I will describe the developments of their respective counter-terrorism frameworks. As regards the section devoted to the US approach, apart from the immediate reaction to 9/11, most attention will be paid to the war in Afghanistan and war Iraq which were a direct response to 9/11 in the first war mentioned but arguably 9/11 was only one of the causes or reasons for the war in Iraq; more precisely said: it was the last straw. A few paragraphs will also deal with the coming of the new president and the changes that the freshly-inaugurated Obama administration has made or is foreseeing to make in the near future.

I will make an attempt at showing that the US acts as a unified actor whereas the EU has neither in the past nor present been able to speak and act with ‘one voice’. This lack of unison is both a result and a cause of the attitudes and perceptions the member states have on terrorism and consequently their ideas on how to fight it. The Madrid and London attacks in 2004 and 2005 respectively will be used as a type of case studies where I will try to see whether there were fundamental changes that took place in the aftermath of these events and whether they in any way be compared to the reaction of the US and especially EU reactions to the 9/11 attacks.

In order to validate the second sub-hypothesis, chapter IV will be used to describe and explain the differences as well as the similarities between the US and EU and particular attention will be paid to the areas related to counterterrorism on which they are able but more importantly willing to cooperate.

The substantiation of the second hypothesis requires a thorough research and critical analysis on the EU and US counter-terrorism policies and to what extent they infringe upon civil liberties and rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. When referring to the US policy, most evidence will be based somewhat on the Abu Ghraib prison but for the most part on the Guantánamo base used to detain terrorist suspects. With reference to the EU policy, among others, mention will be made of the secret CIA prisons on European soil as well as the various measures imposed by national policies of individual member states. In this sense, with the aim of validating my hypothesis, it is my intention to show that the protection of human rights has been directly affected by the fight against terrorism, in a negative way. In other words, I will try to show that counter-terrorism and human rights cannot fully function together or alongside each other and that one of them always has to be diminished or even forfeited in order to achieve or fulfil the other. Unfortunately, it is the human rights that are given second places, in almost all cases anyway.

I. The Origins of Terrorism and 9/11


In one way or another, terrorism comes up on the news, journal publications, the radio or TV almost, if not, every day whether associated with policymaking, research or an actual terrorist attack. Bearing this in mind, it is quite perplexing to know that a universally agreed upon and accepted definition of this phenomenon does not exist. Further yet, one may wonder how this is even possible, knowing that terrorism in itself is not a new phenomenon and that in fact some international legislation directly or indirectly associated with terrorism had been in place since as early as the 1970s. With absolute certainty, it can be said that at least five of the world’s seven continents have dealt with terrorism in one form or another. Why, one may ask is there so much demand for the insight into terrorism, if as mentioned before, it is not a novel ‘trend’. The underlying changes that have taken place and have arguably been marked by the September 11th attacks on the World Trade Centre are the goal(s), tactics and the approach used by terrorists.

    1. Defining terrorism

In relation to a unitary definition on terrorism, Gus Martin clarifies the situation by stating that ‘there is some consensus...but no unanimity on what kind of violence constitutes an act of terrorism’3. This also applies to the realm of the United Nations, which at the time of writing, has been in existence for fifty four years. It would be wrong to assume that no attempts were made in this regard. Rather, on the contrary, despite of plentiful efforts and even in the aftermath of the catastrophic attacks on New York, Washington and Pennsylvania on September 11th 2001, a universally accepted definition has still not been attained. One of the main obstacles is the fact that a value-free definition seems to be impossible to find in a world of a myriad of cultures, religions and ideologies. Rather, a definition of terrorism always seems to be value-ridden in some way or another, making it extremely difficult to receive acceptance across different parts of the world. In this sense, it could be argued that the notion of ‘one’s man terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter’ is more applicable than ever. One of the many examples that could be given to support this is the fact that when the September 11th attacks created real pressure to find common ground on this issue within the UN, it is possible that some sort of compromise would have been made, were it not for a group of nations spearheaded by the Organization of the Islamic Conference, which refused to accept a definition of terrorism, which included national liberation movements and resistance to foreign occupation4.

One of the bigger sources of disagreement has been the dilemma of whether terrorists are always necessarily non state actors.5 By using Falk’s argument, he argues that this has been particularly hazardous with regards to human rights in the case of the ‘war on terror’ where Bush labelled the terrorist threat as anti-state terrorism, which led to the decay of action against state terrorism, which in turn resulted fed the deterioration of human rights protection.6 Worse yet is the fact that even a single nation, albeit a very large one, like the US does not use a common definition. In 2004, a House of Representatives Committee7 had found that ‘that practically every agency in the United States government with a counterterrorism mission uses a different definition of terrorism,8 undoubtedly quite a worrying finding especially if it pertains to such a serious and sensitive issue. The EU is not doing much better in this quest for a definition, despite the fact that it did adopt a common definition through the 2002 Framework decision. Upon scrutiny however, this definition (see chapter III) is not only vague but it pertains to acts which could be classified as those comparable to a 9/11 scale of destruction and human loss.9 Generally, the definitions of terrorism in almost any international, regional or national context are subject to ‘overbreadth’10, which is, more than anything else, successful in causing damage to the protection of fundamental rights. One of the victims of the overbreadth plague has also been the UN Draft Comprehensive Convention, which is still pending adoption.

At the same time, it should be noted that the speculative nature of a unified definition of terrorism and the inability to find common ground and thereafter accept it, has played in the hands of abusive governments but simultaneously it has seriously challenged terrorist suspects of challenging their states or the states where they have been mistreated as a result of their alleged involvement in terrorism. In a more negative sense as well, it has been identified as on top of the ten main factors which are likely to encourage terrorism in the future.11

When one looks at the many definitions which have been adopted by individual states, groups of states and/or organizations, there are a few elements that they most, if not all, of them have in common. In his chapter ‘What is terrorism12’, Daniel D. Novotny discusses these elements and addresses them as four conditions which constitute a terrorist act. The first condition relates to the actors, identified as ‘an individual or group of individuals when they act privately, i.e. without a legitimate authority of a recognised state’13. The second condition relates to the targets of terrorism, who are thought to be non-combatants, a term which embraces both civilians and military personnel not engaged in war. The third and fourth conditions concern the goals and means of terrorism respectively. In this sense, the goal of terrorism is, as Novotny puts it, politically relevant and it is achieved by the means of ‘fear-provoking violence’14. The latter is highlighted in Weigend’s article, where he notes that there is a general pattern inherent to the 21st century, where the requirement of ‘political purpose’ is diminishing or even completely absent in many conventions and that the focus is rather paid to the intention to intimidate or compel.15 This also extends to the use of terror, which generally speaking likewise seems to have lost its formerly central importance in the quests for definitions.16

    1. 9/1117- the day the world changed

There was nothing peculiar about the morning of September 11th 2001 and in the early hours of the morning no one could have predicted what was going to happen just a few hours later. That morning, nineteen hijackers boarded four different flights with the intention of crashing the hijacked airplanes, their lethal instruments, into politically and economically indispensible and fore mostly symbolic buildings. At 8.46 an American Airlines flight 11 flew into the north tower of the World Trade Centre (WTC) in the city centre of New York. Chaos broke out but the situation escalated just 17 minutes later at 9.03, when the second hijacked plane United Airlines flight 175 crashed into the south tower. At this point, all American Airlines flights had been ordered to stay on the ground, shortly followed by the same order from the United Airlines headquarters. In the meantime, the passengers of American Airlines flight 77 were being threatened by the five-man team of hijackers who ultimately made the plane plummet straight into the Pentagon, in Washington, at 9.37. Still yet, the fourth hijacked plane was already airborne at this point and after having seized control of the aircraft, in spite of passengers’ struggle, the hijackers crashed the plane into a field in Pennsylvania at 10.03, just four minutes after the WTC south tower collapsed and twenty-five minutes before WTC forever disappeared from New York’s symbolic skyline. According to the 9/11 Commission report, the hijackers intended to use United airlines 93 flight to destroy the Capitol or the White House.

The horrific events of 9/11 are known to everyone and will be engraved into history books and people’s minds as a black day in modern history. Certainly, when the first plane hit the WTC at 8.46, not many people could say that they knew or even suspected that it was a terrorist attack. Nevertheless, just a few minutes later it was clear that this could not have been an accident and that the 2,82318 people who died on September 11th either onboard of the hijacked planes, in the WTC towers, the Pentagon or the centre of New York immediately thereafter in fact marked the beginning of a new terrorist era.

The confusion, chaos, shock, disbelief and most of all anger had no direction to follow until two days later when Osama bin Laden, a name unknown to many, was identified as the prime suspect.





    1. Al Qaeda

In order to explain the relevance of Osama bin Laden, one needs to go back into history and into the year 1979 in particular, for this is when the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan. The invasion ‘produced a large cadre of hardened Islamic fighters19’, known as the mujahedeen, literally meaning the ‘holy warriors20’. The mujahedeen may have started as a national Afghan collection of fighters in the war of resistance against the Soviet Union, but soon enough they were joined by thousands of Muslim volunteers, who ultimately played the important role of spreading the mujahedeen ‘jihadi ideology’21. According to Gus Martin, ‘the ideology of the modern mujahedeen requires selfless sacrifice in defence of the faith’. This is to say that ‘accepting the title of mujahedeen means that one must live, fight, and die in accordance with religious teachings22’.

During the Soviet invasion which ended in February 1989, a Saudi national named Osama bin Laden created a training camp, with the aim of uniting the ‘holy warriors’, essentially those Muslims who held an exceptionally fundamentalist interpretation of the Qur’an and of the Muslim faith as a whole. Bin Laden, his supporters, acquaintances and aspiring associates did not only oppose globalization, which they considered to be a product of the West, but they also abominated all the countries even in the Arab region, which cooperated with the US and the West23. This thus meant that despite Bin Laden’s Saudi origin, he sharply criticized the Saudi lax attitude towards the Western influence on its territory and in the surrounding region, which ultimately resulted in the loss of his Saudi citizenship24. By 1988, the camp had turned into an organization which self-financed indoctrination and large-scale trainings, based in Sudan, known as Al Qaeda, meaning ‘the base’ in Arabic25. From here, bin Laden and his loyal followers planned and executed attacks against Saudi and US interests26. As a result of pressure exerted by a group of states led by the US, Sudan ultimately evicted the continuously growing Al Qaeda, which by then started transforming into an extensive network of terrorists. Brigitte L. Nacos quotes Simon Reeve to explain why Afghanistan would become bin Laden’s and consequently Al Qaeda’s new home. In his book titled ‘The New Jackals’, Reeve explains that bin Laden had picked Afghanistan because there he would find ‘old comrades’ whom he had collaborated with during the Soviet invasion and many of whom had become part of the fundamentalist Islamic militia, more notoriously known as the Taliban27. In return for financial means, the Taliban was ready to provide Al Qaeda with a safe haven which included training facilities and ultimately also Al Qaeda’s headquarters. Afghanistan thus once again became the place where ‘holy warriors’ would be recruited.

It is important to note however that Al Qaeda is not a typical hierarchically organized organisation. In fact, it could hardly be called an organisation based on its characteristics of a very loose formation of like-minded extremists. Another atypical feature is that Al Qaeda is not limited to a territory. Today, we know that there is a widespread following of Al Qaeda and allied cells, either active or dormant (sleeper cells28) ranging from Algeria to Indonesia to France, Britain and Spain as well as the United States and South America29. Furthermore, there is no clear vertical or ‘top-down’ structure, rather there is a horizontal network of cells which are directly or indirectly associated.

9/11 was by far not the first ‘mission’ carried out by Al Qaeda against American interests, albeit it was the largest to date. In 1993 it was involved in the WTC bombing and in August 1997, the US Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya was bombed by an Al Qaeda cell, coordinated with another attack perpetrated by yet another cell in Tanzania in the bombing of the US Embassy in Dar es Salaam30. Another significant event which clearly targeted US interests was the attack of the USS Cole Navy destroyer on October 12th 2000, while it was refuelling at Aden Harbour in Yemen.


    1. The spill over

International terrorism has its roots in the 1960s, when revolutionary groups started realizing that their activities, albeit on a much larger scale than today, had a sort of multiplier effect on the global stage. Gus argues that in this way, these groups were able to move the issue of terrorism into the forefront of the international agenda31. Since then, this phenomenon has been involving into an unprecedented focus of international relations. One of the biggest contributors to the dawn of the so called ‘New Terrorism’ has been the unprecedented wave of globalization which has swept the world in the recent decades. With the coming of new and perpetually improved technology, terrorists have a substantial advantage not only in planning their attacks but also in bringing their message across to the global community32. Along with many other authors and experts, Brigitte L. Nacos shows that the countless and most importantly affordable flight connections and particularly extensive satellite and news networks as well as the Internet have made terrorism advance into an international undertaking33. In this sense, ‘the New Terrorism represents a manifestation of the sophistication of modern terrorists who have acquired advanced proficiency in coordinating their tactics with globalized information technologies.’34 As a result of this and other factors, the distinction between domestic and international terrorism became all the more blurred. The distinctive features of terrorism in its international form include the targeting of interests which have globally symbolic significance and which thus more often than not have an impact on the global audience35. Moreover it is a good, if not the best, example of ‘asymmetric warfare’, meaning that international terrorism and naturally the acts that are perpetrated within its abstract framework are unpredictable, unexpected and unconventional36. 9/11, which caused a 180˚ turn in world politics and the security environment, fits into this description perfectly.


II. US and counter-terrorism

When the former president George W. Bush officially left office in January and when ordinary people and especially critics looked back at the eight years of his presidency, their vision was dominated by 9/11, Afghanistan and Iraq. Especially the latter occupy a prioritized position on the policy agenda until today. The aim of this chapter is to review the response of the US to the 9/11 attacks, in what resulted to be a long, perhaps never-ending struggle to eliminate terrorism. The author is hopeful that this chapter as well as later chapters (chapter IV and V) in particular will explain why the Bush administration provided critics with so much ammunition.



2.1 The US response to 9/1137

The United States president at the time, George W. Bush, who was inaugurated on January 20th 2001, found out that ‘America was under attack38’ just a little after the second plane hit the WTC. The speech39 with which former President Bush addressed the nation that evening gave some insight into the course of action that America would resort to in response to the attack on their nation. To some extent, Bush’s stance was reinforced by the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1368, adopted on September 12th, which condemned the attacks and pledged ‘readiness to take all necessary steps to respond to the attacks of 11 September and to combat all forms of terrorism’ as well as it called on all states to work together to bring those in charge of the attacks to justice.40 On September 14th, a national state of emergency was declared.41


Nine days after the attacks, on September 20th in a speech addressed to the Joint Session to Congress, Bush had somewhat clarified his intended policy and gave an even deeper insight into the action that would be followed. And we will pursue nations that provide aid or safe haven to terrorism. Every nation, in every region, now has a decision to make. Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists. From this day forward, any nation that continues to harbour or support terrorism will be regarded by the United States as a hostile regime42. This was also the first time that Bush declared that "Our war on terror begins with al Qaeda, but it does not end there. It will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has been found, stopped and defeated."43 The strong statement and ultimately a very sharp black and white distinction of you are either with us or against combined with the fact that the US did not seem to welcome some of the aid and resources that the EU and the rest of the world offered, showed that Washington was ready to go at it alone. Bush was clear on the point of fighting a global war against the terrorists, but who would fight the war and how it would be fought was yet worryingly unclear.

One of the first long-term impacts that 9/11 had was a considerable re-shuffle of the US administration in general and its executive branch in particular. Before 9/11, the Bush administration did not place much priority on foreign affairs and internal security44but in the immediate aftermath; these two policy areas were quite understandably present in every conversation in the White House, Congress and beyond. It was there, in the two chambers of the Congress, where the idea of merging the numerous federal agencies, which had counter-terrorism in their line of work, was born in the fall of 2001 and was signed into law less than a month after 9/11, on October 8th. The newly established Office of Homeland Security, which fell under the Executive office of the President, was charged with the objectives of, as its name suggests, ensuring the security of the US and its people as well as preventing the occurrence of another (terrorist) attack. At least partially, these objectives were to be met by the implementation of a strategy which the administration would develop in the following months. Over time however, it became apparent that the scope of these objectives was too large for a single office. Dubbed the ‘largest reorganization of the federal government since World War II’45 and described as ‘the most comprehensive reorganizations of the executive branch’46, it was decided and signed into law in November 2002 that a cabinet-level Homeland Security Department was to be created.47 The objectives of this department which simultaneously represented the objectives of the war on terror were codified in the National Security Strategy of the United States of America48 and the National Strategy for Combating Terrorism.49 ‘Defeat(ing) terrorists and their organizations, Deny(ing) sponsorship, support and sanctuary to terrorists, diminish(ing) the underlying conditions that terrorists seek to exploit and defend(ing) US citizens and interests at home and abroad’50 are the four main objectives, described generally in the National Strategy for Combating Terrorism. The Bush administration reiterated its black and white neutrality-absent policy by stating that ‘the United States will make no concessions to terrorist demands and strike no deals with them. We make no distinction between terrorists and those who knowingly harbour them or provide aid to them’51. The uncertainty of the whole notion of the war on terrorism was clearly displayed by stating that ‘it will be fought on many fronts against a particularly elusive enemy over an extended period of time’.52 It is hard to deduce whether it was clear to the Bush administration that ‘an extended period of time’ stretched to the date on which these pages are being written.


Almost simultaneously with the creation of passing of the Homeland Security Act and the subsequent creation of the Office of Homeland Security, another significant bill was being passed through Congress and signed into law on October 26th. Originally tabled by John Ashcroft, US Attorney General at the time, the bill in question is the Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act 53, more commonly known as the USA Patriot Act. Divided into ten titles, the Act gives detailed insight into the measures that would be taken to track down terrorists and bring them to justice. These far-reaching and controversial (see later chapters) measures include surveillance, blocking any and all channels which are used to finance terrorism54, strengthening border controls, tightening immigration and criminal laws and facilitating access to information for judicial and law enforcement authorities in particular, including improved intelligence.
2.2 Operation Enduring Freedom
The actions which would take place in response to 9/11 had to be decided and taken at lightning speed and it was soon apparent that the Bush administration was going to keep its ‘promise’ of a military approach. The first target of the war on terror was Afghanistan, for this was the 80% Taliban-run state which provided shelter and crucial resources to Osama bin Laden and his Al Qaeda, thus being identified as ‘those who knowingly harbour them or provide aid to them”55 The planning of the first war, originally named Operation Infinite Justice56, within the framework of the war on terrorism was initiated on September 12th57 and intensified after the failed attempts at getting the Taliban or rather the complete refusal of the Taliban to hand over bin Laden. The US Administration was armed with the Congress authorization of force as well as the aforementioned Resolution 1368 which recognised the ‘the inherent right of individual or collective self-defence in accordance with the Charter’. The Congress authorization granted extensive powers to the president, stating that he may ‘use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons’.58 The resolution, granting a free-pass in using force, passed through the Senate with absolute success and did not face much opposition in the House of Representatives.59

With the mission of overthrowing the Taliban and destroying al Qaeda, the US-led Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) was initiated in the early hours of October 7th, limitedly together with the UK, the Northern Alliance60 and Pashtun anti-Taliban forces, the latter two providing ground forces.61 During the course of the aerial attacks, an Arab TV station aired a statement made by bin Laden, where he praised the 9/11 attacks and identified the West as hypocrites.62 One of the immediate successes of OEF was the expression of immense military power, unmatched by anyone in the world.63

The heavy fighting, which continually extended over several weeks, ultimately resulted in the fall of Kabul as the capital of Taliban rule on November 13th and to the collapse of the Taliban hold on the country as a whole by the end of November. An interim government was set up by an agreement reached in Bonn at the beginning of December64, whereby an International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) was called upon to supervise the stability of the provisional government and Afghanistan. This assistance force was officially dispatched by United Nations Security Council Resolution 138665, under UK leadership and taken over indefinitely66 by NATO in March 2003.

However it must be noted that US troops did not suddenly withdraw from Afghanistan, as we now know that the fighting is far from over. It is true that the Taliban was severely weakened but this should not be overestimated, the Taliban was not completely destroyed as Bush may have envisioned. In March 2003 more raids took place

Quite ironically, the choice of name for this extensive operation is quite applicable as it is still enduring eight years later and perhaps a more appropriate name would have been Operation Enduring War. Meanwhile the Taliban has recuperated from the invasion and is making the efforts at peace building in Afghanistan ever more difficult.

2.3 Iraq


It is often said that 9/11 changed everything and while this may not be so easy to prove, proving the fact that 9/11 changed a lot is slightly more feasible. One of the many quotes and statements which support this claim is US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s response to those who were not particularly or at all supportive of the war; they “are thinking back in the 20th century”67, directly underlining that the 21st century needs to be looked at with a completely difference lens, particularly with regards to potential or, in Iraq’s case, apparently imminent threats.

The fear that terrorists would get their hands on weapons of mass destruction (WMD) was a concern that was not created by 9/11. Arguably the first real wakeup call came in 1995 when the Aum Shinrikyo cult perpetrated terrorist acts using sarin gas on a crowded subway line in Japan.68 It was this event that made the world realise the surprising easiness of individuals getting access and obtaining chemical weapons, of which a small amount can have devastating consequences. Perhaps even more shocking was the fact that this was possible without state sponsorship. This certainly became a more alarming thought in the US ,more intense than ever before, when letters containing traces of anthrax were sent to several politicians and media figures just days after 9/11. Nacos points out that this was a ‘chilling reminder that a far more devastating version of bioterrorism by one individual or a small group, whether sponsored by states or acting independently, was a real possibility’.69

The US had its share of history with Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, particularly during the 1990s in the Gulf war, when George W.H. Bush was in charge of the United States. A decade later, his son’s administration was claiming links between Al Qaeda and Baghdad and between their top men Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein in particular. In addition, it was argued that Iraq had the capability to develop and was in fact developing biological and chemical weapons. The equation which came out of the alleged situation was thus Al Qaeda has links with Iraq, Al Qaeda is a terrorist network and Iraq has WMD capability therefore Al Qaeda is or in the near future will be able to acquire these weapons. Knopf points out that some similarities did indeed exist between Saddam and bin Laden; they are both Arab, Muslim and have influence in the Middle East70 but these trivial similarities are overshadowed by major differences such as the fact that bin Laden leads a territory-less terrorist network while Saddam leads a territory-bound state. There is also a considerable gap between the motivations and ideologies of these actors which thus directly results in different methods and levels of deterrence.71

The idea and almost urge to de-seat Saddam Hussein from his chair of despotic leadership was not a novel one within the US government. The ‘hawks’ in the administration had long contemplated this idea and in this sense thus 9/11 provided an avenue of opportunity.72 Though it was later found that no proof existed for any of the allegations referring to WMD, the Bush administration was doing a good job at pretending and using the incited fear to pursue its goals. This can be displayed, for instance, by Bush’s statement that “you can’t distinguish between Al Qaeda and Saddam when you talk about the war on terror”.73


2.3.1Axis of Evil and Operation Iraqi Freedom
Before discussing the military campaign taken against Iraq, it is important to note of a crucial provision of the National Security Strategy, which is very relevant to the developments that took shape and were realised just six months after the Strategy was first released. The sentence ‘to forestall or prevent such hostile acts by our adversaries, the United States will, if necessary, act pre-emptively’74 is probably the most often cited provision of discussion about the Strategy, at the same time being the most controversial and crystallizing the approach that the US was ready and willing to take.

Knowing that the link between terrorists and WMD was stressed in the Strategy75 and the fact that the issue of Iraq was ‘in the air’, it is justifiable to say that negotiations about taking action in Iraq were present from early on. One of the decisive moments which revealed Bush’s intentions was the content of his speech on January 29th 200276, where he identified, the self-named ‘axis of evil’, being Iraq, North Korea and Iran. With regards to Iraq, Bush reinforced all the claims that his administration had been making until then and informed his audience about the weapons that Iraq had been developing over a decade and the fact that UN inspectors were not allowed to inspect various sites means that ‘this regime has something to hide from the civilised world’.77I will not wait on events while dangers gather. I will not stand by as peril draws closer and closer’ were another sign of the determination to resort to pre-emptive action. When making reference to states which may not be so keen on this war on terror, Bush stated ...make no mistake about it: If they do not act, America will’, once again exposing the harsh unilateralist face of the Bush administration.


Bush’s speech on March 19th 2003 officially announced to the world public that American and coalition forces had initiated the invasion of Iraq, with the aim of disarming it.78 This action seemed all but inevitable, particularly after Bush’s address on March 17th, when he gave Saddam Hussein and his sons a 48 hour deadline to leave Iraq.79 In addition, it was firmly stated that upon refusal or failure to do so, Iraq will be attacked militarily. In this speech, Bush also pointed to the failure of the Security Council to authorize the use of force and rather relied on the fact that the Congress had already authorized the use of force against Iraq at its 107th session in October 2002.80 Another point which Bush used to justify his decision to go to war was Iraq’s disregard for UN Security Council Resolution 1441 of November 200281, whereby the UN had decided that Iraq was in breach of its material obligations imposed on it by numerous past Resolutions82, particularly regarding Iraq’s failure to cooperate with the UN and International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).83 This resolution therefore offered Iraq one last chance to comply with the provisions served by the UN namely with regard to disarmament, which would subsequently be verified by a newly-set up inspectorate regime.84 The use of force however was never authorized.

Today, five years since the first planes started to bomb targets in Iraq, the US is still very much present in Iraq and this will remain so for the foreseeable future. The circumstances under which the war was waged in the first place has been criticized within the general public as well as within political circles and this remains to be so today, where suicide-terrorist attacks occur on almost a daily basis in Iraq.


2.4 A new administration, a new era
The inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th President in January 2009 brought, is bringing and will bring a substantial change to the United States and its policy. For one, Obama is the first African-American president in the history of the United States. More importantly and definitely with more relevance to the topic discussed in this paper, the new president made some groundbreaking changes. Almost immediately after stepping into the Oval office, Obama ordered the closure of Guantánamo, a place which was associated with a policy much loathed throughout the world. Guantánamo was to close its doors for the last time in early 2010. This was not only part of a new policy; it was a small piece of the bigger picture which represents the new general approach of the new president. Although arguably the biggest challenge facing Obama is finding an effective solution to the financial crisis, it is also clear that the new administration is aware of the fact that some fundamental changes are needed in the approach in the fight against terrorism and particularly in places where the US involved is involved militarily. This can most clearly be illustrated by Obama’s announcement of a new strategy on Afghanistan and Pakistan85 where along with explaining that the future of Afghanistan is ‘inextricably linked’ with the future in Pakistan, where at least according to intelligence, the latter has changed into the new safe haven of the Al Qaeda leadership. Obama also points out that resources, for the most part reconstructive, including a substantial increase in civilian efforts, need to be provided to Afghanistan and Pakistan, with the acknowledgement that these resources have been denied to them and Afghanistan in particular, as a result of the war in Iraq. Although military force may and most likely will be applied in this region, the focus will rather be shifted to the reconstruction of Afghanistan and in the nearest time the ensuring of fair presidential elections in August. 17,000 soldiers have already been dispatched to the most troublesome areas in the southern provinces and 4,000 especially to train Afghan security forces. Along with the acknowledgment that an a quick exit is not an option as it will only lead to de-stabilization and a possibly worse situation than pre-9/11 and Operation Enduring Freedom, Obama also notes that ‘the end of extremism will not be solved with bullets and bombs alone’, marking a shift from Bush’s almost completely diplomacy-absent approach. An important part of the new administration’s strategy is to initiate a reconciliation process, a thorough province by province course of action which will also determine the outcome of a reclassification of the Afghan and Pakistani adversaries.86

Lastly, but with no intention of being interpreted as being the least important, the Obama administration also signalled an arguably major shift in its approach when it announced that it had dropped the notion of “war on terror”, a word that more often than not had negative connotations outside the US as well as within it and a word that was used ‘to justify many of his (Bush’s) actions’87. For human rights groups, it was associated with Guantánamo and for state leaders it was seen as a ‘with us or against us’ way of thinking.88 The announcement, also symbolically made on the day of the UN conference on the future of Afghanistan held in The Hague, marked a promising vision for the future of US policy under the new president.

III. The European Union
3.1 The EU as an actor in the international arena

Before discussing the immediate response of the EU to the 9/11 attacks and thereafter describing what counter terrorism in the EU context actually entails, it would be wise to at least briefly elucidate the position of the EU in the international arena and most importantly its ability to exert its influence. Furthermore, the extent of its ability of conceptualizing a common security and defence policy (CESDP) within the Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) framework is of high relevance here since, together with its Justice and Home Affairs89 (JHA) counterpart, it deals with countering terrorism.

JHA as a policy domain was incorporated into the newly-established pillar structure as a result of the 1993 Maastricht Treaty which simultaneously created the EU as an entity.

Despite these considerably vast restructuring, the legal personality of the EU as a whole was not addressed 90 and thus it remained vested solely within the EC in the first pillar and only in its areas of competence. This in turn also meant that the JHA pillar was not able to conclude EU-level agreements with third countries which was understandable a substantial hindrance if not near paralysis, considering the scope of the policy domain that the JHA covered and operated in.91

A change came in 1997 with the signing of the Amsterdam Treaty, when for the first time

the EU was given the capability to exert international presence or actorness in the JHA framework. It was also by the signing of this Treaty that the EU took steps to build a common area of freedom, security and justice, simultaneously providing it with an external dimension.92 This development should not be confused with the building of a European Area of Justice, Liberty and Security which was taking place in the same period.93

At this point the 21st century was already standing on the doorstep, aptly requiring increasing levels of international cooperation than in the past. In the context of this thesis, it is important to emphasise that this cooperation was also becoming ever more sensitive as a human rights and civil liberties were taken into direct account by the JHA. Monar points out however that despite the success of having more external capability and influence, the JHA faced a rather complex challenge. The JHA is in fact split between the first and third pillar, where in the former under Title IV of the TEC, the JHA has competence in asylum, immigration, border controls and judicial cooperation in civil matters in the first pillar. In the latter, on the other hand, under Title IV TEU, the competencies include police and judicial cooperation in criminal matters, falling under the third pillar.94 This has repercussions on the legal basis and decision making procedures, where the latter is intergovernmental in the third pillar whereas the first pillar is subject to supranational decision making. Unanimity, which is often required in the third pillar (and second pillar) before any decision is adopted has oftentimes been the recipe for a major paralysis.

The aim of the following pages is to describe the European reaction to 9/11 and particularly it is hoped that an insight into the EU policymaking in this area will reveal the approach the EU is taking in countering terrorism.


3.2 The EU response to 9/11 and subsequent developments
Europe has a share of its own experience with terrorism however it is crucial to note that each country’s traces of terrorism root from the domestic realm and thus cannot be compared to the situation today, where international terrorism has besieged the global frame. Most recently in modern history, the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and Euskadi Ta Askatasuna95 (ETA) and the Fronte di Liberazione Naziunale Corsu96 (FLNC)had been the most active groups in Europe which perpetrated terrorist attacks in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, Spain and Corsica respectively. These countries thus had a bundle of national legislation which addressed this grievance but talk of a joint EU policy directly dealing with terrorism was scarce. The only such mention in this sense was made at the 1999 Tampere European Council meeting97 where it was agreed that efforts against crime in general should be stepped up, the word terrorism was used all but once in the outcome of this meeting.
Joined by world leaders, politicians and ordinary people all over the world, the members of the European Union pledged solidarity within hours of the 9/11 attacks. This declaration of solidarity was officially documented and approved in the Special Meeting of the General Affairs Council on September 12th. Here, the perpetrators of the attacks were condemned as were those who helped and continue to help in sponsoring them. Behind the EU solidarity was the will to mobilize any resources necessary to help the US recuperate from the attack. Furthermore, a three minute silence would be observed across the EU and beyond on September 14th, a newly established day of mourning. The following day Javier Solana, in his capacity as High Representative of the CFSP, further reiterated the readiness of the EU to provide assistance to the US in bringing the perpetrators to justice, along with other more immediate assistance such as search and rescue. Solana also made sure to state that EU solidarity ‘goes beyond mere expressions of support and is absolute’.98 Furthermore, Solana noted that states which sponsor and/or harbour terrorists have to be addressed with action but he was quite vigilant in adding that “at the same time, we must recognise that they do not represent the views of the majority of the people. They are not democracies. Indeed, in many cases they are punishing their own people as well as threatening our interests”.99

On September 14th, on the newly established day of mourning, a Joint Declaration100 outlined the general steps the EU would take in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. These included the intensification of efforts against terrorism in judicial as well as law enforcement spheres, the realisation of a speedy operational status of the ESDP and the stepping up of the implementation of a ‘genuine European judicial area.101 Den Boer argues that all this swift development showed that at least for a while, 9/11 functioned as a ‘great equalizer’ within Europe, at least as threat perceptions and the appropriate ways to respond were concerned.102 France in particular proved to be quite active, for instance by renewing its commitment to greater information sharing and a call on other members to accelerate judicial procedures and expand police cooperation.103 In addition, leaders and ministers such as Chirac, Schroder and Blair immediately sought cooperation by rallying support of the leaders of countries in the Middle East as well as in China, India and Pakistan, the latter becoming crucial in Bush’s ‘war on terror’.


On September 20th, the Ministers of the Justice and Home Affairs (JHA) Council gathered in Brussels to discuss and conclude the measures that should be taken in order to combat terrorism. Particular emphasis was placed on the harnessing of policies that were already in place at the EU level104 as well as creating and ensuring a strong area of freedom, security and justice. In order to realise the latter, the Council adopted measures such as judicial cooperation, cooperation between law enforcement agencies and intelligence services, cutting off financial channels supplying and connecting terrorists, stricter measures relating to state borders as well as reinforced cooperation with the US.105 Under the Belgian Presidency, an extraordinary European Council meeting was convened on September 21st with the sole purpose of addressing the attacks that occurred just ten days earlier. The meeting produced the watershed approval of an EU Action Plan on combating terrorism106 and for the first time in its history, a general anti-terrorism policy was formulated. The 64-point Action Plan would be implemented within the framework of the CFSP. The plan reiterated the need to maintain and heighten cooperation with the US to the maximum as well as it highlighted the need to enhance judicial and police cooperation, the freezing of terrorist funds as well as advancing aviation security107. The contents of the action plan were to be updated on a regular basis. The importance of data-sharing was reiterated and a comprehensive agreement in this regard was reached.

In addition to this, the European Council urged the JHA Council to implement the measures that were adopted at the Tampere meeting as soon and as efficiently as possible. To this end, the JHA Council drew up the ‘Antiterrorism roadmap108’, in which it is clearly indicated when the nineteen measures are to be implemented by and the body which is responsible for the smooth and prompt execution. The European Arrest Warrant (EAW), a definition for terrorism and the identification of terrorist groups for the purpose of drawing up a common list were among the first measures to be taken care of. The Roadmap was made available at the end of September 2001. A political agreement, save the Italian delegation, with regard to the list of offences attached to the EAW was reached on November 16th.109

At the beginning of October, the EU advised that all Member States freeze any and all funds that were being made available to terrorist activities by individuals as well as organizations110. This position was reiterated on October 8th by pledging to narrowly cooperate with the US.111 The financial flows of the persons and organizations that were cut off were based on the list produced by the UN 1267 Committee112. The first EU file which listed terrorism-associated individuals and organization was published as an annex to the Council Common position of 27 December 2001, which also included the adoption of a definition of terrorism.
Rewinding back to October, as the EU was advising Member States to ensure that known terrorist-feeding funds are frozen, Bush’s US was ready to launch its rapidly prepared attack on targets in Afghanistan, notoriously known and already mentioned Operation Freedom. The campaign was not readily backed by the EU as a whole, but rather on an individual member state basis. Tony Blair proved to be a reliable ally when he involved vast amounts of UK resources into the operation. Other partners and contributors113 included EU and non-EU but European countries as well as other less self-evident countries such as Russia, Pakistan as well as the Arab Emirates. At this point, EU support for Bush’s actions was probably at its peak.
In December when the European Council meeting convened in Laeken, it was quite obvious that the Antiterrorism roadmap was being followed closely. The three major issues that were on the agenda of the meeting were the European Arrest Warrant, the adoption of a common definition of terrorism and the ways to create a solid area of freedom, security and justice. The EAW, its concrete provisions, character and process by which persons were to be extradited was finally formulated. Significantly also and directly related to the counterterrorism policy was the ‘operational status’ granted to the European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP) under the umbrella of the CFSP. Further yet, a decision on the establishment of the so called Joint Investigation Teams (JITs).

This further accredited the Laeken summit with making real and tangible progress in the area of judicial and law enforcement cooperation as well as within these authorities on a national level as well as on a cross-European level. It thus made successful attempts at harmonizing the creation of an EU counterterrorism strategy.114


December 2001 became all the more productive when the Council adopted a

Common Position115 on Combating Terrorism116 and a Common Position on the application of specific measures to combat terrorism117. In its wording, the former is almost an exact copy of Security Council Resolution 1373, among others, stipulating that all member states are to become parties to all international agreements relating to terrorism118, and those who are parties already, to implement the provisions as soon as possible119. A definition of what constitutes a ‘terrorist act and a terrorist group’ is laid down in the Common Position on the application of specific measures to combat terrorism, together with a list of persons, groups and entities suspected of having carried out or being involved in terrorist activities and thus for which restrictive measures are to apply as according to SC Resolution 1373 is provided in the annex120. The Common Position also obliges EU member states to offer each other the widest possible extent of cooperation in ‘preventing and combating terrorist acts’121 The provision also specifies the method that shall be employed to achieve this, namely ‘…through police and judicial cooperation in criminal matters within the framework of Title VI of the Treaty on European Union’


In January 2002, Spain took over the Presidency from Belgium and arguably partly because Spain had long-lasting domestic grievances with terrorism, it took a firm and committed approach in the fight against terrorism on EU level. In its policy programme ‘Más Europa’122, the fight against terrorism was the first among the six priority areas, followed by the euro, economic and social reform, enlargement, foreign and security policy and the future of Europe123. By publishing this document, the Spaniards crystallized the course of action they were going to take in the next six months, until the hand-over to the Danes. The Spanish Presidency set out its approach to countering terrorism by stating that ‘wholehearted multilateral cooperation and adjustment of the cooperation mechanism of international organizations, including the European Union itself124’ was crucial. In order to achieve its goal, Spain aimed to converge all legal systems of the European Union in order to make the possibility of a terrorist sanctuary nil, encouraged the strengthening of new and existing legislative instruments and placed strong emphasis on an intensified cooperation in criminal matters.125
The Council Framework Decision on combating terrorism126 and the Council Framework Decision on the European arrest warrant and the surrender procedures between Member states127, both adopted on June 13th 2002 represented a landmark in the EU counter-terrorism policy for several reasons. The adoption of the former meant that a common definition on terrorism128, agreed at the Laeken Council meeting, was finally wedged into the context of the counter-terrorist framework and since then all Member states were required to implement and harmonise this definition with their national legislation in order to ensure a uniform counter terrorism strategy on the EU level. Furthermore, unitary punishment levels for terrorist offences129 were part of the package, simultaneously ensuring that member states would use their jurisdiction over these offences when committed by their nationals or resident or on their territory.130 The adoption of the latter Framework decision meant the official replacement of all extradition agreements by the EAW and its provisions.
3.3.1 The European Arrest Warrant
Like many other components of the justice, freedom and security sphere, the initial thought of supplanting the existing bilateral extradition agreements131 was shaped at the European Council meeting in Tampere in October 1999132. The EAW was officially drawn up at the Extraordinary Council on September 21st, where the European Council deemed it necessary to replace the bilateral extradition agreements between member states, as the experience with these agreements showed the lack of mutual trust and integration within the EU133. The EAW is inserted into the framework of the fight against terrorism but it extends to many other criminal activities, a fact, which supports the argument that 9/11 sped up the creation of this tool134. Adopted in June 2002 and in force since January 2004, the EAW represents an important break in judicial cooperation in that it is founded on the principle of mutual recognition of judicial decisions rather than territorial jurisdiction135 as was the case prior to its adoption. Another important change is the fact that a member state’s designated executive judicial unit executes an EAW and is accountable an identical unit in the member state which issued the request, whereas before it used to be that extradition requests had a slim chance of being executed due to the fact that they were sent to national ministries, where political grounds prevailed136. The dos and don’ts of the EAW are carefully specified in the Framework decision which also sets very limited grounds on which a refusal of a request is eligible137. The EAW may only be issued for the ‘purposes of conducting a criminal prosecution or executing a custodial sentence or detention order’138 The scope of the EAW is divided into acts which may be applied to the use of an EAW are those punishable by the issuing member state by a minimum of 12 months sentence139 and offences which are punishable by at least a 36 months sentence140. The latter, for which 32 types of offences141 are specified, also implies that the double criminality principle is dropped.142 In this 32 offences-list, terrorism is in second place. Among the exact limitations of the EAW proceedings are also time limits, whereby it is stipulated the each request ‘shall be dealt with as a matter of urgency’143. 10 and 30 days limits after arrest are given in circumstances where the requested person agrees to his or her surrender and in all other cases, respectively. An extension of a maximum of 30 days may be granted, upon informing the issuing authority. In cases where none of these time limits could be adhered to, the respective national authority must inform Eurojust (see below) and provide reasons for the delay144.
3.2.3 The role of Europol
The European Police Office had come into existence before the turn of the 21st century and thus before 9/11, nevertheless it has seen significant changes especially but not exclusively with regards to terrorism. The aim behind the creation of this agency was the need to coordinate the cooperation of law enforcement authorities across the EU member states as well as other countries on the European continent through various channels.

The organizational structure and function of Europol was encompassed in the Maastricht Treaty145 and by 1994 it could boast its status of limited operational activity in The Hague146. At this point, its mandate basically comprised of international drug crimes but over time this mandate was somewhat extended to other types of crimes amongst which were organized crime, financial crime and human trafficking. A legal personality was conferred to Europol by the Europol Convention147, signed in July 1995 and in force since October 1998. Since 1999, Europol has been fully operational but it must be noted that it does not have executive authority. The Convention also expanded and clarified Europol’s mandate whereby its areas of investigation and of competence range from drug, vehicle and human trafficking to money-laundering and terrorism148.

But it was not until 9/11 that things really started to move along within the EU and understandably also within Europol. In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, a Europol Operational Centre was established with the aim of providing a non-stop provision and facilitation of information149. As decided by the JHA Council meeting on September 20th, the exchange of information between member states’ intelligence and police authorities and Europol was to be intensified. In addition, a Counter-Terrorism Task Force, an expert counter-terrorism unit consisting of liaison officers from police and intelligence services was set up and became fully operational in November 2001150. The objectives of this new unit were to collect analyse all relevant information and use it for the purpose of generating a threat assessment report which listed the possible targets, modus operandi and the costs that would be incurred on Member states.151 Since then, the task force had produced several annual threat assessment reports including the threats within Europe and an overview of the counter terrorism measures which are in place within the framework of the European Union152. The former is further divided into two dossiers; ‘Islamic Terrorism’ and ‘Dolphin’, where the latter focuses on all terrorist groups and activities which are not included in the former.153 Assessments are also made with relation to the financial flows which support terrorist activities.

Understandably, the task force is not left on its own to deal with a vast of an issue but rather there are several programs which function alongside it. One of these is the Counter Terrorism Program, which was established with the aim of coordinating all Europol activities concerning (counter)terrorism154. Furthermore, Europol plays a supportive role in investigations as well as the set up and operations of joint investigation teams, which are initiated upon the request of a member state155. Another significant and relevant program is the Networking Program, which as its name suggests, is tasked with establishing contacts and connections between the experts within Europol which are involved in the programs and experts and law enforcmenet authorities of non-EU member states.156 The Prepardness Program operates to achieve the development of multitiered and multilateral investigation teams in the event that a terrorist attack occurs on EU soil.


A significant change came in April 2009, when the ministers of the JHA Council adopted a decision which was initially proposed by the Commission in 2006. This decision157 which is to replace the 1995 Europol Convention and its Protocols158 extends Europol’s competencies and thus makes it that much closer to becoming a ‘federal police force’.159 The crimes in Europol’s competence will be extended to the 32 crimes of the EAW and its supportive role in JITs will be extend to a role of direct establishment and participantion of these teams, as previously upon the request of one or more member states.160

3.2.4 The role of Eurojust


The first ever mention of Eurojust was made at the European Council meeting in Tampere in October 1999, where it was concluded that a permanent judicial co-operation unit should be set up, with the aim of reinforcing the fight against serious crime, with emphasis on organised crime, between two or more member states. This unit, now named Eurojust, was to be an organization comprising of prosecutors, judges, magistrates or police officers seconded from each member state, who would be charged with facilitating cooperation between its judicial and law enforcement authorities, as well as with the same organs in other member states, especially in relation to criminal investigations161. A provisional judicial cooperation unit was to be set up as a type of test-drive for Eurojust. The establishment of this provisional unit; pro-Eurojust was sealed by the Council when it concluded its Decision of December 14th 2000162, laying down the following objectives for the new born body:

  • to improve cooperation between the competent national authorities in the investigation and prosecution of serious crime, particularly when it is organized, involving two or more member states;

  • to stimulate and improve the coordination, between the competent authorities of the Member States, of investigations and prosecutions in the Member States, taking into account any request emanating from a competent authority of a Member State and any information provided by any body competent by virtue of provisions adopted within the framework of the Treaties163;

  • to improve cooperation between the competent authorities of the Member States, in particular by facilitating the execution of international mutual legal assistance and the implementation of extradition requests164

The work of pre-Eurojust to accomplish these objectives started on March 1st 2001 and was to continue until the official document to create Eurojust as a permanent unit was produced and thereafter adopted165. In the meantime, the cases referred to pro-Eurojust rose up to 180 by November166.

The discussions and negotiations to reach a unanimous support for the conditions creating Eurojust were not particularly short and simple but, as mentioned before and as will be mentioned on many occasions, the events of September 11th represented a real impetus for the wave of decisions, conventions, statements and agreements produced and reached within the EU. By the Decision of February 28th 2002 on setting up Eurojust with a view to reinforcing the fight against serious crime167, Eurojust was formally established by the Council as an independent body with a legal personality, based in The Hague and operational since May 2002. The objectives to be attained remained the same but its competencies were extended in the aftermath of 9/11 to include terrorism as well as crimes over which Europol has authority, alongside its ‘original’ competencies in offences such as drug trafficking, trafficking in human beings, cybercrime and (tax)fraud. by the Council, to create contact points in the law enforcement and judicial authorities to coordinate the fight against terrorism. The steps to achieve ‘the widest possible assistance’168, which are stipulated in the Common Position on the application of specific measures to combat terrorism, can partly be achieved through the European Judicial Network169, with regards to the judicial cooperation component in particular170. The EJN, a decentralised network of lawyers and judges with contact points throughout the EU, works alongside Eurojust.

On the initiative of the Spanish Presidency, a political agreement was reached which stipulated the need to create contact points within the law enforcement and judicial authorities in order to effectively coordinate the fight against terrorism. This in turn resulted in the reiteration of the decision that each member state should designate a national correspondent for terrorism171, at the 19 December 2002 European Council meeting172. Whereas the February Council meeting concluded that such a national correspondent may be appointed and that in relation to terrorism this should be a high priority, the December meeting actually stated that each member state shall appoint such a Eurojust national correspondent for terrorism. In addition, it is clearly stated that each Member State ‘shall ensure that this correspondent [...] has access to and can collect all relevant information concerning and resulting from criminal proceedings conducted under the responsibility of its judicial authorities, with regard to terrorist offences involving any of the listed persons, groups or entities173’.

In the months that followed, a decision was taken to reformat and ultimately repeal this decision, with the aim of widening the scope from terrorist offences committed by in the Annex listed persons, groups or entities to all174 the offences defined by Framework Decision 2002/475/JHA on combating terrorism. Adopted in September 2005, this decision175 furthermore specifies the need to designate a specialised service which will have access to any information surrounding criminal investigations conducted by its authorities with respect to terrorist offences176. In turn, any and all information on all177 stages of criminal investigation and proceedings should be made available to Eurojust.178 Lastly, it is stipulated that all requests for mutual legal assistance particularly with respect to terrorist offences are to be dealt with ‘as a matter of urgency and are given priority’.179 At the end of 2008, people within as well as without Eurojust realised that it was time to review the work of Eurojust and see where its objectives could be met with more efficiency and less time constraints. The outcome of this was a new Framework Decision180, drawn up in July and adopted just four month later in November 2008. The main change that would come about once this framework decision is implemented181 is increased competencies granted to the National members where in the end these competencies would be autonomous182 and harmonized in order to provide for a smooth and speedy of cases, especially in urgent matters.
If one speaks in very simplistic terms, Eurojust and Europol are basically counterparts except that Eurojust coordinates the efforts of judicial authorities whereas Europol deals primarily with law enforcement and intelligence synchronization. It should thus come as no surprise that these two bodies, both conventionally based in The Hague, closely cooperate together. The centrepiece document in this regard is the agreement between Eurojust and Europol183 drawn up in 2004. Very general in nature, it calls for an intensified exchange of information and for the most efficient way of going forth in achieving their objectives i.e. the prevention of work duplication184. The agreement also stipulates that Eurojust and Europol may jointly set up joint investigation teams and participate in them, upon the request of one or more member states and if their competencies so allow185.

As bodies dealing with and facilitating cross border persecutions and investigations, Europol and Eurojust represent a strong position in the fight against terrorism given the fact that terrorist groups operate in more than one country186. In this sense thus, they symbolize a bridge between different judicial and law enforcement systems and a channel through which information flows in a more straightforward fashion.


3.3 The Intra-European Schism and the EU Security Strategy

Attention is most often paid to the gyre that widened as a result of the war policy against Iraq (see chapter IV), rather than the gyre that developed within the European continent and within the EU in particular. At this point it is however necessary to mention the crack that was generated within the EU, where member states were essentially divided into the ‘pro-war’ and ‘anti-war’ camps. This was reinforced by the US bracketing of the opposition camp as ‘Old Europe’, thus ‘New Europe’ being the friendly camp accordingly.187 The main members of the former were France and Germany, significantly also being the biggest member states, while the pro-war stance was taken most staunchly by the UK, but also by Spain, Italy, Portugal and the ten countries that acceded to the EU in May 2004. In this regard, the old Europeans were not shy in their criticism of the to-be EU member states as well as those whose accession negotiations were still underway (Romania and Bulgaria), when they expressed their pro-US stance by joining existing member states in endorsing a last chance to disarm warning in mid February.188 The then French President Chirac identified the candidate states as being ‘childish and irresponsible’. Schroder defended his and his country’s stance in asserting that ‘the Middle East needs a lot of peace, not a new war’.189


Nevertheless, something good did come out of this intra-European schism. It represented a sort of impulse to the EU that it had to be glued back together in order for the member states to reconcile their differences and be less dependent on the US, with which relations were not at its best. This glue was to be a genuinely European strategy which would deal with national and transnational threats and would delegate a cooperative distribution and use of resources. The task of compiling this comprehensive document was given to Javier Solana, the High Representative of the CFSP. Entitled the European Security Strategy: A Secure Europe in a Better World190, the text was adopted by the European Council on December 12th 2003. Clearly recognising the existence of entirely new threats which are ‘more diverse, less visible and less predictable’191, such as terrorism, proliferation of WMD and the deadly combination of terrorists getting their hands on and using these weapons, regional conflicts and state failure; the strategy calls for more bilateral and multilateral cooperation as well as more coherence in policy coordination and an overall increase of institutional capacities. In discussing the various cooperation channels, the Strategy identifies the UN as crucial, at the same time making a point for providing it with the capabilities necessary to maintaining its position as a global forum for cooperation.192 It also warns that the European continent is both a base for and a target of terrorism, thus indirectly calling for the need to fight terrorism from the inside out. It is further stressed that the world and the threats therein have changed dramatically since the Cold War, mainly indicating that the ‘new’ threats are not purely military.193 This is to say that the way the EU responses to these threats must not be purely military either, but rather a combination of different means on different levels of cooperation. The means here represent intelligence, aspects of the law enforcement and judicial capabilities as well as military or any other means as appropriate. This is also closely related to the acknowledgement that the prevention of radicalisation and the de-seeding of the roots of terrorism as well as simultaneously diminishing derogatory issues such as organized crime and state failure are crucial in dismantling the global tyrant.194

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