By Richard Jordan
Monday, July 16, 2018
John Mearsheimer, a professor at the University of
Chicago, predicted in 1990 that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization would
soon dissolve. Among academics, Mearsheimer has the reputation of a contrarian,
perhaps even of a crank. But, back in 1994, he also predicted (to much
derision) that Ukraine would regret surrendering its nukes when it wound up the
victim of Russian aggression. Both predictions were born from a realist
worldview, a worldview Donald Trump has returned to the White House.
It’s doubtful that Trump and Mearsheimer would see
eye-to-eye on much. Yet both have wondered for 30 years what purpose NATO
serves. Scholars and policymakers used to laugh at that question. Now, for the
first time, they have to take it seriously—and are realizing it might not have
an answer. The realists have come back with a vengeance.
Until Now, the
Internationalist View Has Dominated
There have long been two justifications for NATO: one
internationalist, one realist. The internationalists argue that NATO is part of
a quasi-constitutional project, a kind of soft world government that the United
States created after World War II. In this view, because it’s more about
international society than power, NATO would survive the fall of the Soviet
bloc.
The realists, like Trump, disagree. They argue that NATO
was all about balancing the threat of communism. Once that threat was removed,
the alliance would lose its purpose and eventually disintegrate—unless it found
a new enemy to oppose.
During the Cold War, it was impossible to tell which view
was correct: both sides wanted a strong NATO to defend against the Soviet
Union, and both sides accepted the United States would have to pay for it, even
if the allies weren’t ponying up. As conservatives have emphasized, every
president since Ike Eisenhower has tried to get the allies to pay more; Trump
is unique only in that he succeeded.
After the Cold War, at first it looked like the
internationalists had been right all along: far from collapsing, NATO expanded
into Eastern Europe and undertook missions in Afghanistan and Yugoslavia.
Between presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama, some variety
of internationalism has guided our foreign policy for 25 years.
Now, the
Irrationality Is Starting To Hurt Us
But America has a lot of wiggle room in international
affairs. What other country could simultaneously fight two wars on the other side
of the earth, without a draft, without increased taxes, and without any
significant loss to gross domestic product? Our military power exceeds that of
the next eight countries combined; we are the only people capable of projecting
force rapidly onto any continent at will; and, contrary to the European Union’s
petulant president, we lead the largest network of friends and allies of any
nation in history.
For three decades, we’ve been coasting by on that wiggle
room, not needing to face hard realities or reform old structures to fit new
circumstances. An old adage warns, “the market can remain irrational longer
than you can remain solvent.” Up until now, NATO has had the luxury of
remaining irrational. The alliance didn’t make sense, but there were no pressures
forcing it to evolve.
That is changing. On both the Right and the Left,
American observers are realizing that something has to give. The Right is tired
of paying for ungrateful Europeans’ welfare states, much less shoring up an
incipient (and antagonistic) despotism in Turkey. The Left sees a reduced
commitment to Europe as a way to avoid conflict and as a windfall to fund a new
New Deal.
The old willingness to “pay any price, bear any burden”
is waning. And rightly so: Americans fought the Cold War because we were all
that stood between freedom and tyranny. There is no reason we should subsidize
others’ luxuries, let alone when we have so many problems at home.
A New Theory
Ascends the Throne
The internationalists are in retreat. At least with regards
to China, even The Economist has embraced
a more realist approach. Trump has filled his administration with realists:
Defense Secretary James Mattis, along with former advisors Steve Bannon and
H.R. McMaster, are hardnosed pragmatists and devotees of Thucydides, the Greek
father of realism.
After joining the National Security Council, Michael
Anton, of Flight 93 fame, argued for an essentially realist overhaul of the
liberal order. And last April, Trump replaced Anton with John Bolton, who is
sometimes erroneously described as a neocon but actually embraces a calculating
and forceful approach to foreign policy. Together, whether in power or out,
these figures are challenging the old internationalist platitudes. They have
already been assaulting free trade; now, they are taking on NATO.
Fundamentally, realists stress that a country should act
in its self-interest, narrowly defined: it should pursue security, and
privilege considerations of power when engaging others. They set little stock
in rules, diplomatic niceties, international society, or assuming it’s possible
to promote human rights through intervention. Most of all, realists stress
that, when a country neglects the realities of power politics, reality
eventually bites back.
With their dreams of a global society and neglect of hard
power, internationalists saw no pressing need to revitalize NATO. They enjoyed
their holiday from history. By contrast, the Trump administration has chosen to
act before reality has a chance to bite.
Two Options for NATO
In his Warsaw Speech, Trump centered his foreign policy
on one theme: “The fundamental question of our time is whether the West has the
will to survive.” The president made plain that question included whether our
delinquent cousins will pay for their security—and by the sounds of it, Trump
is willing to force the issue. Either Europe steps up, or America steps down.
It is a coarse choice, but a necessary one.
NATO can take two roads now. Down one, the alliance is
reformed. Europeans step up, America takes a less prominent role in securing
the Continent, and together they confront a revanchist Russia and a volatile
Middle East. The French president, Emmanuel Macron, suggested one such avenue
last fall with a Europe-wide defense force. That might be a pipe dream, but a
robust alliance centered on Franco-German wealth and power is not.
Some on the Left think Trump has an infantile worldview
that hates alliances, but that is false: Trump likes a team; he just dislikes
getting “ripped off.” We have every indication that a Trump administration (and
subsequent presidents) would embrace a strong, European alliance. Such a
friendship would be a bulwark for liberty throughout the world.
Down the other road, the alliance dwindles, ending either
defunct or dissolved. Not tomorrow or next year, but five or ten or twenty
years hence, a crisis will arise that the Europeans can’t solve on their own.
They will call in the Americans, whose patience they have exhausted. Europeans
see us as cowboys, but Americans are naturally much more isolationist. Our gut
reaction is not to come out guns blazing, but to ask why we should care. (Where
is Iraq, anyway?)
Ask yourself: will a future president stake reelection to
help a decadent Europe whose citizens could not even be roused to defend
themselves? Or will America, whether wisely or foolishly, shrug its shoulders
and retreat once more behind the Atlantic Ocean, to let the Old World sort out
its problems on its own?
The world no longer needs the Cold War’s NATO, and
America will have neither the patience nor the cash to provide it much longer.
The question is not whether NATO will change, but whether it will reform while
it still can. To date, the Trump administration is our best hope that it will.
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