NATO RIP? Well, Hopefully

By Srdja Trifkovic <http://www.alternativeright.com/authors/srdja-trifkovic/>  

 

http://www.alternativeright.com/main/blogs/exit-strategies/nato-rip/

 

Ukraine's announcement that it will pass a law that will bar the country from 
joining NATO <http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,5361801,00.html>  has been 
greeted with barely concealed relief in Moscow, Paris, Berlin and Rome. It is 
also good news for the security interests of the United States. The time has 
come not only to give up on NATO expansion, but also to abolish the Alliance 
altogether.

Encouraging an impoverished, practically defenseless nation such as Ukraine to 
join a military alliance directed against the superpower next door, thereby 
stretching a nuclear tripwire between them, had never been a sound strategy. 
Article V of the NATO Charter states that an attack on one is an attack on all, 
and offers automatic guarantee of aid to an ally in distress. The U.S. would 
supposedly provide its protective cover to a new client, right in Russia's 
geopolitical backyard, in an area that had never been deemed vital to America's 
security interests. 

>From the realist perspective, accepting Ukraine into NATO would mean one of 
>two things: either the United States is serious that it would risk a 
>thermonuclear war for the sake of, say, the status of Sebastopol, which is 
>insane; or the United States is not serious, which would be frivolous and 
>dangerous. 

President Clinton tried to evade the issue, over a decade ago, by questioning 
the meaning of words and asserting that Article V "does not define what actions 
constitute 'an attack' or prejudge what Alliance decisions might then be made 
in such circumstances." He claimed the right 
<http://www.armscontrol.org/act/1997_09/nato>  of the United States "to 
exercise individual and collective judgment over this question." 

Such fudge cannot be the basis of serious policy. It evokes previous Western 
experiments with security guarantees in the region -- leading to 
Czechoslovakia's carve-up in 1938, and to Poland's destruction in September 
1939 -- which warn us that promises nonchalantly given today may turn into 
bounced checks or smoldering cities tomorrow. After more than seven decades, 
the lesson of is clear: security guarantees not based on the provider's resolve 
to fight a fully blown war to fulfill them, are worse than no guarantees at 
all. It would be dangerously naïve to assume that the United States, 
financially and militarily overextended, would indeed honor the guarantee under 
Article V, or assume responsibility for open-ended maintenance of potentially 
disputed frontiers (say in the Crimea) that were drawn arbitrarily by the likes 
of Khrushchev and bear little relation to ethnicity or history,

A necessary and successful alliance during the Cold War, NATO is obsolete and 
harmful today. It no longer provides collective security -- an attack against 
one is an attack against all -- of limited geographic scope (Europe) against a 
predatory totalitarian power (the USSR). Instead, NATO has morphed into a 
vehicle for the attainment of misguided American strategic objectives on a 
global scale. Further expansion would merely cement and perpetuate its new, 
U.S.-invented "mission" as a self-appointed promoter of democracy, protector of 
human rights, and guardian against instability outside its original area. It 
was on those grounds, rather than in response to any supposed threat, that the 
Clinton administration pushed for the admission of Poland, the Czech Republic, 
and Hungary in 1996, and President Bush brought in the Baltic republics, 
Bulgaria, and Rumania in 2004. 

Bill Clinton's air war against the Serbs, which started 11 years ago (March 24, 
1999), marked a decisive shift in NATO's mutation from a defensive alliance 
into a supranational security force based on the doctrine of "humanitarian 
intervention." The trusty keeper of the gate of 1949 had morphed into a roaming 
vigilante five decades later. 

The limits of American power became obvious in August 2008. Saakashvili's 
attack on South Ossetia's capital, Tskhinvali, was an audacious challenge to 
Russia, to which she responded forcefully. Moscow soon maneuvered Washington 
into a position of weakness unseen since the final days of the Carter 
presidency three decades ago. The Europeans promptly brokered a truce that was 
pleasing to Moscow and NATO's expansion along the Black Sea was effectively 
stalled, with no major Continental power willing to risk further complications 
with Russia. They understood the need for a sane relationship with Moscow that 
acknowledges that Russia has legitimate interests in her "near-abroad." 

America, Russia and NATO -- The Soviet Union came into being as a revolutionary 
state that challenged any given status quo in principle, starting with the 
Comintern and ending three generations later with Afghanistan. Some of its 
aggressive actions and hostile impulses could be explained in light of 
"traditional" Russian need for security; at root, however, there was always an 
ideology unlimited in ambition and global in scope. 

At first, the United States tried to appease and accommodate the Soviets 
(1943-46), then moved to containment in 1947, and spent the next four decades 
building and maintaining essentially defensive mechanisms -- such as NATO -- 
designed to prevent any major change in the global balance. 

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia has been trying to 
articulate her goals and define her policies in terms of "traditional" national 
interests. The old Soviet dual-track policy of having "normal" relations with 
America, on the one hand, while seeking to subvert her, on the other, gave way 
to naïve attempts by Boris Yeltsin's foreign minister Andrei Kozyrev to forge a 
"partnership" with the United States. 

By contrast, the early 1990s witnessed the beginning of America's futile 
attempt to assert her status as the only global "hyperpower." The justification 
for their project was as ideological, and the implications were as 
revolutionary as anything concocted by Zinoviev or Trotsky in their heyday. In 
essence, the United States adopted her own dual-track approach. When Mikhail 
Gorbachev's agreement was needed for German reunification, President George 
H.W. Bush gave a firm and public promise that NATO wound not move eastward. 
Within years, however, Bill Clinton expanded NATO to include all the former 
Warsaw Pact countries of Central Europe. On a visit to Moscow in 1996, Clinton 
even wondered if he had gone too far, confiding to Strobe Talbott 
<http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9780812968460> , "We 
keep telling Ol' Boris, 'Okay, now here's what you've got to do next -- here's 
some more [sh-t] for your face.'" 

Instead of declaring victory and disbanding the alliance in the early 1990s, 
the Clinton administration successfully redesigned it as a mechanism for 
open-ended out-of-area interventions at a time when every rationale for its 
existence had disappeared. Following the air war against Serbia almost a decade 
ago, NATO's area of operations became unlimited, and its "mandate" entirely 
self-generated. The Clinton administration agreed that NATO faced "no imminent 
threat of attack," yet asserted that a larger NATO would be "better able to 
prevent conflict from arising in the first place" and - presumably alluding to 
the Balkans -- better able to address "rogue states, the poisoned appeal of 
extreme nationalism, and ethnic, racial, and religious hatreds." How exactly an 
expanded NATO could have prevented conflicts in Bosnia or Chechnya or Nagorno 
Karabakh had remained unexplained. 

Another round of NATO expansion came under George W. Bush, when three former 
Soviet Baltic republics were admitted. In April 2007, he signed the 
Orwellian-sounding NATO Freedom Consolidation Act 
<http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=s110-494> , which extended U.S. 
military assistance to aspiring NATO members, specifically Georgia and Ukraine. 
Further expansion, according to former National Security Advisor Zbigniew 
Brzezinski, was "historically mandatory, geopolitically desirable." A decade 
earlier, Brzezinski readily admitted 
<http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/zbignato.htm>  that NATO's enlargement 
was not about U.S. security in any conventional sense, but "about America's 
role in Europe - whether America will remain a European power and whether a 
larger democratic Europe will remain organically linked to America." Such 
attitude is the source of endless problems for America and Europe alike. 

President Obama and his foreign policy team have failed to grasp that a problem 
exists, let alone to act to rectify it. There has been a change of officials, 
but the regime is still the same - and America is still in need of a new grand 
strategy. Limited in objectives and indirect in approach, it should seek 
security and freedom for the United States without maintaining, let alone 
expanding, unnecessary foreign commitments. 

The threat to Europe's security does not come from Russia or from a fresh bout 
of instability in the Balkans. The real threat to Europe's security and to her 
survival comes from Islam, from the deluge of inassimilable Third World 
immigrants, and from collapsing birthrates. All three are due to the moral 
decrepitude and cultural degeneracy, not to any shortage of soldiers and 
weaponry. The continued presence of a U.S. contingent of any size can do 
nothing to alleviate these problems, because they are cultural, moral and 
spiritual. 

NATO: unnecessary and harmful -- In terms of a realist grand strategy, NATO is 
detrimental to U.S. security. It forces America to assume at least nominal 
responsibility for open-ended maintenance of a host of disputed frontiers that 
were drawn, often arbitrarily, by Communist dictators, long-dead Versailles 
diplomats, and assorted local tyrants, and which bear little relation to 
ethnicity, geography, or history. With an ever-expanding NATO, eventual 
adjustments -- which are inevitable -- will be more potentially violent for the 
countries concerned and more risky for the United States. America does not and 
should not have any interest in preserving an indefinite status quo in the 
region. 

Clinton's 1999 war against Serbia was based on the his own doctrine of 
"humanitarian intervention," which claimed the right of the United States to 
use military force to prevent or stop alleged human rights abuses as defined by 
Washington. This doctrine explicitly denied the validity of long-established 
norms -- harking back to 1648 Westphalia -- in favor of a supposedly higher 
objective. It paved the way for the pernicious Bush Doctrine of preventive war 
and "regime change" codified in the 2002 National Security Strategy. 

The Clinton-Bush Doctrine represented the global extension of the Soviet model 
of relations with Moscow's satellites applied in the occupation of 
Czechoslovakia in August 1968. Ideological justification was provided by the 
Brezhnev Doctrine, defined by its author as the supposed obligation of the 
socialist countries to ensure that their actions should not "damage either 
socialism in their country or the fundamental interests of other socialist 
countries." "The norms of law cannot be interpreted narrowly, formally, in 
isolation from the general context of the modern world," Brezhnev further 
claimed. By belonging to the "socialist community of nations," its members had 
to accept that the USSR -- the leader of the "socialist camp" -- was not only 
the enforcer of the rules but also the judge of whether and when an 
intervention was warranted. No country could leave the Warsaw Pact or change 
its communist party's monopoly on power. 

More than three decades after Prague 1968 the USSR was gone and the Warsaw Pact 
dismantled, but the principles of the Brezhnev Doctrine are not defunct. They 
survive in the neoliberal guise. 

In 1991 the Maastricht Treaty speeded up the erosion of EU member countries' 
sovereignty by transferring their prerogatives to the Brussels regime of 
unelected bureaucrats. The passage of NAFTA was followed by the 1995 Uruguay 
round of GATT that produced the WTO. The nineties thus laid the foundation for 
the new, post-national order. By early 1999 the process was sufficiently far 
advanced for President Bill Clinton to claim in The New York Times in May 1999 
that, had it not bombed Serbia, "NATO itself would have been discredited for 
failing to defend the very values that give it meaning." This was but one way 
of restating Brezhnev's dictum that "the norms of law cannot be interpreted 
narrowly, formally, in isolation from the general context of the modern world." 

Like his Soviet predecessor, Clinton used an abstract and ideologically loaded 
notion as the pretext to act as he deemed fit, but no "interests of world 
socialism" could beat "universal human rights" when it came to determining 
where and when to intervene. The key difference between Brezhnev and Clinton 
was in the limited scope of the Soviet leader's self-awarded outreach. His 
doctrine applied only to the "socialist community," as opposed to the 
unlimited, potentially world-wide scope of "defending the values that give NATO 
meaning." The "socialist community" led by Moscow stopped on the Elbe, after 
all. It was replaced by the "International Community" led by Washington, which 
stops nowhere. 

The subsequent Bush Doctrine still stands as the ideological pillar and 
self-referential framework for the policy of permanent global interventionism. 
It precludes any meaningful debate about the correlation between ends and means 
of American power: we are not only wise but virtuous; our policies are shaped 
by "core values" which are axiomatic, and not by prejudices. 

The Axis of Instability -- The mantra's neocon-neolib upholders are blind to 
the fact that, after a brief period of American mono-polar dominance 
(1991-2008), the world's distribution of power is now characterized by 
asymmetric multipolarity. It is the most unstable model of international 
relations, which -- as history teaches us -- may lead to a major war. 

As I wrote in takimag.com 
<http://www.takimag.com/site/article/the_more_things_change>  a year ago, 
during the Cold War the world system was based on the model of bipolarity based 
on the doctrine of Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD). The awareness of both 
superpowers that they would inflict severe and unavoidable reciprocal damage on 
each other was coupled with the acceptance that each had a sphere of dominance 
or vital interest that should not be infringed upon. Proxy wars were fought in 
the grey zone all over the Third World, most notably in the Middle East, but 
they were kept localized even when a superpower was directly involved. 
Potentially lethal crises (Berlin 1949, Korea 1950, Cuba 1963) were 
de-escalated due to the implicit rationality of both sides' decision-making 
calculus. The bipolar model was the product of unique circumstances without an 
adequate historical precedent, however, which are unlikely to be repeated. 

The most stable model of international relations that is both historically 
recurrent and structurally repeatable in the future is the balance of power 
system in which no single great power is either physically able or politically 
willing to seek hegemony. This model was prevalent from the Peace of Westphalia 
(1648) until Napoleon, and again from Waterloo until around 1900. It is based 
on a relative equilibrium between the key powers that hold each other in check 
and function within a recognized set of rules. Wars do occur, but they are 
limited in scope and intensity because the warring parties tacitly accept the 
fundamental legitimacy and continued existence of their opponent(s). 

If one of the powers becomes markedly stronger than others and if its 
decision-making elite internalizes an ideology that demands or at least 
justifies hegemony, the inherently unstable system of asymmetrical 
multipolarity will develop. In all three known instances -- Napoleonic France 
after 1799, the Kaiserreich in 1914, and the Third Reich after 1933 -- the 
challenge could not be resolved without a major war. Fore the past two decades, 
the U.S. has been acting in a similar manner. Having proclaimed itself the 
leader of an imaginary "international community," it goes further than any 
previous would-be hegemon in treating the entire world as the American sphere 
of interest. Bush II is gone, but we are still stuck with the doctrine that 
allows open-ended political, military, and economic domination by the United 
States acting unilaterally and pledged "to keep military strength beyond 
challenge." 

Any attempt by a single power to keep its military strength beyond challenge is 
inherently destabilizing.  Neither Napoleon nor Hitler knew any "natural" 
limits, but their ambition was confined to Europe. With the United States 
today, the novelty is that this ambition is extended literally to the whole 
world. Not only the Western Hemisphere, not just the "Old Europe," Japan, or 
Israel, but also unlikely places like Kosovo or the Caucasus, are considered 
vitally important. The globe itself is now effectively claimed as America's 
sphere of influence 

The U.S. became the agent of revolutionary dynamism with global ambitions, in 
the name of ideological norms of "democracy, human rights and open markets," 
and NATO is the enforcement mechanism of choice. That neurotic dynamism is 
resisted by the emerging coalition of weaker powers, acting on behalf of the 
essentially "conservative" principles of state sovereignty, national interest, 
and reaffirmation of the right to their own spheres of geopolitical dominance. 
The doctrine of global interventionism is bound to produce an effective 
counter-coalition. The neoliberal-neoconservative duopoly still refuses to 
grasp this fact. Ukraine's decision to give up its NATO candidacy makes a 
modest but welcome contribution to the long-overdue return of sanity inside the 
Beltway "foreign policy community." 

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