ALEX GORKA |
19.02.2018 | SECURITY / WAR
AND CONFLICT | WORLD / MIDDLE
EAST
Dancing to US Tune:
NATO Creates Military Schengen and
Launches Iraq Mission
The NATO defense chiefs’ meeting on
February 14-15 was mainly devoted to sharing the defense burden and other
issues routinely discussed at any event. As usual, there were turgid speeches
with opaque meaning to leave one guessing what’s really behind those nice
words. In fact, the alliance took two far-going decisions proving a clue to its
plans for near future.
The ministers said yes to the creation of military
Schengen to ease forces movements across the Old Continent. NATO is to do away
with the cumbersome and lingering bureaucratic procedures hindering
transportation of troops and hardware through territories of member states. One
of the solutions is a standardized form used by European allies and partner
states for granting permission for movements. Germany has offered to host the
command center to implement the concept of free transit zone in view of its vast experience in
providing logistical support.
It’s not red tape only. One thing leads to another.
The military Schengen will inevitably result in additional expenditure to adapt
the civilian infrastructure to military needs, upgrading roads, tunnels and
bridges to enable hardware movements and heavy aircraft landings.
The decision is taken amid burgeoning preparations to boost military
infrastructure near Russia’s borders. The fact that by signing the 1997
NATO-Russia Founding Act the bloc pledged not to deploy “substantial” ground
forces on permanent basis close to Russia appears to be ignored and forgotten.
With the document no longer valid, the bilateral military relationship will be
deprived of any legal basis.
To augment the forces in East Europe, the Black Sea,
the Baltics and the Scandinavian Peninsula the bloc needs new logistic hubs. Unobstructed large-scale transport
movements become top priority for implementation of the war plans, such as
concentrating combat-ready stocks for a full US brigade in Poland. So, the
alliance is clearing the obstacles that hinder its ability to rapidly boost
forward presence and concentrate forces for an attack.
The ministers announced another important decision
using euphemisms to obfuscate the essence. NATO agreed to launch an assist
and train mission in Iraq, “establishing specialist military academies
and schools.” According
to Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, the alliance’s priorities “in
the South” include improving “the ability to react to future
crises in the region, including with enhanced planning and exercise.” So,
it’s not a pure training mission but rather a commitment to join the
US campaign aimed at rolling back the Iran’s influence. The US cuts its forces in Iraq moving them to Afghanistan,
where the situation is getting worse, and NATO is right here to fill the gap
under the pretext of training and increased military aid. With military
presence, which goes hand in hand with training missions, the alliance is on
its way to prevent Iraq from falling into the Iran’s orbit and also
reduce Russia’s influence in that country. Iraq is too
important to be anything but pro-Western.
NATO is also lending the US a helping hand in Syria,
the country viewed by Washington as a battlefield in the campaign to roll back
Iran. French President Macron has just threatened to strike Syria if the information
about the use of chemical weapons by its government is confirmed. The US has made it clear that it has no plans to leave or
even reduce its presence in Syria after the defeat of the Islamic State. It
will stay indefinitely. The purpose is to counter the threat from Iran. America has quietly launched a nation-building process in the Syrian
territories under its control.
The ministers’ meeting of the multinational
organization has expressed its readiness to dance to the US tune, confirming
its commitment to raise defense expenditure up to 2% of GDP, spur military
build-up in Europe, including the creation of two more commands, and join the
US in its anti-Iran campaign in an attempt to remake the world in its own
image. So, we have the same old song and dance with the
alliance remaining in full saber-rattling mode.
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