ATHENS, April 25 (Reuters) - The EU's mutual assistance clause is unambiguous, French President ​Emmanuel Macron said on Saturday, after the bloc's leaders ‌asked officials to prepare a blueprint for how it would work amid doubts over Washington's commitment to NATO.

President Donald Trump's criticism of NATO for failing ​to back the U.S. in the war with Iran ​and his threats earlier this year to seize Greenland ⁠from Denmark have created urgency in the European Union to ​define the mutual assistance provisions.

Unlike NATO's Article 5 collective defence pact, ​the EU's mutual assistance clause is not backed by operational plans or military structures. It has been activated only once, by France in 2015, after ​Islamist attackers killed 130 people in Paris.

On article 42, paragraph ​seven ... we know that for us, it is clear and there is ‌no ⁠room for interpretation or ambiguity, if I may say so, on this clause," Macron said at a news conference in Greece with Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.

Both Macron and the Greek prime minister ​said efforts to ​strengthen defence ⁠at the EU level should be thought of as a complement to the North Atlantic Treaty ​Organization (NATO) rather than a replacement for the alliance.

I ​would say ⁠that NATO and the United States should be satisfied that Europe is taking strategic autonomy seriously and investing more in defence. We ⁠are ​strengthening the European pillar of NATO ​in this way," Mitsotakis said.

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