December
6, 2019
©
Photo: AP/Evan Vucci
If
the NATO summit this week marking the 70th anniversary of its foundation in
1949 was meant to be a resounding celebration, it backfired spectacularly, more
as a resounding farce. Amid all the pomp and ceremony afforded by an official
reception at Buckingham Palace, hosted by the British Queen, the two-day
gathering descended into squabbling, sneering and back-stabbing.
For
an organization that declares its mission to be about “maintaining peace and
security”, the infighting between NATO leaders showed an organization virtually
at war with itself.
The
culmination of comedy was when US President Donald Trump stormed off before the
closing session on Wednesday after he found out about video footage showing other leaders
mocking him for his rambling press conferences. The video recording of a
“hot-mic” discussion went viral, appearing to show Canada’s Justin Trudeau,
Britain’s Boris Johnson and France’s Emmanuel Macron making jokes about Trump. Trump hit back by slamming Trudeau as “two-faced”.
The
next day’s front-page headlines captured some of the farce. The London Times:
“Trump leaves NATO meeting as leaders are seen laughing”. The Guardian: “Trump
leaves NATO meeting after ridicule from allies”. The Financial Times: “Disunity
mars NATO summit”. A New York Times’ online briefing edition headlined:
“Squabbling and uncertainty cloud NATO’s future”.
NATO’s
problems are not just about a clash between personalities. The arrival of Trump
as US president has merely brought long-simmering structural and strategic
tensions to the surface.
In
a nutshell, NATO’s problem is that the US-led military alliance has continued
to enlarge when it does not have a credible cohesive purpose. When it was
founded in 1949, four years after the Second World War ended, the Atlantic
alliance was nominally purposed for defending Europe from alleged aggression by
the Soviet Union. In reality, it was the other way around. NATO was founded to
harry the Soviet Union. Hence the Russian-led Warsaw Pact was established in
1955, six years after NATO was formed.
Be
that as it may, when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 that was supposed to
herald the end of the Cold War. Instead of disbanding, however, NATO continued
to expand as an organization. Over the past three decades it has added 17 new
members, many of them proximate to Russia’s borders.
Despite
its official claims, NATO is not maintaining peace and security in Europe. It
is fueling dangerous tensions with Russia; tensions which could lead to a hot
war between nuclear powers.
Russia’s
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said this week that
“NATO’s reckless expansion” is jeopardizing international peace. He said the
organization is now functioning as an imperial machine for dominance not just
in the Euro-Atlantic hemisphere but in the Middle East as well.
This
week’s NATO summit near London was given the slogan “innovating the alliance”.
Amid the squabbling and rancor among leaders, the slogan betrays a desperation
for the organization to find a credible purpose for itself in the modern age.
The
demonization of Russia with absurd claims of Moscow wanting to invade European
countries is outlandish scaremongering that is simply not fit for purpose in
the eyes of Western publics.
So,
this week NATO announced some new “innovations”. Secretary-General Jens
Stoltenberg told media that, in
addition to “protecting Europe” from Russia, the military alliance was for the
first time designating China as a “challenge”. He also announced that NATO was
henceforth viewing “space as an operational domain”.
What
this shows more than ever is that NATO is a vehicle for maximizing US
imperialism. It gives a multilateral cover for what are Washington’s global
objectives. It is this dominance by the US over the Europeans that causes much
of the strife within the organization. France’s President Macron and his
remarks last month about NATO being “brain dead” is symptomatic of the growing
resentment among European leaders to what they see as an overbearing American
task-master.
As
the US-led NATO alliance expanded to 29 members – and looks for more members
from among Georgia and Ukraine – so too have military budgets expanded. The
combined NATO spend is over $1 trillion a year. That is 20 times Russia’s
defense budget and five times that of China.
In
concert with this expansion so too have the number of NATO overseas wars and
regime-change operations, from former Yugoslavia and the Balkans, to
Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and Syria, among others. Again this is NATO serving as
a tool for America’s illegal wars, giving those wars a semblance of multilateralism
and legalism, when they are nothing but naked aggression in total violation of
international law.
Only
days before the pageantry began in London, a family of five, including a young
mother, was reportedly blown to bits by a US
drone in Afghanistan. That 18-year US war has been sanitized by the involvement
of all the NATO members in Afghanistan.
The
NATO bloc is way past its expiry date. Its continued presence and operation is
one of the main reasons why international tensions between the US, Europe,
Russia and China appear to worsening, not improving.
But
the unjustified militarism of NATO is hastening its eventual obsolescence. The
profligate military spending is unsustainable and ruinous for its members. And
the internal resentment towards a dominant US is leading to ever-more public
quarreling. Without any credible purpose for genuine security, but rather only
pallid pretexts for pushing imperialist wars, the NATO bloc is heading for
oblivion.
The
70th anniversary summit-turned-circus this week would seem to be a portent for
NATO’s overdue redundancy.
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