12.04.2020 Author: Vladimir Odintsov
Does the US Need Such a
Military Complex, and does Europe Need NATO?
Column: Politics
Region: Europe
The role of armed forces has
been the focus of a lot of literature, works of art and films in every nation.
They often portray military personnel as patriots who genuinely love their
compatriots and their homelands, and who serve their nations willingly and not
because of benefits and privileges they receive. The Eternal Flame, impressive
memorials and modest obelisks, as well as works of fiction and art all ensure
that out contemporaries and descendants continue and will continue to remember
the bravery of those who were among the first to take up arms, who protected
their commanders with their own bodies from deadly attacks, and who fought to
their death in battlefields.
These are the reasons why
inhabitants of territories freed of enemies feel gratitude or even love towards
soldiers who made this possible. And even in times of peace, people have the
same regard for military personnel because if any crisis were to erupt, armed
forces would be there to help!
Servicemen and more senior
military personnel face numerous hardships and challenges as they have to
assess current risks and threats, and also find optimal ways of defending their
homeland and the civilian population.
Unfortunately, the current
Coronavirus pandemic ravaging the globe has shown that not every country or
even military alliance and especially its leadership have handled the current
crisis successfully, since they all seemed to have forgotten about their key
mission – to protect civilian populations.
In China, as soon as the
COVID-19 outbreak began, military personnel were charged with more than just
guarding and protecting. Units of engineers from the People’s Liberation Army
immediately began building additional hospitals; arranged food and water
supplies for vulnerable populations, and provided necessary medical aid not
only in China but in neighboring countries.
In the Russian Federation,
similar steps were taken. Armed forces that include engineers started
constructing new hospitals straight away; air force squadrons were created, and
15 military transport aircraft carrying medical and humanitarian aid, necessary
equipment and medical corps personnel were sent to Italy, followed by 11 planes
with similar cargo to Serbia. There are ongoing discussions about providing
such assistance from the Russian military to other countries.
But why are US or NATO
servicemen not taking similar steps?
The American military did ensure that a US
Navy hospital ship was deployed to New York, and that “members of the
Individual Ready Reserve” were called on to help combat the spread of the
Coronavirus on a voluntary basis. In addition, on 1 February, “US Secretary of
Defense Mark Esper instructed General Terrence O’Shaughnessy to” prepare
to take over as commander-in-chief in the event of a worst-case scenario.
So has the US military built
additional hospitals in an American city with the highest number of individuals
whose deaths have been attributed to COVID-19 and confirmed Coronavirus cases?
Or have NATO’s armed forces helped Italy, Spain or other member states of the
alliance?
In the author’s opinion, the
answer to both of these questions is “No”. Instead, US and NATO senior military
personnel continue their “war games” and drills in the Baltic countries, and
their discussions about future plans of the Alliance.
At the beginning of April,
Ministers of Foreign Affairs of NATO member states agreed to enhance their
“training mission in Iraq” to combat terrorism. They also decided “to
coordinate the necessary military support to combat” the Coronavirus crisis but
the author is unsure what countries such aid will be provided to.
Instead of medical aid, the
United States delivered 128 Javelin anti-tank missile weapon systems (produced
by a Joint Venture between Raytheon and Lockheed Martin) to Estonia “as part of
a larger contract signed by the Estonian Center for Defense Investment and the
US”. This year, according to err.ee, the annual Spring Storm (Kevadtorm)
military exercise, organized form Estonia, will be smaller in scale than usual.
Still a few thousand active-duty servicemen and members of an Allied battle
group stationed in Tapa, Estonia, will take part in the drills.
On 31 March, Estonian
think-tank International Centre for Defence and Security and the Center for
European Policy Analysis research institute issued a report entitled “Until
Something Moves. Reinforcing The Baltic Region in Crisis and War”. The
document focused on movement of NATO military forces within Europe, or more
specifically on the Alliance’s capabilities to effectively move fresh troops to
and increase their size on the eastern front if a military conflict were to
start in the Baltic region. Again, the report made no mention of any specific
aid that would be provided by NATO to Baltic countries or other members of the
alliance affected by the spread of the Coronavirus. After all, why would NATO
be tasked with protecting civilians?
The author believes that
NATO’s spin doctors are trying to take advantage of the tragic situation in
Italy to sow discord and to devalue the importance of medical aid being
provided to Italy but not by either the United States or NATO nations. The
disinformation campaign was launched not only by Italian (e.g. newspaper La
Stampa) but also American (e.g. CNN and Bloomberg) media outlets. They
attempted to portray the assistance provided by Russia, China, Cuba and Egypt
as a propaganda ploy aimed at sowing discord in the united anti-Russian front
within the European Union.
And now consider the number
of citizens of NATO member states who are experiencing difficulties due to the
Coronavirus pandemic outside of the United States or Europe. Has the USA or the
EU attempted to bring these individuals home? And why is Russia actively
repatriating its citizens? The author thinks that the answer is obvious.
Neither the United States nor the EU are prepared for their return, as these
individuals will contribute to an increase in unemployment rates (after all,
they will most likely find it difficult to find jobs), plus the US and EU
health and social welfare systems already cannot handle all the challenges
facing those who live within their borders. Hence, the return of such people
could turn into a disaster!
The author would also like
to add another point. At the beginning of April, the United States, which is
still trying to draw Georgia into NATO, gave $1.1 million to Tbilisi to assist
its fight against the Coronavirus. In Georgia, this is equivalent to
approximately 25 cents per capita. So is this really how much an average
Georgian citizen is worth to the United States? The author believes that the
USA values its other “strategic partners” similarly.
Considering the lackluster
response to the Coronavirus outbreak by US and NATO armed forces, it is not
surprising that there have been numerous anti-NATO protests in Europe lately.
According to the author, recently, anti-NATO billboards appeared in Istočno
Sarajevo. Some of them depict NATO planes with more or less the following
message: “Instead of providing aid, NATO aircraft have flown half a million
tests for the Coronavirus out of Italy”.
The author believes that
NATO (established in 1949) has come to the end of the road and so has US
hegemony. At present, in the year 2020, US and European security objectives no
longer coincide. An alliance with Europe is not viewed by the United
States under Donald Trump’s leadership as being in line with US economic,
political or national security interests. It is rumored that if Donald Trump
were re-elected as President, the USA would withdraw from NATO at the beginning
of his second presidential term.
And it is doubtful that
anyone would regret such an outcome with the exception of Baltic nations, which
receive military aid from individual NATO member-states.
And who needs a military
alliance that does not come to anyone’s aid during a pandemic?
Vladimir
Odintsov, expert politologist, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook“.
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