http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/02/10/natos-role-in-the-military-encirclement-of-iran


Stop NATO
February 10, 2010


NATO's Role In The Military Encirclement Of Iran
Rick Rozoff


Following on the heels of identifying himself as the "Commander-in-Chief of a 
nation in the midst of two wars" and moreover the head of state of no less than 
"the world's sole military superpower" [1] while being presented with what is 
still curiously called the Nobel Peace Prize, U.S. President Barack Obama in 
his first State of the Union address on January 27 asserted "the international 
community is more united, and the Islamic Republic of Iran is more isolated" 
and threatened: "As Iran's leaders continue to ignore their obligations, there 
should be no doubt: They...will face growing consequences. That is a promise." 

Two days later his secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, delivered an address at 
a major French military academy, revealingly enough, and while there she 
coupled excoriation of Iran with an anything but diplomatic dressing down of 
China, stating "China will be under a lot of pressure to recognize the 
destabilizing impact that a nuclear-armed Iran would have in the [Persian] 
Gulf...." [2]

Pressure from Washington, of course. On the very day of Clinton's speech in 
Paris the White House confirmed the completion of a $6.4 billion weapons 
transfer to Taiwan.

On February 9 U.S. Department of Defense spokesman Geoff Morrell told the press 
that his boss, Pentagon chief Robert Gates, wants the United Nations to impose 
sanctions on Iran within "weeks, not months" and "clearly thinks time is of the 
essence." [3] 
 
During the First World War Austrian journalist and dramatist Karl Kraus 
lamented: "What mythological confusion is this? Since when has Mars been the 
god of commerce and Mercury the god of war?"

If he were alive today he would be equally bemused by the U.S.'s top diplomat 
delivering an address at a military academy (and condescendingly admonishing 
the world's most populous nation) and its defense chief pressuring the world to 
impose punitive sanctions against a country that has not attacked any other in 
centuries.

The secretary general of the U.S.-led "world's sole global military bloc" - 
Anders Fogh Rasmussen - spoke at the annual Munich Security Conference on 
February 7, delivering himself of a ponderous and grandiose screed entitled 
NATO in the 21st Century: Towards Global Connectivity, during which he touted 
the role of the military bloc in intruding itself into almost every interstice 
imaginable: The ever-expanding war in Afghanistan, terrorism, cyber attacks, 
energy cut-offs - the last two references to Russia if not formally 
acknowledged as such - nuclear non-proliferation, climate change, piracy, 
failed states, drugs, "humanitarian disasters, conflicts over arable land, and 
mounting competition for natural resources," [4] North Korea and Iran.

In repeating Alliance and other Western leaders' demands that "NATO should 
become a forum for consultation on worldwide security issues," Rasmussen stated 
that "to carry out NATO’s job effectively today, the Alliance should become the 
hub of a network of security partnerships and a centre for consultation on 
international security issues....And we don’t have to start from scratch. 
Already today, the Alliance has a vast network of security partnership[s], as 
far afield as Northern Africa, the Gulf, Central Asia, and the Pacific." [5]

Indeed NATO has a broad and expanding network of members and military partners 
throughout the world. It has one member, Turkey, the second largest contributor 
of troops to the bloc, which borders Iran, and a partnership ally, Azerbaijan, 
which does also.

Rasmussen's allusion to the Persian Gulf refers to increasing military 
contacts, visits and joint activities between NATO and the six members of the 
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), which parallel the intensification of the U.S. 
buildup in the region [6] and is conducted within the framework of the Istanbul 
Cooperation Initiative (ICI) launched in 2004. [7]

The project received the name it did as it was inaugurated at the NATO summit 
in Istanbul which, after almost completing the absorption of all of Eastern 
Europe into the bloc, introduced the same graduated partnership process used 
earlier to incorporate ten new European members for the seven Mediterranean 
Dialogue nations in the Middle East and Africa (Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, 
Mauritania, Morocco and Tunisia) and six states in the Persian Gulf (Bahrain, 
Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates). All thirteen 
are covered under the ICI, but extending NATO military partnerships to six 
Persian Gulf nations for the first time was the most ambitious and significant 
aspect of the program.

It marked the commencement of NATO's drive into the Gulf to complement the U.S. 
strategy of containing and eventually confronting Iran.

One of the stated objectives of the ICI was to "invite interested 
countries...to join Operation Active Endeavour (OAE)," [8] the NATO naval 
surveillance and interdiction operation (a de facto blockade) throughout the 
Mediterranean Sea which will be nine years old this October. The Istanbul 
Cooperation Initiative links control of the Mediterranean with expansion 
through the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden, where the NATO Ocean Shield naval 
operation is currently being run, and the Arabian Sea into the Persian Gulf.

An earlier article in this series listed the main objectives of the ICI:

-Employing GCC states to base troops, warplanes, cargo and surveillance for 
operations both in the area and throughout the so-called Broader Middle East.

-[I]ncorporating the Gulf states into a global missile surveillance and missile 
shield program.

-Bringing the GCC nations not only under the U.S.’s missile and nuclear 
umbrella, but effectively under NATO’s Article 5 mutual defense provision, the 
latter entailing the possibility of claiming that one or more GCC members is 
threatened by a non-member (that is, Iran) and using that as a pretext for 
“preemptive” attacks.

-Reprising NATO’s Operation Active Endeavor in the Gulf by inaugurating a 
comprehensive naval interdiction – that is, blockade – in the Strait of Hormuz 
where an estimated 40-50% of world interstate oil transportation occurs. [9]

In 2006 NATO signed both military intelligence and transit agreements with 
Kuwait and initiated a new faculty for the Middle East at the NATO Defense 
College in Rome. NATO held a conference on the ICI in Kuwait in December 
attended by all six Gulf Cooperation Council states.

The next year four of the six GCC members - Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and the 
United Arab Emirates - formally joined the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative.  

NATO's penetration of the Gulf continued steadily and in May of 2009 Admiral 
Luciano Zappata of the Italian Navy and NATO's Deputy Supreme Allied Commander 
Transformation (based in Norfolk, Virginia), while speaking of the new NATO 
Strategic Concept currently in progress, praised the Istanbul Cooperation 
Initiative as a "successful example" of the new model of "partnership and 
cooperation" the Alliance plans for most of the world.
   
What Zappata had in mind - the Iranian pretext for Western military expansion 
into the Persian Gulf for once wasn't evoked to hide NATO's real interests - 
was detailed in discussion of what was described as the "maritime dimension of 
the new strategy."

He said that "the network of ports, infrastructure and pipelines as
well as vessels sailing along sea lines of communication supports trade and is 
vulnerable to disruption.

"With the beginning of the exploitation of the resources at the bottom of 
oceans, there is a shift in security and strategic focus."

The admiral added that the United Arab Emirates are "a significant trading 
partner and energy supplier in the global economy. The new French military base 
opening at Port Zayed will be an important addition to the increasing 
international efforts in support of maritime security." [10]

On the same day as the above report appeared, May 26, 2009, French President 
Nicolas Sarkozy was in the United Arab Emirates to open a new military base, 
his nation's first in the Persian Gulf and the first major foreign base in the 
UAE. The French facility in Port Zayed, on the coast of the Strait of Hormuz, 
"contains a navy and air force base and a training camp." [11]

"The base will host 500 personnel from the French navy, the army, and the air 
force. It will be able to simultaneously accommodate two frigates of the French 
fleet operating in the region....[T]he French base is the first of its kind in 
the Arabian [Persian] Gulf." 

A Gulf analyst was quoted on the occasion saying, "The US has a number of 
military, air and maritime bases in Kuwait, Qatar and Bahrain. The Abu Dhabi 
French Maritime Base is the first foreign military base for a friendly army in 
the UAE." [12]

"For France, the military base certainly improves its status within NATO as 
well as with the US as it would become the only NATO member other than the US 
that is stationed in the Gulf." [13]

The following month Sarkozy pushed a deal with the UAE for the purchase of 60 
Rafale fighter jets at a cost of $8-11 million.

The previous year France led war games in the UAE, the 12-day Gulf Shield 01, 
with military counterparts from the host country and Qatar. 4,000 troops 
participated in the exercises, which "simulated a war pitting two regional 
countries and their ally against a neighbouring state which has invaded one of 
the two countries." [14] 

In late October of 2009 a two-day conference called NATO-UAE Relations and the 
Way Forward in the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative was held in Abu Dhabi, the 
capital of the United Arab Emirates. It gathered "together 300 participants, 
including the Secretary General of NATO, NATO Permanent Representatives on the 
North Atlantic Council, the Deputy Secretary General of NATO, the Chairman of 
the NATO Military Committee and high level NATO officials with government 
representatives, opinion leaders, academics and senior scholars from countries 
in the Gulf region invited in the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative." [15]

NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen told an Al Arabiya correspondent 
that "NATO considers the Gulf region a continuation of the Euro Atlantic 
security area," and in reference to Iran - which of course was not invited to 
the conference - "we all are seriously concerned about nuclear ambitions and 
about the nuclear domino-effect they could cause in a region that is pivotal 
for global stability and security." [16]

In recent weeks the United States announced the sale of land-based interceptor 
missiles to Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. It has 
supplied both Patriot Advanced Capability-3 and Terminal High Altitude Area 
Defense (THAAD) missile systems to GCC states and has deployed sea-based 
Standard Missile-3 interceptors in the Gulf on Aegis class warships.

In early February the deputy secretary general of NATO, Claudio Bisogniero, was 
in Qatar and, "Lauding the support extended by Qatar to Nato since the Istanbul 
Initiative in 2004," said "Qatar has become an active participant in most 
deliberations held under the aegis of Nato...." [17]

GCC states being integrated into international NATO operations are being 
recruited for the war in Afghanistan. A U.S. armed forces publication disclosed 
in late January that 125 security personnel from Bahrain were guarding "the 
headquarters for U.S. military operations in volatile Helmand province, where 
more than 10,000 Marines are stationed and more are on the way." [18] The U.S. 
and NATO are launching the biggest and bloodiest battle of the more than 
eight-year war in Afghanistan in Helmand.

Troops from the UAE have been serving under NATO command in Afghanistan for 
years. 

The Kuwait News Agency wrote on January 28 that the chairman of NATO's Military 
Committee, Admiral Giampaolo Di Paola, said "the Alliance is in discussion with 
a Gulf state to deploy AWACS planes for reconnaissance mission[s] over 
Afghanistan in support of its ISAF mission and also for anti-piracy off 
Somalia."

In addition, Di Paola was quoted saying "The Alliance is close to closing the 
basic issue with one of the Gulf countries" and "We are looking forward to be 
in a position to follow on the temporary deployment that we have today in Oman 
with a more permanent long-term deployment." [19] Oman directly overlooks Iran 
on the Strait of Hormuz.

The true military powerhouse in the Gulf region, Saudi Arabia - armed to the 
teeth with advanced U.S. weapons - has been engaged in its first-ever war since 
last November. Riyadh has launched regular attacks with infantry, armor and 
warplanes in the north of neighboring Yemen against Houthi rebels. Hundreds of 
Yemeni civilians have been reported killed in the assaults, which rebel 
spokesmen claim have been accompanied by U.S. air strikes. [20] 200,000 
civilians have been uprooted and displaced by fighting in the north since 2004.

The Saudi government acknowledges over 500 military casualties, both dead and 
wounded. 

The population of northern Yemen is Shia in terms of religious conviction, and 
the Saudi offensive is not only fraught with the danger of being converted into 
a war with Iran once removed but in fact can serve as a rehearsal - and 
training - for the genuine article. 

In other countries bordering Iran, last July NATO Deputy Secretary General 
Claudio Bisogniero signed an agreement with the Iraqi Minister of Defense to 
train the nation's security forces. The NATO website reported: "This agreement 
represents a milestone in the cooperation between the Republic of Iraq and NATO 
and demonstrates the Alliance's strong commitment....The agreement will provide 
the legal basis for NATO to continue with its mission to assist the Government 
of the Republic of Iraq in developing further the capabilities of the Iraqi 
Security Forces." [21]

Last month NATO started recruiting ethnic Kurds for Iraq's national security 
force in the north of the country near the Iranian border.

On Iran's western border, during meetings of NATO defense ministers in Turkey 
late last week Pentagon chief Robert Gates met with Chief of Turkish General 
Staff General Ilker Basbug and Gates said that he had "discussed, with General 
Basbug, Turkey's role in the missile defense system and relations between our 
armies." [22]

Former NATO secretary general George Robertson, arguing that U.S. nuclear 
warheads should be kept in Germany, recently divulged that there are between 40 
and 90 American nuclear weapons stored at Turkey's Incirlik Air Base under NATO 
arrangements.

To Iran's northwest, Azerbaijan is increasingly being developed as a NATO 
outpost in the South Caucasus and the Caspian Sea Basin. Early this month "A 
working group of the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry and the United States 
European Command (USEUCOM) held a meeting in Stuttgart, Germany....The meeting 
[was] held within the framework of the Azerbaijan-US action plan for military 
cooperation" and lasted five days. [23]

The country has been granted a NATO Individual Partnership Action Plan as have 
other former Soviet states like Georgia, Ukraine and lately Moldova. In January 
Azerbaijan hosted a planning conference for the NATO Regional Response 2010 
military exercise. Last year "the Regional Response 2009 military training was 
held within the NATO's Partnership for Peace (PfP) programme in April 2009 in 
Baku.

"Commander of US Land Forces in Europe Carter Ham participated in the 
training." [24]

Azerbaijan has doubled its troop strength in Afghanistan and will train Afghan 
National Army personnel at its military schools. The nation's Foreign Ministry 
recently announced that Azerbaijan is interested in joining the NATO Response 
Force along with Ukraine, regarding which the Alliance provides this 
description:

"The NATO Response Force (NRF) is a highly ready and technologically advanced 
force made up of land, air, sea and special forces components that the Alliance 
can deploy quickly wherever needed.

"It is capable of performing missions worldwide across the whole spectrum of 
operations...." [25]

In late January a former Azeri presidential adviser, Vafa Guluzade, spoke at a 
seminar called NATO-Azerbaijan Cooperation: A Civilian View and said, "The 
territory and people of Azerbaijan are ideal for military cooperation with 
NATO. The country has a favourable geostrategic location....Azerbaijan has 
military aerodromes suitable for NATO bases." [26] 

To Iran's east, the U.S. and NATO will soon have over 150,000 troops, and 
according to a recent study 400 bases, in Afghanistan and both Western 
belligerents are coordinating military actions with Pakistan, the Alliance 
through the Trilateral Afghanistan-Pakistan-NATO Military Commission.

The chain is being tightened around Iran from every direction and NATO is 
supplying several of the key links.


1) Obama Doctrine: Eternal War For Imperfect Mankind
   Stop NATO, December 10, 2009
   
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/12/11/obama-doctrine-eternal-war-for-imperfect-mankind
2) Hillary Clinton’s Prescription: Make The World A NATO Protectorate
   Stop NATO, January 31, 2010
   
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/01/31/hillary-clintons-prescription-make-the-world-a-nato-protectorate
3) Associated Press, February 9, 2010
4) NATO, February 7, 2010
   http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/opinions_61395.htm?selectedLocale=en
5) Ibid
6) U.S. Extends Missile Buildup From Poland And Taiwan To Persian Gulf
   Stop NATO, February 3, 2010
   
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/02/03/u-s-extends-missile-buildup-from-poland-and-taiwan-to-persian-gulf
7) NATO In Persian Gulf: From Third World War To Istanbul
   Stop NATO, February 6, 2009
   
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/08/26/nato-in-persian-gulf-from-third-world-war-to-istanbul
8) NATO, Istanbul Cooperation Initiative
   http://www.nato.int/docu/comm/2004/06-istanbul/docu-cooperation.htm
9) NATO In Persian Gulf: From Third World War To Istanbul
10) Khaleej Times, May 26, 2009
11) Radio Netherlands, May 26, 2009
12) Gulf News, May 23, 2009
13) Gulf News, January 27, 2008
14) Agence France-Presse, March 6, 2008
15) NATO, October 28, 2009
16) Al Arabiya, November 1, 2009
17) Gulf Times, February 8, 2010
18) Stars and Stripes, January 23, 2010
19) Kuwait News Agency, January 28, 2010
20) Yemen: Pentagon’s War On The Arabian Peninsula
    Stop NATO, December 15, 2009
    
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/12/15/yemen-pentagons-war-on-the-arabian-peninsula
21) NATO, July 26, 2009
22) World Bulletin, February 6, 2010
23) Azeri Press Agency, February 1, 2010
24) Azeri Press Agency, January 21, 2010
25) NATO, The NATO Response Force        
    http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/topics_49755.htm
26) Novosti Azerbaijan, January 22, 2010
===========================
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