Organisation for Joint Armament Cooperation
This article relies too much on references to primary sources. (February 2008) |
Abbreviation | OCCAR-EA |
---|---|
Type | Intergovernmental organisation |
Purpose | European armament cooperation |
Director | Matteo Bisceglia |
Budget | €59 million |
Staff | 300 (March 2019) |
Website | www |
The Organisation for Joint Armament Cooperation (French: Organisation Conjointe de Coopération en matière d'ARmement; OCCAR) is a European intergovernmental organisation that facilitates and manages collaborative armament programmes through their lifecycle between the governments of Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom.
History[]
OCCAR was established on 12 November 1996 by the Defence Ministers of France, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom. Legal status was not achieved, however, until January 2001 when the parliaments of the four founding states ratified the OCCAR Convention. Other European nations may join OCCAR, subject to their actual involvement in a substantive collaborative equipment programme involving at least one OCCAR partner and ratification of the OCCAR Convention. Belgium and Spain joined the organisation in respectively 2003 and 2005.
Other states can participate to OCCAR programmes without becoming a member state. Currently the European Union member states and/or NATO members Turkey, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Finland, Sweden, Lithuania and Poland participate in one or more OCCAR programmes without being formal members.[1]
Structure[]
The highest decision-making body within OCCAR as corporate organisation is the Board of Supervisors (BoS). Each OCCAR programmes is supervised by a Programme Board (strategic decisions) and a Programme Committee (operational decisions). The programmes are executed by the OCCAR Executive Administration (OCCAR-EA) in accordance with the decisions of the supervisory bodies. OCCAR-EA is headed by the OCCAR Director (Matteo Bisceglia since September 2019) and consists of a Central Office and the Programme Divisions. OCCAR-EA employs over 300 staff members.
Current programmes[]
The 16 programmes currently managed by OCCAR are the following:
- A400M (tactical and strategical airlift)
- Boxer (multirole armoured vehicle)
- COBRA (radar) - a counter-battery radar system
- European Secure Software-defined Radio (ESSOR)
- FREMM (Multimission frigates)
- FSAF - PAAMS munition (surface-to-air anti-missile system)
- LSS, Logistic Support Ship
- European MALE RPAS (Medium Altitude Long Endurance Remotely Piloted Aircraft System)
- MMCM (Maritime Mine Counter Measures)
- MMF (Multinational Multi-Role Tanker Transport Fleet)
- MUSIS (MUltinational Space based Imaging System)
- NVC (Night Vision Capability)
- PPA (Multipurpose Patrol Ship)
- Tiger (attack helicopter)
- MAST-F (Missile Air-Sol Tactique Future)
- U212 NFS (Near Future Submarine)
See also[]
References[]
- ^ https://www.occar.int/about-us=. Retrieved 2020-05-18. Missing or empty
|title=
(help)
External links[]
- International military organizations
- International organizations based in Europe
- Bodies of the Common Security and Defence Policy