and NATO failed to destroy the Serbian army in 1999

 


Mary Dejevsky: Nato's dissolution is long overdue

If the alliance cannot prevail in Afghanistan, what price its continuation at 
all?

Monday, 7 September 2009 

 

With the number of British and US casualties rising, the election results mired 
in complaints of fraud, and the Obama administration still reviewing its 
strategy, the war in Afghanistan is at once in crisis and in limbo. It is no 
wonder then that the Prime Minister should have started the new political term 
by trying to convince British opinion that this operation still has purpose 
and, more to the point, an end.

But the future of Afghanistan, of great geopolitical significance though that 
has to be, is by no means all that is at stake here. Looming behind the growing 
public debate about what this war is about and whether we British should be 
fighting it is quite another discussion: about the future or otherwise of Nato 
– the Western defence alliance that has endured for the past 60 years.

Where more than two or three military or defence specialists are gathered 
together, the war enters conversation not just as a make-or-break point for 
Afghanistan, but as make-or-break for the Nato alliance. If, it is argued, the 
North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, under whose command this war is being 
fought, cannot prevail – and, equally pertinent – be seen to have prevailed, 
what price the continuation of the alliance at all?

There are three main strands to the argument as it has developed so far, though 
with many gradations in between. The defeatist one would be that the alliance 
has outlived its usefulness. The second strand, you could describe as the 
reformist one, would be that the alliance has a future, but must change in line 
with changing times. And the third you could describe as the nostalgic strand: 
Nato, so its adherents would maintain, has done an excellent job, is essential 
to future global stability and needs less change and more belief.

I make no apologies for belonging to the first, rather small, camp which is 
hardly admitted to the debate at all. My firm conviction is that Nato should 
have declared victory and dissolved itself at the end of the Cold War. There 
are many reasons why this did not happen, including the considerable confusion 
at the time, the preoccupation of Western leaders with other matters, not least 
the hugely controversial reunification of Germany, and the uncertainty about 
how Russia and the former Warsaw Pact countries would develop.

But the dissolution of Nato would have sent the message – still not really 
heard in Moscow or points east – that the Cold War is over. If disbanding was 
thought a step too far, Nato could, as an interim measure, have honoured Bill 
Clinton's early pledge that the alliance would not expand – as it subsequently 
did – up to Russia's borders. A simple name change and clarification of mission 
could have been a first step to the alliance, perhaps, becoming the core of a 
regional military force for the UN. It would have allowed Nato to cast off its 
image as directed exclusively against Russia and helped dispel east-west 
antagonism. An opportunity was lost. Ever since, the alliance has been looking 
around for a new purpose.

Afghanistan represented one key chance, lost and belatedly reclaimed, to find 
one. When Nato invoked its famous Article 5, after the terrorist attacks of 
9/11, the US seemed unenthusiastic. To Washington, operations under Nato 
auspices risked becoming bogged down in quarrels about targets, as the 
intervention against Serbia over Kosovo had done in 1999. For better and worse, 
though, Afghanistan was designated a Nato operation, which is why, now it is in 
trouble, it is seen as "make-or-break" for the alliance.

After eight years of this intervention, the allies are at sixes and sevens, and 
you don't have to listen to defence specialists for long to hear bitter 
national resentments. Viewed from London, Britain is shouldering a 
disproportionate burden; the French and Germans are not pulling their weight. 
Viewed from Paris or Berlin, the British are only where they are because they 
demanded to make themselves indispensable to the US (preserving the special 
relationship and all that). Viewed from Washington, the Brits are trying hard, 
but are so lamentably equipped as to be almost a liability in the front line.

The discord in Afghanistan is compounded by differences about the focus of Nato 
policy – is it any longer about Russia or mostly about the rest of the world? 
And this lies behind a discussion just launched by Nato's new General 
Secretary, the Dane Anders Fogh Rasmussen, to agree a new "strategic concept" 
for the alliance. He has appointed a panel of 12 advisers which is supposed to 
come up with its blueprint by late 2010.

Given the depth of existing disagreements, one can only really wish the group 
of 12 good luck. And this will be especially needed, given that some 
particularly vocal participants in the debate will represent the third, 
nostalgic, strand of opinion. The UK, represented on the panel by the former 
defence secretary, Geoff Hoon, may well be among them.

Any far-reaching change in the alliance and its priorities is likely to be seen 
as a threat to the Britain's "special relationship", with the US. Obama's view 
has always seemed to be less romantic than London's; indeed, it is not 
unreasonable to ask whether, deep down, he believes it still exists at all. Nor 
is the return of France to the Nato command structures necessarily good news 
for Britain, unless we accept that the so-called European "pillar" of the 
alliance should be strengthened. As a project, that might well entail 
sacrificing the "special relationship" on intelligence-sharing and Trident 
renewal in favour of enhanced London-Paris defence cooperation. How would that 
look to a government led by David Cameron?

The nostalgic wing of Nato received new succour from the accession of the "new" 
European states, which still wanted protection from Russia. But with more 
realism now setting in, at least in Poland, less ideology and more pragmatism 
in the US, and a less strident and more domestically preoccupied leadership in 
Russia, the prospects for Nato reform could be more favourable than for some 
time, speeded by fear of failure in Afghanistan. Britain has some hard thinking 
to do if it does not want to be the odd man out.

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/mary-dejevsky/mary-dejevsky-natos-dissolution-is-long-overdue-1782938.html

 

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