By Kyle Balzer & Wes Culp
Friday,
October 18, 2024
Last month,
Vladimir Putin seemingly unveiled changes to Russia’s nuclear doctrine — the
conditions in which Moscow would employ such a weapon — that sent a clear
message to the West: Even if the war in Ukraine stops, Russia’s threats of war
will not. Sowing discord between the U.S. and its allies in Europe remains a
central goal of these threats, and it is the responsibility of American leaders
to avoid playing into Putin’s hands. America’s adversaries in the emerging Axis of Aggression (Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea)
dream of a U.S. retreat from global engagement. Authoritarians despise how U.S.
forces stationed abroad, in Europe and beyond, reassure key allies and
communicate our will to protect our partners. As Putin attempts to fracture
transatlantic relations through nuclear threats, Washington must never lose
sight of the fundamental political role that U.S. conventional
forces play in maintaining the NATO alliance.
Whether
Putin’s rhetoric represents a meaningful long-term change or simply more
saber-rattling will remain uncertain until an official policy document is
released. But some analysts warn that the Kremlin boss suggested a lower threshold for the Russian use of nuclear
weapons — both to hold non-nuclear states like Ukraine responsible for
conventional attacks and to punish third parties like the United States for
aiding Kyiv.
Other
Kremlin watchers believe Putin’s remarks are a symptom of what security analyst
Dima Adamsky calls Russia’s “new normal”: the brandishing of nuclear weapons to weaken
Western resolve and sow divisions within NATO. The erosion of Russia’s nuclear
taboo is playing out on a societal level, where government officials and
state-run media aim to desensitize the Russian people to the idea of nuclear
warfare in ways unthinkable to Westerners. The United States should thus assume
that Putin’s incessant threat-making will remain a central feature of Russian
statecraft even after the Ukraine war ends.
As
U.S. officials assess how to adjust the nation’s global military posture for
long-term competition with the Axis of Aggression, they should factor Russia’s
new nuclear normal into the equation. It is undeniable that Washington must
devote a larger share of defense resources to deterring China as Beijing’s own
capabilities grow. And NATO allies like Germany and France should shoulder more
of the defense burden in Europe as Washington prioritizes the Asia-Pacific. Yet
only focusing on military-technical considerations at the expense of
more subtle political factors risks giving Putin’s nuclear bullying the
chance to weaken, if not sever, trans-Atlantic ties. There are no shortcuts to
reassuring our European allies and keeping them enlisted in the broader
struggle against China and the Axis of Aggression.
Recently,
however, several policy frameworks have been proposed that overlook the political
significance of forward-deployed U.S. conventional forces. These proposals
insist Europe must contribute “most if not all of the conventional forces
necessary to deter” Russia. They suggest that transferring the bulk of U.S.
combat power to Asia would incentivize Germany and France to pick up the slack,
so to speak, on the Continent. Washington’s contribution to the Atlantic
alliance would thus rest primarily on its extended nuclear deterrent — allowing
it to prioritize China and divest from Europe.
Defense
experts close to former president Donald J. Trump’s advisory circle have also proposed dramatic cuts to America’s forward-deployed conventional posture in
Europe. Many believe Washington will have to leave Europe more
exposed
to free up resources for the Asia-Pacific. Others have even called for a radical reorientation of NATO, in which the United States contributes only enough ground forces to serve as a
last-ditch logistics provider. All downplay or ignore the fact that the United
States is the glue binding NATO together.
Between
proposals like these and Putin’s unceasing nuclear threats, it is little wonder
that Europe is increasingly anxious about U.S. security guarantees. Our NATO allies — especially frontline
partners like Poland and the Baltics who already carry their share of the
defense burden — would likely consider any effort to consign the U.S. to
extended nuclear deterrence as abandoning existing security commitments. After
all, if Washington is unwilling to devote meaningful conventional firepower to
Europe in the name of resource scarcity, why would it take steps — like using
nuclear weapons — that risk a catastrophic war that diverts attention from
Asia? Why would Washington not simply husband its resources, as suggested, and leave Eastern Europe to its own devices?
Cold
War history suggests that relying on token conventional contributions would
have dire consequences. In the mid 1970s, as Senate Majority Leader Mike
Mansfield sought to downsize U.S. forces in Europe following the Vietnam War,
West German officials expressed grave concern about the Soviet tanks massed on
their border. They believed Washington’s forward-deployed conventional
capability tied the U.S. nuclear arsenal to NATO. Thus, to reassure an anxious
ally in the midst of Mansfield’s ill-advised campaign, the Gerald Ford
administration parked two additional U.S. combat brigades on the German lowlands.
And despite Washington’s dissatisfaction
with the German defense program in the years ahead — in 1984, for example, a
former U.S. defense secretary delivered a blistering critique of Bonn — those brigades remained in Europe.
Fortunately
for the United States today, frontline allies like Poland and the Baltics are
doing their fair share and continue to ramp up defense spending. It would be a
grievous, unforced error to jeopardize NATO’s future — and, more importantly,
the American national interest — by ignoring the political import of
forward-deployed capability because of the fitful German and French defense
effort. European capitals are already worried that fraying trans-Atlantic trade
ties over two successive U.S. administrations, combined with a broad American
withdrawal from the Continent, could invigorate efforts to bring European defense capabilities
under the EU umbrella in ways that damage NATO cohesion.
Hasty
and deep reductions to U.S. combat capability in Europe would alienate
Washington’s most valuable economic and political partners and reduce their
incentive to maintain a united front against China. As A. Wess Mitchell and
Jakub Grygiel point out, Europe is indispensable to the U.S. global
position. Its economic heft, geostrategic importance, role in underwriting
America’s global reputation, and political and cultural ties to the United
States are irreplaceable and unique in their convergence.
While
fair critiques can be leveled at European governments for their hesitation on
important strategic issues, our European allies have often helped us manage a
range of security challenges. From restricting Chinese access to advanced chipmaking
technology, to assisting with U.S. efforts to defend Israel from Iranian attack, to providing essential aid to Ukraine even as Washington
dithered, our European allies have benefited our global interests.
But
European NATO’s main contribution to the United States is in Europe itself,
specifically in maintaining a modicum of stability on the Continent. A dramatic
conventional drawdown of U.S. forces would diminish America’s influence in
Europe — the critical ingredient lending NATO its strategic coherence. Even if
Eastern Europe remained onside against Russia after an American drawdown,
Western Europe would still be at a fraught juncture where political forces sympathetic to NATO lack the political capital to fill the void as they juggle a raft of competing capital-intensive priorities. In
addition, a trans-Atlantic unraveling would give little incentive for Europe to
cooperate with the United States in countering China’s global reach, leaving
Washington worse off in the Asia-Pacific.
The
central role of the United States in maintaining the trans-Atlantic alliance
makes clear there are no shortcuts to countering Putin’s nuclear bullying and
China’s global reach. If Washington desires an international environment
conducive to American freedom and prosperity, U.S. officials must recognize the
political role of forward-deployed conventional forces. To ignore this reality
would be to jeopardize an alliance critical to competing against the new Axis
of Aggression.
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