By Jerry Hendrix
Monday, July 09, 2018
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is a source
of strength for the United States and the nations of Europe, but Europe is
endangering NATO’s continued existence through its own actions. If NATO is to
remain an effective mutual-assistance defense force, then all the member states
must step up and demonstrate their willingness and ability to bear their
portion of the burden of alliance membership. Make no mistake, it is Europe’s
unwillingness to do so thus far, and not the election of President Donald
Trump, that has created the vacuum that invited the present reevaluation of
NATO’s future. When it comes to mutual security in Europe, the question that
currently haunts the continent is “How much does Europe want it?”
It is true, however, that the United States has some
responsibility for the present situation. It helped to found NATO and voluntarily
bore a disproportionate economic and military burden within the alliance for
much of its history. This was done for a purpose. Following World War II and
the profound devastation of the European continent, the relatively untouched
United States economy provided Europe with financial resources in the form of
the Marshall Plan to help rebuild its industries. The U.S. also carried most of
the military burden within the alliance, allowing its European partners to
spend more on reconstructing their shattered societies. These efforts only
accelerated after the fall of the Soviet Union and the arrival of “the end of
history.” Except history never really ends.
The decade of the 1990s, characterized by “peace
dividends” and the downsizing of American military forces to include the
removal of many forward-based units from Europe, was soon followed by the
terror attacks of 9/11. After the Twin Towers fell, NATO as an organization
invoked its Article V common-defense clause for the first time, in support of
the United States, and began to send expeditionary units to Afghanistan to
support U.S.-led counterterrorism efforts there. However, despite increases in
activity, there was no real increase in the size of the military forces within
most NATO members. Their focus continued to be on internal domestic entitlement
spending and supporting the maturation of the European “experiment.” The
thought remained that the United States, then spending more than 4 percent of
its GDP on defense and national security, would continue to cast its broad
security blanket over Europe, where such spending quickly dipped below 2
percent of GDP as a whole.
NATO also continued to grow. Originally founded as a
twelve-member organization composed of ten European nations plus Canada and the
United States, it has now reached 29 states, with the last, Montenegro, being
added in 2017. Who could blame the new member nations for wanting to join NATO?
After two generations of slavery under Soviet domination, they clearly wanted
freedom and some sense of security in which to build better lives for their
people. NATO, with its massive American security blanket, provided it. However,
NATO’s broader sense of assurance soon found expression in military complacency
as fiscal resources flowed away from national security. “Why worry?” appeared
to be the thought; Russia
was a weak, ineffectual power, and besides, “the U.S. will provide” had
become the accepted mantra.
However, counterterrorism wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
distracted the United States’ strategic gaze long enough for Russia to pick off
territory in Georgia in 2008 and in Ukraine, including the outright illegal
annexation of Crimea, in 2014, with little to no reaction from Europe. While
the three small Baltic nations have all increased their defense spending to 2
percent of their GDPs, a majority of NATO’s members, including Germany, the
continent’s largest economy, have yet to meet that goal. There is also the
looming question surrounding how much each nation contributes to NATO’s
operating fund, and the fact that Europe as a whole has not really invested in
seriously modernizing its military capabilities. While Russia’s actions bespeak
a growing threat to the stability of Europe, it is hard for citizens of the
United States to get worked up over the problem when Europeans themselves seem
so nonchalant about the issue.
Americans understand that NATO has been a force for good
in the world, and they appreciate the fact that the alliance showed solidarity
with the U.S. after 9/11, but there is also a slowly opening chasm of
understanding with regard to security between Europe and the United States that
threatens to fracture the foundation of the alliance. Europe has failed to make
the investments necessary to uphold its side of the bargain, and this problem
goes far beyond the 2 percent–of-GDP defense-spending issue. Its air
forces are largely incapable of operating in advanced
anti-access/area-denial environments, which means that in wartime it will be up
to the Americans to attack advanced missile sites. European allies have failed
to make significant investments in air and missile defense, giving Russia a
free pass in these critical technology areas. Legal documents such as the
Ottawa Treaty, which limit anti-personnel and other types of mines, are a
disadvantage and unrealistic when
only one side of a competition plans to adhere to them. Europe has also
failed to keep its navies right-sized to wage an anti-submarine campaign in the
Atlantic, which means that in wartime Americans will have to fight
their way across the Atlantic before they can even land troops on European
soil. So far as highly mobile armored units go, most European armies’ tanks are
either too few or too antiquated (if they’re not simply
non-existent) to fight in a modern land war.
So, as President Trump makes his trip to Brussels and
then on to Helsinki, it would be best for European leaders to understand that
the future of the alliance lies not in his hands, but theirs. As NATO is a
treaty, the United States will not exit the alliance without an action by the
Senate, and that is unlikely. The real danger is that the growing American
perception that NATO members are not taking their individual responsibilities
to the alliance seriously will continue to undermine respect for the
organization in the United States, and in Russia. To turn this perception
around, NATO’s members must meet the United States halfway, both in their
overall defense spending and in the particular investments they make. NATO’s members
in Europe and Canada must spend more and modernize their forces. The success of
President Trump’s talks with Putin will depend on the degree to which Europe
publicly backs Trump’s policies. In the end, when it comes to Europe’s
security, the U.S. cannot want it more than Europeans do.
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