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{{NPOV}}

[[Image:Javiersolana.jpg|150px|thumb|right|Javier Solana]]
[[Image:Javiersolana.jpg|150px|thumb|right|Javier Solana]]
'''Javier Solana''' (born [[July 14]], [[1942]]), the 1995-1999 [[NATO]] Secretary General, is, since late 1999, Secretary General of both the [[European Union]] and the 10 nation permanent member [[Western European Union]]. He also holds the title of the High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy of the EU, a position created by the European Union's "Council of Vienna" in December 1998.[[http://europa.eu.int/abc/doc/off/rg/en/1998/x0666.htm]] He has been officially designated to serve as the new Foreign Minister of the European Union under its new constitution, effective upon full ratification, due in 2006.[[http://www.euractiv.com/Article?tcmuri=tcm:29-118090-16&type=News]] As such he would combine the positions of Commissioner of External Relations (currently held by [[Benita Ferrero-Waldner]]) and Common Foreign and Security Policy chief currently held by him. He has a cabinet of his own. That advisory body is expected to grow. It is expected that ratification of the constitution will be complete sometime in 2006. Under the new constitution, he would become a powerful figure in the EU government, having a power of initiative only shared with the presidency. He would also automatically serve as Vice President of the [[European Commission]].
'''Javier Solana''' was born [[July 14]], [[1942]]) in Madrid. He is married to Concepcion Giménez Solana, and they have 2 children. He was a physicist who became an important [[Spain|Spanish]] [[politician]] in [[1976]], and then became [[NATO]] Secretary General in [[1995]] for 4 years before became Secretary General of both the [[European Union]] and the 10 nation permanent member [[Western European Union]]. He has been designated to serve as the Foreign Minister of the European Union in [[2006]] under its new proposed constitution.

{{NPOV}}


==Family history==
==Family history==
Solana was born on [[July 14]], [[1942]] as '''Javier Solana de Madariaga''' in [[Madrid]], [[Spain]]. On his maternal side, he is the grandson of famous Spanish diplomat and writer [[Salvador de Madariaga]]. Solana's maternal grandmother, Constance Archibald de Madariaga, was Scottish. She was a well known [[scholarly method|scholar]] and [[economic]] [[historian]].


Solana was born on [[July 14]], [[1942]] as '''Javier Solana de Madariaga''' in [[Madrid]], [[Spain]]. On his maternal side, he is the grandson of famous Spanish diplomat/writer [[Salvador de Madariaga]] ([[1886]]-[[1978]]). Salvador de Madariaga at various times served as Spanish ambassador to the [[United States]] and as chief of the Disarmament Section of the League of Nations. He also had a teaching career at England's [[Oxford University]]. Salvador de Madariaga was admiringly said to be one of the ten best conversationalists in all of Europe in his day. His writing career ranged from books about [[Christopher Columbus]] to analyses of what he considered to be the growing Communist threat to [[Latin America]]. Solana's maternal grandmother, Constance Archibald de Madariaga, was born Scottish. Like her diplomat-writer husband, she was also a well known scholar. She was professionally and academically known as an economic historian.
Javier is the younger of the two sons of scholar and writerNieves de Madariaga. She worked for 20 years in the FAO (Food and Agricultural Organization), a [[United Nations]] agency based in [[Rome]]. Nieves Mathews, is the name under which her Yale University book was published. His older brother Luis was opposed to [[Francisco Franco|Franco's]] dictatorship and was imprisoned for his political activities.

Javier is the younger of the two sons of de Madariaga's daughter Nieves ([[1917]]-[[2003]]). Solana's mother, like her more famous father, was also a recognized scholar and writer. Her full name at the time of her death was Nieves Hayat de Madariaga Mathews. She was employed for upwards of 20 years by the FAO (Food and Agricultural Organization), a [[United Nations]] agency headquartered in [[Rome]]. Her [[Yale University]]-published book on the life of [[Sir Francis Bacon]] was released in [[1996]]. The 606 page volume is entitled, ''Francis Bacon: The History of a Character Assassination''.[[http://www.sirbacon.org/nmathewsbook.htm]] Nieves de Madariaga Mathews claimed in her acknowledgements that the book was suggested and blessed by "my teacher, Osho, who thought highly of Francis Bacon and gave the book his blessing." As well as Rajneesh, Solana's mother was equally deeply and publicly influenced by the works of Immanuel Velikovsky. She devoted much time to her pursuit of both Velikovsky and Sir Francis Bacon literacy and causes.

Javier Solana's only maternal aunt is Isabel de Madariaga, a professor emeritus of Slavonic Studies at the College of London. A brilliant and thorough scholar, she has published extensive historical works, most notably about Russian empress, [[Catherine the Great]].

Javier Solana is the younger of Nieves de Madariaga Mathews' two sons. His older brother Luis Solana is a retired Spanish telephone company chief executive officer; he was the first known [[Socialist]] party member to join the [[Trilateral Commission]]. He was ardently opposed to the Spanish presidency of General Franco and was reportedly imprisoned for his political activity. Like his older brother, Javier Solana, is an active member of the Trilateral Commission. Although not eligible for membership as he is not an American citizen, Javier Solana is a frequent speaker and enjoys excellent relationships with members of the prestigious US based Council on Foreign Relations [[Council on Foreign Relations]] (CFR) He is likewise active with the Foreign Policy Association (FPA) as well as the New York city based East West Institute.

On Solana's paternal side, his grandfather was [[Don Ezequiel Solana de Ramirez]]. He was reportedly a revered educator and text book author who died in [[1931]]. Luis and Javier's father was Don Ezequiel Solana's son Francisco Solana.

==Education, Early Career, and Associations==

Javier Solana's most personally listed affiliation apart from the Socialist party is the Spanish chapter of the [[Club of Rome]]. On a personal level, he has been said to "eat little and sleep less;" his is reportedly "a monk's diet of fish and fruit." Some accounts state that although he is active in global disarmament efforts, his favorite personal hobby is "collecting guns".

Professionally, apart from his political careers, Solana holds an undergraduate degree in chemistry (Received in Spain in 1963), a Master's Degree obtained in Great Britain, and a doctorate in [[physics]]; he is fond of saying that "in a previous incarnation I worked as a professor in solid-state physics." He received his doctorate in 1968 while studying at the [[University of Virginia]] under a [[Fulbright Scholarship]] in the United States. He taught and worked as a researcher at the University of Virginia between 1968 and 1971.
Solana left the USA in [[1971]] to return to [[Spain]] with one of his teaching mentors. There he became employed by [[Complutense University]] of Madrid, Spain. Again, he was banished for political reasons, i.e. opposition to the Franco government. In [[1975]] his political nemesis, Generalissimo [[Francisco Franco]] died. Thereupon Solana, expelled in his youth for anti-Franco rebellion, gained a Complutense University professorship. That year, also, he involved himself in Spanish political life. As a representative of a teacher's union, he ran and won election as the Socialist candidate for the parliamentary seat he was to begin occupying in July [[1977]].

Solana has been a member of the Spanish socialist party [[PSOE]] since [[1964]]. That was the year as well that he joined the "Socialist Youth." In 1976, he represented the Socialists at an internation Socialist Congress held in the French province of Suresnes. He participated in the same Congress held in 1977 in Spain. Solana was designated secretary of Information and Press of the Federal Executive Commission of the PSOE. He was also active in the Teacher's Union, the Federation of Workers of the Education of the General Union of Workers (UGT). He was elected to the Spanish parliament as a representative of the Teacher's Union in 1977. He was continuously a member of the Spanish parliament and steadily advanced in the Ferdinand Gonzalez administration through various cabinet positions.

Between [[1982]] and [[1995]] he held powerful positions in the Spanish government including that of the Minister for Culture, Minister of Science and Education and lastly as Minister for Foreign Affairs ([[1992]]-[[1995]]). For most of those years he was also the official spokesman for the Spanish government. When it was Spain's turn to hold the rotating chairmanships/presidencies of the Council of the European Union and the Western European Union, Solana was designated by Spain to head those posts. Those dual posts coincided in 1995.

On [[November 20]]th, [[1995]], during Spain's turn at the rotating six month [[presidency of the European Union]], Javier Solana concluded a treaty between the European Union and [[Israel]].[[http://europa.eu.int/eur-lex/pri/en/oj/dat/2000/l_147/l_14720000621en00030156.pdf]] Although scheduled to go into effect on [[January 1]], [[1997]], the treaty was not ratified until [[June 1]], [[2000]].

== Role in NATO ==
On [[November 30]], [[1995]], Solana was appointed as [[NATO]] Secretary General. His election was a surprise to many, including 52 United States congressmen who telegraphically protested his appointment because of his alleged [[Marxism]] and open [[Castro]] sympathies. He had once been on the [[United States of America|USA's]] own subversive list. He had been best known, according to the Spanish press, as one of Spain's most vocal and prominent opponents of NATO. He had once written a pamphlet, "''50 Reasons to say NO to NATO''."

The Secretary General of NATO usually has a ministerial role, passing on instructions from the member nations' consensus to its military components, but during his 1995 to 1999 NATO tenure, Solana was given powers to make military decisions over [[Yugoslavia]]. For example, on [[January 30]], [[1999]], he was given the authority to make all further military decisions over NATO's [[Balkan]] operations. This included the decision on whether or not bombings should occur. [[Madeline Albright]], USA Secretary of State then said by way of explanation, "Solana has the power and has had it since [[January 30]], 1999. We are speaking with one voice through Javier Solana". On [[March 21]], [[1999]], USA President [[Bill Clinton]] told a national American television audience in regards to the forthcoming bombings: "I agree with Javier Solana's decision to do this." The order to commence bombing against Yugoslavian targets was subsequently given by Solana.

USA General [[Wesley Clark]], who as chief military officer of the NATO coalition reported to and took orders from Solana, reports in his book ''Waging Modern War'' that he once asked Solana the secret of his success. Solana reflected briefly and then answered, "First make no enemies. Then never ask a question to which you do not know or do not like the answer."

== Roles in the EU and the Western European Union ==

Solana's NATO term was to have expired in December, 1999; however, he left that job two months early, in October 1999, to take the newly created position of Office of the High Representative of the Common Foreign and Security Policy (also more informally called "Señor PESC]]" ("Mr PESC", in Spanish media)- Post of European Security Commissioner). He was also given the title and responsibility of Secretary General of the European Union; this was to give continuity between the EU's various 6 month rotating presidential administrations. Solana was described by the European press as "[[tsar]] of European military and foreign policy."

On [[November 20]], [[1999]], Javier Solana was also selected by the ten-nation core of the [[Western European Union]] (WEU) to be its pending Secretary General, pending unification with the European Union. However, on [[June 5]], [[2000]], the ten nation WEU noted that under its governing treaties complete merger could not occur, and therefore they supported a proposal to have the WEU Secretary General and CFSP High Representative (both roles of Solana) preside over the PSC (Political Security Committee) and convene the council of the European Union in the event of an emergency. (Such an emergency was declared after the ([[March 11]], [[2004]]) [[Madrid train bombings]].)

This appointment came on the same day as major world leaders were gathering at deceased British author Sir Harold Acton's old [[Italy|Italian]] villa, owned by [[New York University]]'s School of Law. The gathering was of the [[Third Way Movement]]. Solana was in attendance at the villa as were U.S. [[Bill Clinton|President]] and [[Hillary Clinton|Mrs. Clinton]], [[United Kingdom|British]] Prime Minister [[Tony Blair]], [[Romano Prodi]] and many other distinguished transatlantic leaders.

Javier Solana presides over Europe's Political Security Committee (PSC). All those seated on that committee hold ambassadorial rank in the EU and serve at the pleasure of Javier Solana. All foreign ambassadors of the European Union entity (as opposed to its individual countries) as well as all EU military personnel are accountable to the Council of the European Union through Javier Solana. The EU's hope is that the pending new European constitution will strengthen and extend this European federal-type set of structures.

In December 2003, Solana released the [[European Security Strategy]], "A Secure Europe in a Better World." [[http://ue.eu.int/cms3_fo/showPage.ASP?id=266&lang=EN&mode=g]].


Javier Solana did most or even all of the spearheading and coordination of the [[Barcelona Conference]], the launching pad of the 27 nation [[Barcelona Process]] expected to lead to a Mediterranean free trade zone by [[2010]]. This conference was opened by him on November 27, 1995. He opened by declaring that it was auspicious that it began on the 900th anniversary of the calling of the [[first crusade]] by [[Pope Urban II]], and commented "What a lot of intolerance and misunderstanding that led to." The conference concluded with the 27 nations signing the Barcelona Treaty.
==Physicist==
He went to [[Complutense University]] in [[Madrid]] where he was sanctioned by the University in [[1963]] for having organised an opposition forum. He also clandestinely joined [[PSOE]], at the time an illegal party under the [[dictatorship]] of [[Francisco Franco]]. He graduated in [[chemistry]] in [[1964]]. He gained a Master's and a doctorate in [[physics]] in Great Britain in [[1965]] and then went to the [[United States of America]] for 6 years studying at various universities on a [[Fulbright Scholarship]]. During this time he joined in the [[protests]] against the [[war]] in [[Vietnam]]. He received his doctorate in [[1968]] from the [[University of Virginia]], where he taught and researched until [[1971]]. Returning to Spain he became a lecture at Complutense University, becoming a Professor 2 years later. During this time he published around 30 articles. He is fond of saying that in a previous incarnation he worked as a solid state physicist.


Solana has also negotiated numerous "Treaties of Association" between the European Union and various Mideast countries. In his tenure with the European Union, Javier Solana has been relatively busy on the world stage negotiating various integration treaties with South American countries such as [[Bolivia]] and [[Colombia]]. He has also been a vital part of the Quartet for Peace in the Middle East along with [[Kofi Annan]] of the [[United Nations]], a [[Russia]]n representative, and a USA representative. He has been said to be a primary architect of "The Roadmap" itself issued by "The Quartet",
==Spanish Politics==
He was elected as the Secretary of the [[socialism|socialist]] [[PSOE]] party in it's first legal, national congress in decades in [[1976]], and continued in that role for 5 years. As a leading PSOE member, personal friend of PSOE leader [[Felipe González]] and representative of a teacher's union from the University he won a parliamentary seat as the PSOE candidate. He was designated secretary of PSOE's Federal Executive Commission. In [[1976]] and [[1977]] he represented the Socialists at an internation Socialist Congress held in the French province of Suresnes.


In November 2004, Solana assisted Britain, France, and Germany in negotiating a nuclear material enrichment freeze with the leadership of Iran. The EU through Solana stated it hoped to avoid another American-Iraqi style invasion through this and future negotiations. [http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsPackageArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=617235&section=news Reuters]
===Government===
Some British and American observers stated that perhaps the EU's motives were to cater to Jacques Santers' public calls to dislodge the USA as the only superpower in the coming 21st century struggle for increasingly scarce global resources.
On [[December 2nd]] [[1982]] González came to power. Solana was immediately named Minister for Culture. On [[5th July]] [[1985]] he was also made the official spokesman for the Government until [[1988]]. 2 weeks later he became Education Minister. He was then made Minister for Foreign Affairs on [[July 22nd]] [[1992]]. It was during these 13 years that his reputation as a discreet diplomat grew. By going to the foreign Ministry in the later years of González administration avoided the political scandal that characterised it's the last years.


==NATO==
== "Solania" ==
Solana claimed a pivotal role in unifying the remainder of the former Yugoslavian federation. Reportedly, he proposed accommodating the Montenegrine desires within the new loose union of [[Serbia and Montenegro]] (2003), instead of full independence of the parts. Solana claimed this was done to avoid a domino effect from [[Kosovo]] and [[Vojvodina]] independence demands. Local media named the new country "Solania" . Still other observers have pointed to this as a "Balkan reduction."
On [[5th December]] [[1995]], 4 months before the end of the PSOE era, and amid rumours that Solana would run for President during those elections, he became Secretary General of [[NATO]], replacing [[Sergio Balanzino]], and becoming the last Minister to leave González' original cabinet. His election was a surprise to many as he had been a prominent opponent of NATO until the early eighties. Solana immediately had to deal with the NATO peace mission that came about as a result of the [[Dayton agreement]] in the former [[Yugoslavia|Yugoslavian]] region of [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]]. This force was replaced in December [[1996]] by a stabilisation force. In [[1997]] he obtained an agreement with [[Russia]] that allowed the countries of the former Eastern European block to join NATO, something that was considered a considerable diplomatic achivement, as it formally ended hostilities between Russia and the NATO axis.
He was replaced as Secretary General by [[George Robertson]] on [[6th October]] [[1999]],leaving NATO 2 months earlier than scheduled.


== Future ==
General [[Wesley Clark]] once asked Solana the secret of his diplomatic success. He answered, "Make no enemies, and never ask a question to which you do not know or like the answer." He has been described as a "squarer of circles".


[[As of 2004]], there is increased reliance on Javier Solana by the EU and the WEU. On [[June 29]], 2004 Javier Solana was selected by the [[Council of the European Union]] to be its first Foreign Minister under the new [[EU constitution]]. Until formal ratification of the constitution occurs (planned for [[2006]]), Solana is ''de facto'' exercising the defined powers of that future office as well as being responsible for the approximately 26 billion [[euro]]s budget (formerly reserved for the Commissioner of External Affairs).
==EU Foreign Affairs==
Solana no longer travels with the [[EU presidency|EU rotating presidency]] and the Commissioner of External Affairs as the reigning EU "troika" -- since the vote of the Council of Ministers, Solana now speaks and travels as the sole voice rather than one of three voices.


On [[July 20th [[2004]] Israel's Prime Minister [[Ariel Sharon]] declined to meet with Solana, saying that because of an EU vote against Israel at the UN Israel would not work with the EU, notwithstanding it's prominence on the Quartet for Peace in the [[Middle East]]. Solana stunned the world, Israel included, by replying that like it or not, both he and the EU were there to stay on the Israeli-Palestinian decision making processes. He is presently may be the major player in structuring a peace plan between Israel and Palestine, with Europe combining with other major players to guarantee regional security for the time any treaty achieved is in force. He is achieving this both through his "Barcelona Process" and the "Roadmap for Peace" in the Middle East, for which he is also acknowledged as a major architect.[[http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2004/03/e90a2e07-99cb-40e5-b459-a761590a4915.html]]
Solana immediately became the newly created High Representative of the Common Foreign and Security Policy, and also the Secretary General of the European Union. The latter post gives continuity between the EU's rotating presidencies. On [[November 20]] [[1999]] he was also selected to be the new Secretary General of the [[Western European Union]] (WEU). In this role he presides over Europe's Political Security Committee (PSC). Solana has received criticism for the extent of his new powers. He has said that even under the new constitution the Foreign Minister can only act when there is unanimity amongst EU member states.


The Clinton White House announced in a press conference that Javier Solana was the fulfillment of [[Henry Kissinger|Henry Kissinger's]] long stated wish to have only one phone number to ring up for Europe.[[http://www.aegis.com/news/afp/2000/AF0005B6.html]][[http://www.usembassy.it/file2000_05/alia/a0052504.htm]] Post June 29, 2004, many other sources were making the same observation -- that Kissinger (and anybody else) could ring up Europe by calling just calling Javier Solana.
In December 2003 he released the [[European Security Strategy]]. Solana has also negotiated numerous Treaties of Association between the European Union and various [[Middle East|Middle Eastern]] and [[Latin American]] countries. He has played an important role working with the [[UN]], [[Russia]] and the [[USA]] quartet in the Middle East. He continues to be a primary architect of "The Roadmap" to work towards peaceful end to the conflict in [[Palestine]]. On [[July 20th]] [[2004]] Israeli Prime Minister [[Ariel Sharon]] refused to meet Solana, saying that Israel would not work with the EU


Some Solana-watchers are noting his rise to power with growing fascination. Solana has been criticised for his new powers, and has publicly downplayed his potential powers by saying that even under the new constitution the new Foreign Minister, with all its projected powers, can only be exercised if there is complete unanimity among EU member states. Given Solana's talents in securing consensus but also bringing pressure to bear where necessary, people are interested to watch how Solana and/or his successors in this office play out the role of the new EU Foreign Minister. In end of February Mr. Elmar Brok, German Christian Democrat deputy, and chairman of the European parliament's foreign affairs committee warned in Brussels that Solana "could become too powerful and could be put in charge of an "uncontrollable" new bureaucracy". [[http://news.ft.com/cms/s/9309cc5a-88e2-11d9-b7ed-00000e2511c8,dwp_uuid=d4f2ab60-c98e-11d7-81c6-0820abe49a01.html]]
Solana played a pivotal role in unifying the remainder of the former Yugoslavian federation. He proposed that [[Montenegro]] formed a union with [[Serbia]] instead of having full independence. Solana stated this was done to avoid a domino effect from [[Kosovo]] and [[Vojvodina]] independence demands. On [[June 29]], 2004 Solana was selected by the [[Council of the European Union]] to be its first Foreign Minister if the new [[EU constitution]] is ratified in [[2006]]. Solana is effectively exercising these powers already and has a 26 billion [[Euro]] budget. In November 2004, Solana assisted Britain, France, and Germany in negotiating a nuclear material enrichment freeze with Iran. The EU stated it hoped to avoid another invasion like the Iraq one through this and future negotiations. On 21 January 2005 Solana invited [[Ukraine|Ukraine's]] President [[Viktor Yushchenko]] to discuss future EU membership.


On 21 January 2005 Solana invited Ukraine's president-elect Viktor Yushchenko to discuss the possibility of a future EU membership. The report also stated that the EU's Executive Commission had no plans to consider Ukrainian entry into the EU.
== Personal life ==


== Personality ==
Solana reportedly has never moved his immediate family - wife and children - to [[Brussels]], his main residence since taking his NATO post in the late fall of 1995 and his European Union posts thereafter. He has admitted that his family life has suffered as a result of the schedules from his NATO post and EU jobs forward. He has been said to eat little and sleep less, surviving on a diet of fish and fruit. He is a [[gun]] collector.


As the anti-Franco activist in his youth and the anti-NATO activist in his 40s combined with his leadership of NATO in his 50s, Javier Solana has sometimes been called a "squarer of circles" (i.e. reconciler of opposites). Past illustrations of this (whether intentional or not) were his marriage to the daughter (Concepción Giménez) of a top Franco general and by his heading NATO in his fifties. He has also played an active role in the various Mideast peace processes at least between 1991 and the present time.
He is a frequent speaker at the prestigious US based [[Council on Foreign Relations]] (CFR) He is likewise active with the Foreign Policy Association (FPA) as well as the New York city based East West Institute.


Javier Solana is married to Concepcion Giménez Solana, herself a teacher. They are the parents of two grown children: a son, Diego, and a daughter, Vega. Solana reportedly has never moved his immediate family - wife and children - to [[Brussels]], his main residence since taking his NATO post in the late fall of 1995 and his European Union posts thereafter. He has admitted that his family life has suffered as a result of the schedules from his NATO post and EU jobs forward.
He is a [[Knight]] of the Order of [[St Michael]] and [[St George]], a member of the Spanish section of the [[Club of Rome]], and has received the Grand Cross of Isabel the [[Catholic]] in Spain


== External links==
== External links==
*[http://ue.eu.int/solana/cv.asp Curriculum Vitae of Javier Solana]
* [http://ue.eu.int/solana/cv.asp Curriculum Vitae of Javier Solana]
*[http://www.setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/en_GB/infoBios/setimes/resource_centre/bios/solana_javier shorter biography]
*[http://www.setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/en_GB/infoBios/setimes/resource_centre/bios/solana_javier shorter biography]
*[http://www.cidob.org/bios/castellano/lideres/s-041.htm Biography in Spanish]


[[Category:1942 births|Solana, Javier]]
[[Category:1942 births|Solana, Javier]]

Revision as of 10:50, 11 March 2005

File:Javiersolana.jpg
Javier Solana

Javier Solana (born July 14, 1942), the 1995-1999 NATO Secretary General, is, since late 1999, Secretary General of both the European Union and the 10 nation permanent member Western European Union. He also holds the title of the High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy of the EU, a position created by the European Union's "Council of Vienna" in December 1998.[[1]] He has been officially designated to serve as the new Foreign Minister of the European Union under its new constitution, effective upon full ratification, due in 2006.[[2]] As such he would combine the positions of Commissioner of External Relations (currently held by Benita Ferrero-Waldner) and Common Foreign and Security Policy chief currently held by him. He has a cabinet of his own. That advisory body is expected to grow. It is expected that ratification of the constitution will be complete sometime in 2006. Under the new constitution, he would become a powerful figure in the EU government, having a power of initiative only shared with the presidency. He would also automatically serve as Vice President of the European Commission.

Family history

Solana was born on July 14, 1942 as Javier Solana de Madariaga in Madrid, Spain. On his maternal side, he is the grandson of famous Spanish diplomat/writer Salvador de Madariaga (1886-1978). Salvador de Madariaga at various times served as Spanish ambassador to the United States and as chief of the Disarmament Section of the League of Nations. He also had a teaching career at England's Oxford University. Salvador de Madariaga was admiringly said to be one of the ten best conversationalists in all of Europe in his day. His writing career ranged from books about Christopher Columbus to analyses of what he considered to be the growing Communist threat to Latin America. Solana's maternal grandmother, Constance Archibald de Madariaga, was born Scottish. Like her diplomat-writer husband, she was also a well known scholar. She was professionally and academically known as an economic historian.

Javier is the younger of the two sons of de Madariaga's daughter Nieves (1917-2003). Solana's mother, like her more famous father, was also a recognized scholar and writer. Her full name at the time of her death was Nieves Hayat de Madariaga Mathews. She was employed for upwards of 20 years by the FAO (Food and Agricultural Organization), a United Nations agency headquartered in Rome. Her Yale University-published book on the life of Sir Francis Bacon was released in 1996. The 606 page volume is entitled, Francis Bacon: The History of a Character Assassination.[[3]] Nieves de Madariaga Mathews claimed in her acknowledgements that the book was suggested and blessed by "my teacher, Osho, who thought highly of Francis Bacon and gave the book his blessing." As well as Rajneesh, Solana's mother was equally deeply and publicly influenced by the works of Immanuel Velikovsky. She devoted much time to her pursuit of both Velikovsky and Sir Francis Bacon literacy and causes.

Javier Solana's only maternal aunt is Isabel de Madariaga, a professor emeritus of Slavonic Studies at the College of London. A brilliant and thorough scholar, she has published extensive historical works, most notably about Russian empress, Catherine the Great.

Javier Solana is the younger of Nieves de Madariaga Mathews' two sons. His older brother Luis Solana is a retired Spanish telephone company chief executive officer; he was the first known Socialist party member to join the Trilateral Commission. He was ardently opposed to the Spanish presidency of General Franco and was reportedly imprisoned for his political activity. Like his older brother, Javier Solana, is an active member of the Trilateral Commission. Although not eligible for membership as he is not an American citizen, Javier Solana is a frequent speaker and enjoys excellent relationships with members of the prestigious US based Council on Foreign Relations Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) He is likewise active with the Foreign Policy Association (FPA) as well as the New York city based East West Institute.

On Solana's paternal side, his grandfather was Don Ezequiel Solana de Ramirez. He was reportedly a revered educator and text book author who died in 1931. Luis and Javier's father was Don Ezequiel Solana's son Francisco Solana.

Education, Early Career, and Associations

Javier Solana's most personally listed affiliation apart from the Socialist party is the Spanish chapter of the Club of Rome. On a personal level, he has been said to "eat little and sleep less;" his is reportedly "a monk's diet of fish and fruit." Some accounts state that although he is active in global disarmament efforts, his favorite personal hobby is "collecting guns".

Professionally, apart from his political careers, Solana holds an undergraduate degree in chemistry (Received in Spain in 1963), a Master's Degree obtained in Great Britain, and a doctorate in physics; he is fond of saying that "in a previous incarnation I worked as a professor in solid-state physics." He received his doctorate in 1968 while studying at the University of Virginia under a Fulbright Scholarship in the United States. He taught and worked as a researcher at the University of Virginia between 1968 and 1971. Solana left the USA in 1971 to return to Spain with one of his teaching mentors. There he became employed by Complutense University of Madrid, Spain. Again, he was banished for political reasons, i.e. opposition to the Franco government. In 1975 his political nemesis, Generalissimo Francisco Franco died. Thereupon Solana, expelled in his youth for anti-Franco rebellion, gained a Complutense University professorship. That year, also, he involved himself in Spanish political life. As a representative of a teacher's union, he ran and won election as the Socialist candidate for the parliamentary seat he was to begin occupying in July 1977.

Solana has been a member of the Spanish socialist party PSOE since 1964. That was the year as well that he joined the "Socialist Youth." In 1976, he represented the Socialists at an internation Socialist Congress held in the French province of Suresnes. He participated in the same Congress held in 1977 in Spain. Solana was designated secretary of Information and Press of the Federal Executive Commission of the PSOE. He was also active in the Teacher's Union, the Federation of Workers of the Education of the General Union of Workers (UGT). He was elected to the Spanish parliament as a representative of the Teacher's Union in 1977. He was continuously a member of the Spanish parliament and steadily advanced in the Ferdinand Gonzalez administration through various cabinet positions.

Between 1982 and 1995 he held powerful positions in the Spanish government including that of the Minister for Culture, Minister of Science and Education and lastly as Minister for Foreign Affairs (1992-1995). For most of those years he was also the official spokesman for the Spanish government. When it was Spain's turn to hold the rotating chairmanships/presidencies of the Council of the European Union and the Western European Union, Solana was designated by Spain to head those posts. Those dual posts coincided in 1995.

On November 20th, 1995, during Spain's turn at the rotating six month presidency of the European Union, Javier Solana concluded a treaty between the European Union and Israel.[[4]] Although scheduled to go into effect on January 1, 1997, the treaty was not ratified until June 1, 2000.

Role in NATO

On November 30, 1995, Solana was appointed as NATO Secretary General. His election was a surprise to many, including 52 United States congressmen who telegraphically protested his appointment because of his alleged Marxism and open Castro sympathies. He had once been on the USA's own subversive list. He had been best known, according to the Spanish press, as one of Spain's most vocal and prominent opponents of NATO. He had once written a pamphlet, "50 Reasons to say NO to NATO."

The Secretary General of NATO usually has a ministerial role, passing on instructions from the member nations' consensus to its military components, but during his 1995 to 1999 NATO tenure, Solana was given powers to make military decisions over Yugoslavia. For example, on January 30, 1999, he was given the authority to make all further military decisions over NATO's Balkan operations. This included the decision on whether or not bombings should occur. Madeline Albright, USA Secretary of State then said by way of explanation, "Solana has the power and has had it since January 30, 1999. We are speaking with one voice through Javier Solana". On March 21, 1999, USA President Bill Clinton told a national American television audience in regards to the forthcoming bombings: "I agree with Javier Solana's decision to do this." The order to commence bombing against Yugoslavian targets was subsequently given by Solana.

USA General Wesley Clark, who as chief military officer of the NATO coalition reported to and took orders from Solana, reports in his book Waging Modern War that he once asked Solana the secret of his success. Solana reflected briefly and then answered, "First make no enemies. Then never ask a question to which you do not know or do not like the answer."

Roles in the EU and the Western European Union

Solana's NATO term was to have expired in December, 1999; however, he left that job two months early, in October 1999, to take the newly created position of Office of the High Representative of the Common Foreign and Security Policy (also more informally called "Señor PESC]]" ("Mr PESC", in Spanish media)- Post of European Security Commissioner). He was also given the title and responsibility of Secretary General of the European Union; this was to give continuity between the EU's various 6 month rotating presidential administrations. Solana was described by the European press as "tsar of European military and foreign policy."

On November 20, 1999, Javier Solana was also selected by the ten-nation core of the Western European Union (WEU) to be its pending Secretary General, pending unification with the European Union. However, on June 5, 2000, the ten nation WEU noted that under its governing treaties complete merger could not occur, and therefore they supported a proposal to have the WEU Secretary General and CFSP High Representative (both roles of Solana) preside over the PSC (Political Security Committee) and convene the council of the European Union in the event of an emergency. (Such an emergency was declared after the (March 11, 2004) Madrid train bombings.)

This appointment came on the same day as major world leaders were gathering at deceased British author Sir Harold Acton's old Italian villa, owned by New York University's School of Law. The gathering was of the Third Way Movement. Solana was in attendance at the villa as were U.S. President and Mrs. Clinton, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Romano Prodi and many other distinguished transatlantic leaders.

Javier Solana presides over Europe's Political Security Committee (PSC). All those seated on that committee hold ambassadorial rank in the EU and serve at the pleasure of Javier Solana. All foreign ambassadors of the European Union entity (as opposed to its individual countries) as well as all EU military personnel are accountable to the Council of the European Union through Javier Solana. The EU's hope is that the pending new European constitution will strengthen and extend this European federal-type set of structures.

In December 2003, Solana released the European Security Strategy, "A Secure Europe in a Better World." [[5]].

Javier Solana did most or even all of the spearheading and coordination of the Barcelona Conference, the launching pad of the 27 nation Barcelona Process expected to lead to a Mediterranean free trade zone by 2010. This conference was opened by him on November 27, 1995. He opened by declaring that it was auspicious that it began on the 900th anniversary of the calling of the first crusade by Pope Urban II, and commented "What a lot of intolerance and misunderstanding that led to." The conference concluded with the 27 nations signing the Barcelona Treaty.

Solana has also negotiated numerous "Treaties of Association" between the European Union and various Mideast countries. In his tenure with the European Union, Javier Solana has been relatively busy on the world stage negotiating various integration treaties with South American countries such as Bolivia and Colombia. He has also been a vital part of the Quartet for Peace in the Middle East along with Kofi Annan of the United Nations, a Russian representative, and a USA representative. He has been said to be a primary architect of "The Roadmap" itself issued by "The Quartet",

In November 2004, Solana assisted Britain, France, and Germany in negotiating a nuclear material enrichment freeze with the leadership of Iran. The EU through Solana stated it hoped to avoid another American-Iraqi style invasion through this and future negotiations. Reuters Some British and American observers stated that perhaps the EU's motives were to cater to Jacques Santers' public calls to dislodge the USA as the only superpower in the coming 21st century struggle for increasingly scarce global resources.

"Solania"

Solana claimed a pivotal role in unifying the remainder of the former Yugoslavian federation. Reportedly, he proposed accommodating the Montenegrine desires within the new loose union of Serbia and Montenegro (2003), instead of full independence of the parts. Solana claimed this was done to avoid a domino effect from Kosovo and Vojvodina independence demands. Local media named the new country "Solania" . Still other observers have pointed to this as a "Balkan reduction."

Future

As of 2004, there is increased reliance on Javier Solana by the EU and the WEU. On June 29, 2004 Javier Solana was selected by the Council of the European Union to be its first Foreign Minister under the new EU constitution. Until formal ratification of the constitution occurs (planned for 2006), Solana is de facto exercising the defined powers of that future office as well as being responsible for the approximately 26 billion euros budget (formerly reserved for the Commissioner of External Affairs). Solana no longer travels with the EU rotating presidency and the Commissioner of External Affairs as the reigning EU "troika" -- since the vote of the Council of Ministers, Solana now speaks and travels as the sole voice rather than one of three voices.

On [[July 20th 2004 Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon declined to meet with Solana, saying that because of an EU vote against Israel at the UN Israel would not work with the EU, notwithstanding it's prominence on the Quartet for Peace in the Middle East. Solana stunned the world, Israel included, by replying that like it or not, both he and the EU were there to stay on the Israeli-Palestinian decision making processes. He is presently may be the major player in structuring a peace plan between Israel and Palestine, with Europe combining with other major players to guarantee regional security for the time any treaty achieved is in force. He is achieving this both through his "Barcelona Process" and the "Roadmap for Peace" in the Middle East, for which he is also acknowledged as a major architect.[[6]]

The Clinton White House announced in a press conference that Javier Solana was the fulfillment of Henry Kissinger's long stated wish to have only one phone number to ring up for Europe.[[7]][[8]] Post June 29, 2004, many other sources were making the same observation -- that Kissinger (and anybody else) could ring up Europe by calling just calling Javier Solana.

Some Solana-watchers are noting his rise to power with growing fascination. Solana has been criticised for his new powers, and has publicly downplayed his potential powers by saying that even under the new constitution the new Foreign Minister, with all its projected powers, can only be exercised if there is complete unanimity among EU member states. Given Solana's talents in securing consensus but also bringing pressure to bear where necessary, people are interested to watch how Solana and/or his successors in this office play out the role of the new EU Foreign Minister. In end of February Mr. Elmar Brok, German Christian Democrat deputy, and chairman of the European parliament's foreign affairs committee warned in Brussels that Solana "could become too powerful and could be put in charge of an "uncontrollable" new bureaucracy". [[9]]

On 21 January 2005 Solana invited Ukraine's president-elect Viktor Yushchenko to discuss the possibility of a future EU membership. The report also stated that the EU's Executive Commission had no plans to consider Ukrainian entry into the EU.

Personality

As the anti-Franco activist in his youth and the anti-NATO activist in his 40s combined with his leadership of NATO in his 50s, Javier Solana has sometimes been called a "squarer of circles" (i.e. reconciler of opposites). Past illustrations of this (whether intentional or not) were his marriage to the daughter (Concepción Giménez) of a top Franco general and by his heading NATO in his fifties. He has also played an active role in the various Mideast peace processes at least between 1991 and the present time.

Javier Solana is married to Concepcion Giménez Solana, herself a teacher. They are the parents of two grown children: a son, Diego, and a daughter, Vega. Solana reportedly has never moved his immediate family - wife and children - to Brussels, his main residence since taking his NATO post in the late fall of 1995 and his European Union posts thereafter. He has admitted that his family life has suffered as a result of the schedules from his NATO post and EU jobs forward.

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