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Text: Brookings Scholar Says NATO Remains Key Security Vehicle

(NATO enlargement is a unifying force in Europe, he says) (2270)

The 19-member NATO Alliance remains the primary vehicle for keeping the
United States engaged in European security affairs, says a Brookings
Institution scholar, and further enlargement remains critical for the
continent's security needs.

Through its enlargement process, NATO "is playing a critical role in
unifying a continent that had been divided for almost 50 years," Philip
Gordon, a senior fellow in foreign policy studies at the Brookings
Institution, said April 17 in testimony before the U.S. House
International Relations Subcommittee on Europe. "NATO brought peace to
the
Balkans, and continues to deploy tens of thousands of troops to the
Balkans, without which [that region] could easily revert to the horrible
conflicts of the 1990s," he said.

The International relations subcommittee was conducting hearings on the
proposed enlargement of NATO and its transformation into the 21st
century.

Gordon, who is also director of the Center on the United States and
France
at Brookings and a former director for European Affairs at the National
Security Council, said that instead of giving up on NATO as some have
suggested, the North American and European allies should use the Prague
summit in November to continue to adapt the Alliance to the most
important
security challenges of the day.

Following is the text of Gordon's remarks:

(begin text)

[U.S. House International Relations Subcommittee on Europe
Washington, D.C.
April 17, 2002]

TESTIMONY OF DR. PHILIP H. GORDON
SENIOR FELLOW, THE BROOKINGS INSTITUTION

"The Future of NATO and Enlargement"

I am delighted to provide testimony to this subcommittee on the
important
subject of NATO and its future.  The ongoing war on terrorism, an
expected
enlargement at the November 2002 Prague summit to 5-7 new members, the
European Union's own emerging security and defense policy, and a new
NATO-Russia relationship all raise fundamental questions about the roles
NATO can play and how it should serve American interests.  It is thus
right that members of Congress begin to think about these issues well
before the Prague summit, so that they can help shape American policy
toward the most successful Alliance in history.

NATO will probably never again be the central security institution it
was
during the Cold War, but it remains a vital tool for the defense of
important American interests.  Let me try to explain how recent
developments challenge the Alliance, and how I think we should use the
Prague summit to enhance its future effectiveness.

Less than 24 hours after the September 11 terrorist attacks on the
United
States, America's allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO)
came together to invoke the Alliance's Article 5 defense guarantee --
this
"attack on one" was to be considered an "attack on all."  When it came
time to implement that guarantee, however, in the form of the
American-led
military campaign in Afghanistan, NATO was not used.  The Americans
decided not to ask for a NATO operation for both military and political
reasons -- only the United States had the right sort of equipment to
project military forces half-way around the world, and Washington did
not
want political interference of 18 allies in the campaign.  In the wake
of
these decisions, some observers have begun to wonder whether NATO has
any
enduring role at all.

And there are, in fact, serious reasons to be concerned about the future
of the Alliance if leaders on both sides of the Atlantic do not take the
steps necessary to adapt it to changing circumstances.  The Afghanistan
campaign revealed significant gaps between the war-fighting capabilities
of the United States and its allies, and reinforced the perception in
some
quarters in Washington that it is easier to conduct operations alone
than
with allies who have little to offer militarily and who might hamper
efficient decision-making.

Moreover, the U.S. decision in the wake of the terrorist attacks to
increase its defense budget by some $48 billion [$48,000 million] for
2003
-- an increase larger than any single European country's entire defense
budget -- will only make this capabilities gap worse.

To the extent that the war on terrorism leads the United States to
undertake military operations in other distant theaters, and to the
extent
that the Europeans are unwilling or unable to come along, NATO's
centrality will be further diminished.  Yet to conclude that NATO no
longer has any important roles to play because it was not used for a
mission that it was not designed for would be perverse and mistaken.
The
Alliance remains the primary vehicle for keeping the United States
engaged
in European security affairs.

Through its enlargement process, it is playing a critical role in
unifying
a continent that had been divided for almost 50 years.  NATO brought
peace
to the Balkans, and continues to deploy tens of thousands of troops to
the
Balkans, without which could easily revert to the horrible conflicts of
the 1990s.  Through its Partnership for Peace, the Alliance has reached
out to and promoted military cooperation with partners in Central Asia,
some of which ended up making essential contributions to the campaign in
Afghanistan.  NATO also continues to perform the important function of
promoting military interoperability among the allies, so that they can
cooperate militarily among each other even when NATO per se is not
involved -- as they did during the 1990-91 Gulf War and in parts of the
operation in and around Afghanistan.

As the international community considers ways to stabilize Afghanistan
in
the wake of the war, NATO planning and command and control capabilities
may well prove to be the best option for the maintenance of a long-term,
Western-led security force.

In short, while the war on terrorism suggests that NATO is no longer the
central geopolitical institution it was during the Cold War, it would be
premature and extremely short-sighted to conclude its mission is over
and
that it has no future role to play.  Instead of giving up on NATO, the
North American and European allies should use the Prague summit to
continue to adapt the Alliance to the most important security challenges
of the day.

Just as previous developments -- such as the end of the Cold War or the
conflicts in the Balkans -- have obliged the Alliance to adapt,
September
11 and the conflict that has followed it will require NATO leaders to
think boldly and creatively about how to keep the Alliance relevant.
How
should NATO adapt at Prague?

First, Alliance leaders should make clear that new threats such as
international terrorism are a central concern to NATO member states and
their populations.  Already in its 1991 Strategic Concept, NATO leaders
recognized that "Alliance security must also take account of the global
context" and that "Alliance security interests can be affected by other
risks of a wider nature, including proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction, disruption of the flow of vital resources and actions of
terrorism and sabotage."

[1] NATO made essentially the same point in the 1999 Strategic Concept,
this time moving "acts of terrorism" to the top of the list of "other
risks."

[2] This is not to say that any act of terrorism or threat to energy
supplies can or should be treated as an Article 5 contingency for which
all Allies are obliged to contribute troops.

It does mean, however, that all allies recognize that their common
interests and values can be threatened by global developments, a point
made dramatically clear by the attacks on Washington and New York.  Even
if invocations of Article 5 will no longer necessarily mean a formal
NATO
operation under NATO command, the concept that "an armed attack" from
abroad must trigger solidarity among the member states is an important
development that must be maintained and reinforced.

Second, NATO members -- and particularly the European allies -- must
accelerate the process of adapting their military capabilities for new
missions in light of the new campaign.  At NATO's April 1999 summit, the
Allies adopted a Defense Capabilities Initiative (DCI) designed to
improve
allied forces' deployability, mobility, sustainability, survivability
and
effectiveness.

[3] The DCI process identified some 58 areas in which Allies were asked
to
make concrete improvements in their forces to fill specific gaps in
Allied
capabilities.  But the DCI process never really had political visibility
and few of its goals have been fulfilled.

At Prague, European NATO members should consider whittling down this
long
list to some 3-5 most critical categories -- perhaps Precision Guided
Munitions, airlift, secure communications, and in-air refueling -- and
making real commitments to fulfilling their goals.  Not only do the
Europeans need to make serious improvements in capabilities if they want
to join effectively with the United States in the anti-terrorism
campaign,
but the EU process needs to be fully integrated with NATO's.  Otherwise
the current problems with interoperability will only get worse.
Europeans
have had legitimate complaints about not being fully involved in the
first
stages of the military operations in Afghanistan, but such involvement
will only become more difficult in the future if American and European
military capabilities continue to diverge.

Third, NATO should continue the process of enlargement, as a means of
developing strong allies capable of contributing to common goals and of
consolidating the integration of Central and Eastern Europe.  Barring
the
unexpected, it now seems clear that the Alliance will take in 5-7 new
members at Prague: Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, Slovenia, and
possibly Bulgaria and Romania as well.  Some observers argue that taking
in such a large number of new allies will dilute the Alliance and render
it unusable in the future.  The truth, however, is that there is not a
fundamental difference between an Alliance at 19 and an Alliance at 24
or
26 -- NATO was never an alliance of equals and always depended on
American
leadership in the past as it will in the future.  To ensure future
effectiveness, NATO leaders might want to consider mechanisms that would
allow for the temporary suspension of an Ally whose democratic
credentials
were in question.  But it would be a mistake to fail to act on the
principle that the Alliance has enunciated for years, that the NATO door
is open to those European democracies who are committed to contributing
to
the Alliance's common values and security interests.

Fourth, the Prague summit should be used to promote greater cooperation
between NATO and Russia.  Significant progress is already being made in
this regard, as seen in Russian President Vladimir Putin's recent
acquiescence toward enlargement and his agreement with NATO Secretary
General George Robertson to set up a new forum to expand NATO-Russia
cooperation.

In another sharp break with the recent past, Moscow has also agreed to
get
NATO's help in restructuring its armed forces, long resisted by Russia's
conservative defense establishment, but where NATO has much to offer.

NATO should seek to build on this new momentum and propose much more
far-reaching cooperation that could transform Russia's relationship with
the West -- the proposed NATO-Russia Council "at twenty" is a good start
and should be formalized at Prague.  NATO-Russia cooperation could
include
exchanges of information on civil defense cooperation (where both sides
would have much to learn from each other), cooperation and training
among
NATO member and Russian special forces, Russian involvement in
collaborative armaments programs, and other NATO-Russia joint military
exercises.

In the wake of the tragedies of September 11, the prospect that Russia
could feel that it is part of the West -- rather than threatened by it
--
is an opportunity that should not be missed.

Finally, NATO needs to develop its capacity to deal with the specific
issue of terrorism, a process long resisted by European allies who
worried
about giving the Alliance too great a "global" or "political" role.  In
fact, there are great limitations on the role NATO can and should play
in
this area -- issues of law enforcement, immigration, financial control,
and domestic intelligence are all well beyond NATO's areas of competence
and should be handled in other channels, notably those between the
United
States and the EU (which have in fact been strengthened since September
11).

Still, NATO allies can and should share information about nuclear,
biological, and chemical weapons and ballistic missile programs; develop
civil defense and consequence management planning; develop theater
missile
defenses; and better coordinate various member-state special forces,
whose
role in the anti-terrorism campaign will be critical.  The Alliance
should
also consider a new Force Projection Command that would be specifically
responsible for planning out-of-area operations.

During the Cold War, few could have imagined the need for American and
European special forces to travel half-way around the world and execute
coordinated attacks, but that is now a very real requirement.  While
NATO
was not used for the military response to an attack on the United
States,
it is unfortunately not difficult to imagine a major terrorist attack on
a
European city for which a NATO response would be appropriate.  Even with
all the right reforms, NATO will probably not again become the central
defense organization that it was during the Cold War, or even during the
Balkan wars of the 1990s.  But that does not mean that it does not
remain
an essential tool with which the United States and its most important
allies can coordinate their militaries, promote the unification of
Europe,
maintain peace in the Balkans, and quite possibly fight major military
operations anywhere in the world.  The Prague summit should be used to
revitalize and adapt a still-essential organization, not to accept its
demise.

(end text)

(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
NNNN

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