http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/02/05/brussels-london-istanbul-a-week-of-western-war-councils


Stop NATO
February 5, 2010


Brussels, London, Istanbul: A Week Of Western War Councils
Rick Rozoff


The defense chiefs of all 28 NATO nations and an undisclosed number of 
counterparts from non-Alliance partners gathered in Istanbul, Turkey on 
February 4 to begin two days of meetings focused on the war in Afghanistan, the 
withdrawal of military forces from Kosovo in the course of transferring control 
of security operations to the breakaway province's embryonic army (the Kosovo 
Security Force) and "the transformation efforts required to best conduct the 
full range of NATO’s agreed missions." [1] 

Istanbul was the site of the bloc's 2004 summit which accounted for the largest 
expansion in its 60-year history - seven new Eastern European nations - and its 
strengthening military partnerships with thirteen Middle Eastern and African 
nations under the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative. 

The Chairman of the NATO Military Committee, Admiral Giampaolo Di Paola, NATO's 
Supreme Allied Commander Europe Admiral James Stavridis and the top commander 
of all U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan - soon to reach over 150,000 - 
General Stanley McChrystal are also in attendance, as are European Union High 
Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ashton and 
United Nations High Representative for Afghanistan Kai Eide as well as the 
defense and interior ministers of Afghanistan.

The meetings follow by a week the International Conference on Afghanistan held 
in London, which in turn occurred the day after two days of meetings of the 
NATO Military Committee with the Chiefs of Defense of the military bloc's 28 
member states and 35 more from what were described as Troop Contributing 
Nations; presumably NATO partner nations with troops stationed in the Afghan 
war theater. In all, the military chiefs of 63 countries. 

The U.S.'s McChrystal was present there also as were Israeli Chief of General 
Staff Lieutenant General Gabi Ashkenazi and Pakistani Chief of Army Staff 
General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani. Beforehand the bloc's website reported that "The 
various meetings will focus on the progress made in ongoing operations and the 
New Strategic Concept for NATO." [2] That 35 top military commanders from 
non-NATO countries were present to hear plans for the escalation of what is 
already the largest war in the world is understandable, as their forces are on 
the ground as part of a 50-nation plus force under NATO military command.

That the same conference discussed the bloc's 21st century new global military 
doctrine - former U.S. secretary of state Madeleine Albright delivered an 
address on the topic - raises the question of how many of the 35 partner 
states' military chiefs may have joined their 28 NATO colleagues for that phase 
of discussions. That such a high percentage of the world's leading military 
commanders attended a two-day affair which deliberated on both the war in South 
Asia and the expansion of the world's only military bloc's activities even 
further outside the Euro-Atlantic area (when it has already conducted 
operations in four continents) confirms that the Afghan war serves more than 
one purpose for the West. It is the laboratory for strengthening military ties 
with nations on every inhabited continent and for building the nucleus of and 
foundation for a potential future world army.

The London conference on Afghanistan, presented in the West as a benign 
undertaking tantamount to an economic development or humanitarian aid planning 
event - the conference's website described it as "The international community 
[coming] together to fully align military and civilian resources behind an 
Afghan-led political strategy" [3] - was preceded by two days of meetings 
between top military commanders of almost a third of the world's nations at 
NATO headquarters and followed by two days of meetings by NATO and allied 
defense chiefs this week. Many of the same people - EU foreign policy chief 
Baroness Ashton and the UN's Eide (who formerly occupied comparable posts in 
Bosnia and Kosovo and was Norway's ambassador to NATO from 2002 to 2006) - 
attended both the London conference and are attending the Istanbul NATO defense 
ministers conclave. 

(Ashton's predecessor's Javier Solana was Secretary General of NATO from 1995 
to 1999 before becoming the EU's High Representative for Common Foreign and 
Security Policy - the title slightly adjusted after the Lisbon Treaty - from 
1999 until December of 2009, effecting the transition seamlessly.) 

By way of reciprocity, the London conference was addressed by NATO Secretary 
General Anders Fogh Rasmussen who said, inter alia, "with more than 85,000 
troops from 44 nations deployed to Afghanistan – and with over 39,000 
additional forces arriving over the coming weeks and months - the NATO-led 
International Security Assistance Force remains NATO’s top priority." [4]  

If any further evidence was required that the United Nations is at the service 
of NATO and not vice versa, that the EU is NATO's civilian valet de chambre,  
and that all three are subordinated to the United States, the last week's 
events and the roster of attendees at them should suffice. 

The chain of command begins in Washington and orders barked out there work 
their way down to Brussels and New York City.

The two organizations based in the Belgium capital, the "military alliance of 
democratic states in Europe and North America" (NATO's self-definition) and the 
"European military superstate" (Irish opposition parties' reference to the 
effects of the Nice and Lisbon treaties), are afflicted with political 
echolalia, parroting the U.S. position on conflicts armed and with the 
potential to become so around the world - Afghanistan, Iraq, Georgia-Russia, 
Georgia-Abkhazia, Georgia-South Ossetia, Russia-Ukraine, Kosovo, Bosnia, 
Somalia, Yemen, Colombia, Myanmar, Sudan, Chad, the Central African Republic, 
North Korea, Zimbabwe, Israel-Lebanon, Lebanon-Syria, Israel-Palestine, 
Macedonia, Ivory Coast, Djibouti-Eritrea, Transdniester and all those to come - 
with truly impressive fidelity in this otherwise inconsistent age. 

Condemnations, tirades and threats issued by the U.S. secretary of state and 
ambassador to the United Nations may as well be presented in triplicate.

Permanent Security Council members Russia and China may occasionally - all too 
occasionally - block hostile Western actions against defenseless third parties 
in the United Nations, but Washington always walks away with a mandate and the 
final say in the selection of viceroys to complement U.S. and NATO military 
forces on the ground in subjugated nations.

As a recent example, during the second day of the NATO Military Committee 
meetings in Brussels and the day before the Afghan conference in London, an 
"international" conference on Yemen was also held in London which "Britain's 
Prime Minister Gordon Brown called for...in response to the failed bomb attack 
on an airliner over Detroit on December 25." [5]

That bears repeating. The apprehension in the U.S. of a Nigerian national 
alleged to have been trained in Yemen led the head of state of the United 
Kingdom to summon representatives of the Group of Eight (Britain, Canada, 
France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the U.S.), the Gulf Cooperation 
Council (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab 
Emirates), Egypt, Jordan - but not the Arab League - Turkey and the European 
Union, United Nations, World Bank and International Monetary Fund "to bolster 
Yemen's fight against al Qaeda...." [7] Soon 50,000 non-American NATO troops 
will be bogged down in Afghanistan because the bloc invoked its Article 5 
collective defense provision in 2001...to fight against al-Qaeda.

Ever-compliant UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon lent legitimacy to this 
American and British charade, as he did the following day's Afghan conference 
where he delivered a speech in the presence of 28 NATO and perhaps dozens of 
its International Security Assistance Force non-member states foreign ministers.

Yemen has joined the former Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and Iraq as a target for 
Western "assistance and stabilization." NATO will conduct more planning 
sessions with scores of military chiefs and defense and foreign ministers and 
not only for the war in Afghanistan.

Its new Strategic Concept knows no geographical bounds.


1) NATO, February 3, 2010 
   http://www.nato.int/cps/en/SID-07E5106A-22C87D27/natolive/news_61170.htm?]
2) NATO, January 25, 2010 
   http://www.nato.int/ims/news/2010/n100126e.html
3) Afghanistan: The London Conference       
   http://afghanistan.hmg.gov.uk/en/conference 
4) http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/opinions_61101.htm
5) Deutsche Presse-Agentur, January 28, 2010
6) Reuters, January 27, 2010

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