The December 3-4 summit of
the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) in London resembles a family
reunion after the acrimony over the issue of military spending by America’s
European allies.
The trend is up for defence
spending across European Allies and Canada. Over $100 billion is expected to be
added to the member states’ defence budgets by end-2020.
More importantly, the trend
at the NATO foreign ministers’ meeting at Brussels on November 19-20, in the
run-up to the London summit, showed that despite growing differences within the
alliance, member states closed ranks around three priority items in the US
global agenda — escalation of the aggressive policy toward Russia,
militarisation of space and countering China’s rise.
The NATO will follow
Washington’s lead to establish a space command by officially regarding space
as “a new operational domain”. According to NATO secretary-general Jens
Stoltenberg, this decision “can allow NATO planners to make a request for
allies to provide capabilities and services, such as satellite communications
and data imagery.”
Stoltenberg said, “Space is also essential to the alliance’s
deterrence and defence, including the ability to navigate, to gather
intelligence, and to detect missile launches. Around 2,000 satellites orbit the
Earth. And around half of them are owned by NATO countries.”
Equally, Washington has been
urging the NATO to officially identify China’s rise as a long-term challenge.
According to media reports, the Brussels meeting acceded to the US demand and
decided to officially begin military surveillance of China.
The US Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo hit out at
China after
the Brussels meeting: “Finally, our alliance must address the current and
potential long-term threat posed by the Chinese Communist Party. Seventy
years ago, the founding nations of NATO came together for the cause of freedom
and democracy. We cannot ignore the fundamental differences and beliefs
in the – between our countries and those of the Chinese Communist Party.”
So far so good. However, it
remains to be seen if Washington’s grand design to draw NATO into its
“Indo-Pacific strategy” (read containment of China) will gain traction.
Clearly, the US intends to have a say in the European allies’ growing business
and economic relations with China to delimit Chinese influence in Europe. The
US campaign to block 5G technology from China met with rebuff from several
European countries.
On the other hand, the
European project has unravelled and the Franco-German axis that was its anchor
sheet has become shaky. The rift between Paris and Berlin works to Washington’s
advantage but, paradoxically, also hobbles the western alliance system.
The French President
Emmanuel Macron annoyed Germany by his recent calls for better relations with
Russia “to prevent the world from going up in a conflagration”; his brutally
frank remarks about NATO being “brain dead” and the US policy on Russia being
“governmental, political and historical hysteria”; and his repeated emphasis on
a European military policy independent of the US.
The congruence of interests
between Berlin and Washington vis-a-vis Macron manifested itself in the NATO’s
endorsement of the US-led escalation against Russia and China, with France
rather isolated. However, this congruence will be put to test very soon at the
summit meeting of the Normandy format over Ukraine, which France is hosting on
December 9, following the NATO’s London summit. France is helping Russia to negotiate
a deal with Ukraine.
The recent phone calls between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his
Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky underscored the growing interest in
Moscow and Kiev at the leadership level to improve relations between the two
countries.
Moscow’s breakthrough Avangard missile system with the
hypersonic boost-glide vehicle will be deployed on combat duty with the
Strategic Missile Force in December 2019
In the final analysis, the
Franco-German relations are of pivotal importance to not only Europe’s
strategic future but the western alliance system as such. If anyone was in
doubt, the French veto in October means sudden death for the proposal on European
Union accession of the Balkan state of North Macedonia, which NATO is inducting
as its newest member. Berlin and Washington are livid, but a veto is a veto.
With NATO being set up by
Washington for a confrontationist posture, Russia and China won’t let their
guard down. Addressing a meeting of the Russian Federation Security Council on
November 22, Putin said, “There are many uncertainty factors… competition and
rivalry are growing stringer and morphing into new forms… The leading countries
are actively developing their offensive weapons… the so-called ‘nuclear club’
is receiving new members, as we all know. We are also seriously concerned about
the NATO infrastructure approaching our borders, as well as the attempts to
militarise outer space.”
Putin stressed,
“In these conditions, it is important to make adequate
and accurate forecasts, analyse the possible changes
in the global situation, and to use the forecasts
and conclusions to develop our military potential.”
The US-led military build-up
against Russia and China will be on display in two big exercises next year
codenamed ‘Defender
2020 in Europe’
and ‘Defender
2020 in the Pacific’.
Significantly, only four
days before Putin made the above remarks, Chinese President Xi Jinping told him
at a meeting in Brasilia on the sidelines of the BRICS summit that “the ongoing
complex and profound changes in the current international situation with rising
instability and uncertainty urge China and Russia to establish closer strategic
coordination to jointly uphold the basic norms governing international
relations, oppose unilateralism, bullying and interference in other countries’
affairs, safeguard the respective sovereignty and security, and create a fair
and just international environment.”
Putin responded by saying
that “Russia and China have important consensus and common interests in
maintaining global strategic security and stability. Under the current
situation, the two sides should continue to maintain close strategic
communication and firmly support each other in safeguarding sovereignty,
security, and development rights.” (Chinese MFA)
The Russian response is also
visible on the ground. The share of modern weapons and equipment
in the Russian Army and Navy has reached an impressive level of
70 percent. The first pilot batch of next-generation T-14 Armata tanks will arrive for the Russian troops in late 2019 – early
2020.
On November 26, Russian
Defence Ministry stated that Moscow’s breakthrough Avangard missile system with
the hypersonic boost-glide vehicle will be deployed on combat duty with the Strategic Missile Force in December.
For the first time, the
electronic warfare systems at Russia’s military base in Tajikistan will be reinforced with the latest Pole-21
jamming station that can counter cruise missiles, drones and guided air bombs
and precision weapon guidance systems. Moscow is guarding against the US and
NATO presence in Afghanistan.
Source: The Indian Punchline
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