NATO AND THE TRANSATLANTIC DIVIDE
Fifty four years ago, in April 1949,
President Truman signed the North Atlantic Treaty, launching NATO--the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization. In his
signing message, he said that the allies were dedicated to achieving unity on
the great principles of human freedom and justice, and at the same time, to
permit in other respects the greatest diversity of which the human mind is
capable. That dedication summarizes well
the challenges NATO faces today, accommodating diversity while achieving unity.
Until now NATO has successfully met a number of challenges but those it faces
today are no doubt the greatest. Those
challenges--arbitrarily they can be divided into six points of challenge--arise
out of the transition from the Cold War, September 11 and its aftermath, the
emergence of the European Union, the evolution of the Transatlantic
relationship, the changing strategic plan of the US military, and the realities
of the world economy. This paper looks
at how these six points of challenge might shape the future of NATO.
I. The Transition from the Cold War
In the years that followed its creation, NATO
grew from its original membership of six Western European nations to include
the Federal Republic of Germany, Spain, Portugal, Greece and Turkey, eventually
reaching its present membership of 19 nations, soon to be twenty-six. NATO weathered a number of crises during
those years: the seizure of the Suez canal, the withdrawal of French military
forces, the 1961 Soviet threat to Berlin,
the invasion of Czechoslovakia, and the deployment of American Pershing
nuclear-tipped missiles in Europe in the 1980s.
Yet NATO never had to invoke the mutual defense obligations of its
members under Article V of the Treaty during the Cold War.
The end of the Cold War in 1989--the end of
the Soviet threat--marked the first of two watershed events of the NATO-era.
NATO faced the challenge of finding a new mission, a raison d’etre.
It began to grapple with two issues: enlargement of its membership and out of
area operation. Enlargement, because it
involved the Central and Eastern European countries--former Warsaw pact
members--raised sensitive issues concerning NATO’s objectives and the relationship between
Russia and the West. To transition
toward a non-confrontational relationship, NATO formed the Partnership for
Peace and the NATO-Russia Council, a non-military working arrangement with
Russia which helped eventually to overcome Russian objections to NATO
membership of Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary in1999. The out of area issue became moot when NATO
intervened in the Balkan wars in 1995.
NATO members had never reached consensus on a definition of NATO’s
area of operation. Nevertheless, NATO
entered the war in Bosnia in 1995. It
intervened after having dithered on the sidelines until the Srebenica massacre. Russia, because of its historic association
with fellow Slavs in Serbia, was expected to veto any Security Council
resolution. NATO therefore became the
only game in town. For the first time, it invoked Article V of the Treaty and
moved multinational forces into Bosnia to stabilize the country. Over 12,000 troops remain there today. In April 1999, after unsuccessful efforts to
negotiate an end to ethnic cleansing, NATO launched the air war in Kosovo. It ended 77 days later when Serbia withdrew,
leaving NATO (along with the United Nations) in charge of Kosovo where it
remains today with a multinational stabilization force of some 20,000
troops.
However, the long term mission of NATO
remained, and remains undefined. The location of its headquarters is emblematic
of the unsettled state of its future. It
is located in a collection of non-descript, formerly industrial buildings on
the outskirts of Brussels, taken over by NATO in 1966 as a temporary
headquarters when President DeGaulle withdrew his forces from NATO and evicted
it from its Fontainebleau headquarters. Ambitious plans for a permanent
headquarters, a gleaming high-rise building, remain on the drawing board.
II. September 11 and the Prague Summit
Then came September 11, 2001, the second
watershed event. It galvanized
NATO. Within days, the North Atlantic Council,
NATO’s
governing body, invoked Article V. When
President Bush launched the war on terrorism, NATO offered support. NATO AWACS patrolled over the United States
and German troops were later airlifted to Kabul to serve in the Afghan
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF).
But the United States rejected a formal role for NATO in the war in
Afghanistan. And over the next year,
tensions grew between the US and Europe, aggravated by the US’s
increasingly unilateralist policies, such as its rejection of the Kyoto
protocol, of the test ban treaty, and of the International Criminal Court, its
deployment of a missile defense system, its imposition of steel import quotas,
and by Europe’s
restrictions on genetically modified foods, and, eventually, by the war in
Iraq.
As for the US-NATO relationship, the critical
issue became the US commitment to the war on terror. The Balkan wars, in which
US forces bore the brunt of the offensive operations, had brought into sharp
focus a huge capability gap between US forces and those of the European
countries. As US defense expenditures increased by some $50 billion, it sharply
criticized the failure of European nations to spend on defense and on
modernizing their military forces. When
the war on terror came along, the US saw NATO becoming irrelevant unless Europe
stepped up to the plate and made meaningful commitments to enhance its military
capabilities.
Faced with what many saw as an existential
crisis, NATO in November 2002 convened a summit conference in Prague, the
Prague summit. President Bush spoke,
confirming the US’s continuing commitment to NATO but urging
adoption of the summit agenda. That
agenda reflected US insistence that the NATO countries become effective
partners in the war on terror, specifically by being able to participate in
high intensity warfare. The summit
agenda became the linchpin for NATO’s future. It has two principal components.
First, admission of new members. NATO agreed to invite seven Eastern European
countries, whose membership the US had long advocated, to join: the three
Baltic countries, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, and four Balkan countries,
Romania, Bulgaria, Slovenia, and Slovakia, bringing its membership to 26. To qualify, each had to commit to adopt major
political and military reforms. The
political reforms would require each country to commit to civilian control of
its military, to respect for minority rights, to adoption of free market economies and democratic
institutions, and to reform of their judicial systems to further the rule of
law and to root out corruption. Endemic corruption and organized
crime--trafficking in drugs, women and weapons, not to mention cigarettes--are
rife in the Balkan countries and represent a major sector of their
economies. The military reforms will
require reduction in size of the military but increase in its capabilities,
mobility, interoperability with NATO forces, and availability for niche
contributions, such as radiological, biological and chemical defense. This will
mean costly and wrenching changes for the former Warsaw pact nations whose
forces are stocked with obsolete Russian weapons and trained in Russian
tactical doctrine. The new member
countries are expected to be able meet these conditions of membership over
time, but not without difficulty.
Second, to meet US criticism of their
deficiencies, the Western European members committed to reform their militaries
to improve their capabilities in specific areas. With the end of the cold war, massive
armies became obsolete. The Prague summit calls for the development
of lean and mobile forces and of specific capabilities, such as air lift and
aerial refueling, precision guided munitions, chemical, biological and
radiological defense, intelligence and surveillance, and command and
control. The commitment is to lead to
the creation of a rapidly deployable,
well equipped NATO Response Force (NRF) of 20,000 troops by 2006.
Accomplishment of the Prague Summit agenda is
the key to the planned evolution of NATO.
In the US view, military reform
is critical to NATO’s ability to function as a partner of the US
and remain relevant in the war on terror. It may also determine whether NATO as
we have known it will survive. The
Secretary General, ever optimistic, nevertheless has acknowledged that
compliance has hit some bumps in the road.
Although the smaller countries have shown themselves capable of making
niche contributions, such as deployment of a Czech chemical warfare unit in
Kuwait, the major commitments such as for transport aircraft have lagged. (A
recent report states, however, that seven western European countries have
signed a contract to purchase 180 military transport planes from AirBus
Industries for $24B)
There are reasons for pessimism about the
success of the Prague Summit commitments.
One reason is the structure of defense budgets of Western European
nations. The NATO countries’
annual defense budgets aggregate $145 B, less than 2% of GDP, compared to the
US budget of $400 B, 3.5% GDP. And their
defense budgets are heavily weighted with personnel costs. Those costs amount to some 60%, much of this
for retirement benefits, compared to less than 35% for the US. European defense budget support a bloated
military–more
fat than muscle-- in part because of military labor unions. The Belgian army, for example, employs
hundreds of barbers and musicians but lacks the funds to replace aging
helicopters or conduct significant research.
A visitor to Europe sees little evidence of
political will to make major changes.
Economically, European countries are burdened with costly but popular
social welfare programs. Politically,
the countries, long accustomed to enjoying the protective umbrella of the US,
lack its global strategic outlook and an appreciation of global threats. Indeed, some may fear the US more than rogue
states. Europeans tend to feel that
their history is behind them and that they are not threatened. They find comfort in their enormous
achievement of transforming the continent from a site of recurring wars to one
of peace and unity. As Robert Kagan has
characterized the transatlantic gap, Americans are from Mars, Europeans are
from Venus
So September 11 and its aftermath hangs like
a dark cloud over NATO’s future.
III.
NATO and the European Union
Another reason for pessimism about the
prospects for the Prague summit is the uncertainty surrounding NATO’s
relationship to the European Union. Over
the past ten to fifteen years, the EU has grown from a low profile trade pact
into an economic and political powerhouse. It now has 15 members, to increase
to 25 by 2007 with the admission of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, Poland,
Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Slovenia, and Cyprus and Malta The membership of the two organizations will
then largely overlap, the principal exceptions being Turkey, which is a member
of NATO but not among those expected to join the EU by 2007, and of course the
US. The EU’s
population approaches 400 million and its GDP $8 trillion, rivaling that of the
US. Charles Kupchan has predicted that
as its economic muscle grows and its institutions acquire more heft, it will
become a powerful competitor of the US on the world stage.
The EU’s leadership is ambitious, pushing the
envelope as a supra-national organization.
It is on the verge of adopting a constitution for Europe and is moving
toward a common foreign and defense policy.
France, Germany, Belgium and Luxembourg are discussing plans for an
independent military headquarters to field a joint rapid reaction force of some
60,000 troops, the European Defense Force (EDF). Although ostensibly intended to strengthen
NATO, it also reflects the aim of some European leaders to achieve greater
independence from the US. Britain, the
US and some other European countries have warned that nothing should be done to
harm NATO. But Western Europe may be
intent on flexing its muscles vis a vis the United States, although, given
their reluctance to spend money on defense, there may in fact be little muscle
to flex. Indeed some see it as a move
less motivated by defense policy than by domestic politics. In any event, just how an EDF will relate to
the NATO NRF remains a question no one in Europe seems prepared to answer.
That a European Defense Force within the EU
is even under consideration, however, bespeaks the EU’s military ambitions. The EU and NATO have
negotiated protocols for EU participation in NATO military operations. The EU
is participating in Kosovo and has taken over NATO’s
peacekeeping role in Macedonia (in deference to Greek sensibilities, referred
to as FYROM--Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.). And it recently agreed to
send a peace keeping force to Congo independent of NATO, a first for the EU.
These developments raise existential
questions about the future of NATO. Will the EU and NATO evolve into
competitors or will they fill complimentary roles? Will the EU pursue a policy
that will make NATO irrelevant or a mere adjunct of the EU? If the European nations
meet their Prague Summit defense commitments, will their contributions go to
the NATO NRF or to a EU RDF? Will political decisions by European nations be
dominated by their EU commitments or by those to NATO? With the growth of EU
power, will the US role in NATO decline and evolve into predominantly bilateral
relationships with willing countries?
How much will the US be able to, or wish to influence the evolution of
the NATO-EU relationship?
While the answers to these questions remain
shrouded in the fog of international politics, one thing seems quite clear.
Although the EU is not militarily powerful, its institutional presence is
pervasive. Little public policy can be
enacted or implemented by European states without adhering to the vast body of
EU laws and regulations. Compatibility
with Europe-wide standards for foods, products, services, and technology is a
prerequisite to participating in Europe’s commerce.
A common currency binds most member countries and European subsidies are
vital links in the countries’ economies. Membership in the EU is therefore
the dominant fact in the politics and economics of European countries. When it
comes to a choice between the EU and NATO on an issue, one can expect the EU to
be the choice.
IV.. The Transatlantic Relationship
Except, that is, for the transatlantic
relationship which has been the pole star of
European politics and economics.
That relationship has, as I have noted, undergone and survived strains
over the years. But the runup to the
Iraq war and its aftermath have threatened its stability and that of the
US-NATO relationship.
The critical event was Turkey’s
request in February 2003 for assistance from NATO. Acting under Article IV of the Treaty,
Turkey, feeling threatened by Iraq, asked NATO for AWACS aircraft and Patriot
anti-aircraft missile batteries. The
request was made to the Atlantic Council which acts only on a consensus of all
nineteen members. France, taking the
position that Turkey did not appear frightened, opposed the request. The request then went to NATO’s
defense planning council on which France does not sit–its
forces having been withdrawn from NATO–and it agreed to provide the requested
assistance.
The impact on NATO’s
coherence and effectiveness appears to have been profound. Never before had NATO failed to reach a
decision by consensus. The realization
that one country could block implementation of the Treaty’s
mutual assistance commitment came as a shock to the smaller countries who
joined NATO for the sense of security it gave them, mainly because of the
presence of the US to which they look as their ultimate guarantor. In the eyes of many, the promise of unity to
which NATO had been dedicated was undermined, and the consensus rule
jeopardized. Some members of the US
Senate have even called for a review of that rule. There is now a question whether in the future
NATO will evolve from a powerful alliance acting in unison into a conference of
27 countries, such as the Organization for European Security and Cooperation,
whose participation would be as members of ad hoc coalitions of the willing.
Inevitably the answer to this question will
be largely determined by US foreign policy and that depends on what the US
wants from NATO. As the Administration
has stated, it looks to NATO to maintain a peaceful, stable and secure Europe
and to support US policies in the war on terror. Yet until now it has not been willing to turn
over to NATO particular missions outside of Europe, although NATO may in the
future be slated for a larger role in Afghanistan. US policy has been to look to selected
countries to participate in specific
operations with the US. Rumania and
other NATO countries have contributed several hundred troops to the Afghanistan
stabilization force; Slovakia and the Czech Republic have sent chemical warfare
defense teams to Kuwait, and Poland has been given a leading role in the Iraq
occupation. So the US commitment to NATO
appears firm but select. In a recent
speech, Secretary of State Powell asserted that the tensions between the US and
France will not affect America’s commitment to NATO, which he called “the
greatest political and military alliance the world has ever seen.” Referring to the admission of new members, he
said, “It’s a
little hard to close down a club that has a waiting line. The future is going to hold a world that will
still have a strong trans-Atlantic community.”
Although this was a vote of confidence for NATO, it did not remove the
shadow of US-French tensions over the relationship.
V. The United States Military Presence
The future
of NATO is, of course, hostage to the evolution of US defense
policy. The Iraq war sends an
unmistakable signal of changes in US strategic doctrine. More than 110,000 American troops are now
based in Europe, nearly all of them in Germany. They are under the command of an American
general, Marine General James L. Jones, stationed at SHAPE Headquarters in
Mons, a one time Belgian airbase to which SHAPE moved when NATO was evicted
from France in 1966. Many of these
troops--combat and support forces--have been deployed in Iraq as well as in the
Balkans. Whether they will eventually be
returned to bases in Germany when no longer needed in Iraq seems doubtful. Under plans currently under consideration in
Washington troops for the most part
would be stationed in the US and lifted to temporary bases when needed for
exercises or for deployment. For this purpose former Warsaw pact bases in Bulgaria,
Romania, Hungary and Poland would be recycled. These bases would be
located to serve as launching pads for
operations in the Middle East and Central and South Asia where troops are more
likely to be needed than in Western Europe.
An illustration of the type of base contemplated is Camp Bonesteel,
located on a windswept plateau in the US Sector of Kosovo. Its prefab barracks, hospital and service
facilities accommodate some 7,000 men and women who patrol the area and
maintain order as needed. Their tour of
duty generally does not exceed six months. Such a shift in troop basing would
implement the stratregic transformation of the military into light and mobile
combat units.
In a sense the stationing of over 100,000
troops in Germany, at great expense, is a cold war relic. Moreover, they are regarded as a mixed
blessing in Germany–an economic asset but an ecological and
social liability. However, their
withdrawal will send a signal to Western Europe about the value America
attaches to the Western alliance, considering also that the new bases would go
to countries that supported the US war in Iraq.
And because once redeployed, these troops may no longer be subject to
NATO command, the alliance would be weakened. The motive for such a change in
force structure will likely be viewed by Europeans, rightly or wrongly, with
suspicion as retaliation for their lack of support of US military policies.
Redeployment of US troops from Western
Europe, albeit mainly symbolic, will undoubtedly contribute to what many
observers see as a post-September 11 breakdown of the Western Alliance consensus. It is perhaps not surprising that with the
end of the cold war, the pressure that produced unity has evaporated. It was
easy to define US policy objectives in Europe during the cold war. It is difficult to do it now. As the US Ambassador to NATO put it, the US
wants NATO to serve as a complement to the EU to maintain stability. But US actions may also imply that the US
expects European countries to subordinate their policy objectives and conform
their decisions to US objectives.
According to the US, the biggest task for NATO is to restore the common
vision, but the common vision is being defined by the US. In his recent speech
in Krakow, President Bush reaffirmed the US commitment to the transatlantic
alliance but left no doubt that he expected traditional allies, those who
opposed the war in Iraq, to conform to an American vision of a shared
future. Some might see this as defining
NATO’s
role less as a partnership than as an alliance of satellites.
VI. Economic Realities
Still the cultural and political ties that
undergird the transatlantic alliance are deep and durable. The US and Europe share core values of
democracy, free markets, human rights and the rule of law that set the parameters
for US foreign policy. Squabbles may
erupt from time to time, as with France and Germany. Disagreements will arise over perceptions of
and responses to world problems. And
undoubtedly profound philosophical and policy differences will persist between
the US and Europe. But over time, both
sides of the Atlantic may come to appreciate that there is a role in
international affairs for both soft and hard
power. Europe’s far
greater contributions to foreign aid and humanitarian assistance and its concerns
for the environment, for example, matter, just as US security policies matter.
Moreover, whatever the political rhetoric now
coming out of Washington and Europe, it is probable that in the long run
economics, rather than military strategy or ideology, will define and sustain
the transatlantic relationship. Europe
is the US’s
largest trading partner; the annual flow of trade and investment exceeds $2
trillion. Over half of American foreign direct investments are in Europe,
creating an incentive to preserve a hospitable environment. There is a growing convergence of economic
and regulatory policies between the US and the EU. And the US needs Europe. Unlike its imperial predecessor, the British
Empire, the US is a debtor nation; it depends on foreign investors to fund its
budget deficit. Ironically, whether they
like it or not, European buyers of Treasuries finance US military
operations. Some call it a symbiotic
relationship--the US provides security and Europe pays the bills.
The Future of NATO
What then does the future hold for NATO? Some see NATO as a cold war artifact no
longer serving a useful purpose. That
seriously underrates the value of NATO.
For the Europeans, even while living in the shadow of the US’s
dominant power, NATO provides stability and security, especially for the new
members in Central and Eastern Europe who have not forgotten a history of
Russian aggression. For the US, NATO
provides a solid foothold in Europe, a permanent bridge to Europe. Albeit burdened with sometimes irksome allies,
the US gains by being able to exert political influence in a setting that would
otherwise be wholly dominated by the EU.
Even given the gyrations of US foreign policy
over time, there is every reason to expect that the US will continue to view
membership in a viable NATO as vital to advancing its policy goals in Europe:
maintaining security, stability and an advantageous relationship with all of
the countries of Europe.
July
2003 William
W Schwarzer