Flag of the Western European Union

Western European Union
Use War flag and naval ensign
Proportion 2:3
Adopted 1993
Design A semicircle of 10 5-pointed gold stars on a blue field with white initials WEU and UEO in the centre.

The flag of the Western European Union (WEU) was dark blue with a semicircle of ten yellow five pointed stars, broken at the top, with the organisation's initials in the centre. Although it is the flag of a military organisation, it has rarely been flown in military situations.

Design

The flag is dark blue with a semicircle of ten yellow five pointed stars, broken at the top, with the white letters WEU horizontally across the centre and UEO vertically across the centre sharing the letter E with the former set of initials. UEO is the French abbreviations for Western European Union. The flag's blue colour with yellow stars is taken from the flag of the Council of Europe and European Union, however the number of stars is ten due to the WEU membership being of that number.

Use

The flag was rarely used, with the WEU being largely dormant before it was succeeded by the European Union's (EU) military activities. It was once flown on board an operational United States Navy warship, the USS John Rodgers, when it was used as the flagship of an Italian general (with a WEU crew) commanding WEU relief operations in Bosnia and Herzegovina. There are variants for its bodies, such as its assembly, used on formal occasions.[1] The WEU treaty is now terminated, with WEU activities wound up by June 2011, so no further use of the flag is foreseeable.

Previous designs

The current flag was in use only since 1993. Prior to that there was a similar design but with only nine stars (before Greece became a member) and the stars towards the base of the flag were progressively larger than those at the fringe. This design replaced an older version used since the WEU was founded, which was still dark blue but instead of stars, had five links forming an unbroken chain in the shape of an upside-down pentagon. There was a multicoloured border (red on the outside, gold, black and white) taken from the WEU member states' flags.

See also

References

  1. http://www.assembly-weu.org/en/presse/articles/2004/WEU29_1LuxWort_E.pdf

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/22/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.