European Union to set up Intelligence Sharing Center for 28 Member Countries

Brussels (Belgium): Worried after Jihadist attacks and increase such activities in Europe, the European Union has decided to launch its own intelligence sharing center for 28 member countries.

European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans

European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans

Unveiling the bloc’s security priorities for the next five years, European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans told AFP that the counter-terrorism centre would be set up within Europol, the continent’s policing agency based in The Hague.

“We’re creating the centre to see whether the member states can come together more often and learn to work with each other on the basis of trust,” Timmermans said in his 12th-floor office overlooking the Belgian capital Brussels.

“But I’m not naive. That’s not going to happen overnight. What does help a lot is there is a lot of sense of urgency in every single member state that we need to do better in cooperating with the intelligence services to prevent information being lost between one country and the other,” he added.

With jihadists launching deadly attacks in recent months in Brussels, Paris and Copenhagen, the European Commission, the bloc’s executive arm, is trying to promote counter-terrorism cooperation among member states.

Timmermans said many states now see the need to work more closely despite the long-held principle whereby national security services give information to others only on condition they get something equally valuable in return.

Intelligence sharing is not easy, especially when a large member state tries to work with a smaller ally that does not have the same resources and capacities, he said.

Member states also worry if information they give another “is safe in the hands of my friends,” he added.

Unlike the US federal government, the Commission can only be a catalyst for cooperation as responsibility for security rests the fiercely guarded perogative of the sovereign member states.

“Security is the hard core of national sovereignty for states. Opening a debate on jurisdiction would be fruitless,” he said.

In reply to a question, Timmermans said the counter-terrorism centre would not amount to an EU version of the US Federal Bureau of Investigation which enjoys the powers of mass surveillance the “Patriot Act” introduced in the United States after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

“No, because we don’t change the law, we don’t change the (EU) treaties, we don’t change the division of responsibilities,” Timmermans said.

The counter-terrorism centre will be discussed with member states and the European Parliament. It is part of a roadmap to combat not only terrorism, but organised crime and cybercrime.

Timmermans also called for tighter screening of departures and arrivals at the external borders of the Schengen system, which allows passport-free travel for nationals of 22 EU states, plus Switzerland, Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein.

EU members Britain, Ireland, Cyprus, Malta, Romania and Bulgaria are not part of Schengen.

But Timmermans said London has shown it wants “very strong cooperation” on European counter-terrorism efforts.

Schengen members also seek to establish an EU-wide database of airline passenger information, something the United States has also called for.

Such a database, known as passenger name records (PNR), is designed to track militants and disrupt plots.

“We must proceed with PNR,” Timmermans said.

But the proposal remains blocked in the European Parliament which is demanding guarantees to protect personal information that is collected and shared.

The aim of both measures is to obtain information on the departure of EU nationals suspected of wanting to join jihadist groups in the Middle East and then inform EU countries of their return.

Experts fear that jihadists may return home battle-hardened and well trained in the use of explosives and weapons, posing a direct threat as highlighted in the January Paris attacks which left 17 people dead.

Thousands of European nationals are feared to have joined jihadist groups in Syria and Iraq.

Ventuno/AFP