The American Empire of the West
deploys troops for battle
Manlio Dinucci
The NATO Summit took place yesterday at the
headquarters in Brussels: the North Atlantic Council at the highest level of
State and Government Leaders. It was formally chaired by Secretary-General
Jens Stoltenberg, de facto by the President of the United States Joseph
Biden, who came to Europe to call to arms his Allies in the global conflict
against Russia and China. The NATO Summit was preceded and prepared by two
political initiatives that saw Biden as the protagonist - the signing of the
New Atlantic Charter, and the G7 – and they will be followed by President
Biden's meeting with the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin
on June 16 in Geneva. The meeting outcome is heralded by Biden's
refusal to hold the usual final press conference with Putin.
The New Atlantic Charter was signed on June 10 in
London by the President of the United States and the British Prime Minister
Boris Johnson. It is a significant political document to which our media have
given little importance. The historic Atlantic Charter - signed by the US
President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Churchill in August 1941, two
months after Nazi Germany had invaded the Soviet Union - enunciated the
values on which the future world order would be based with "Great
democracies" warranty: above all the renunciation of the use of force,
the self-determination of peoples, and their equal rights in access to
resources. Later history has shown how these values have been applied. Now
the "revitalized" Atlantic Charter reaffirms its commitment to
"defend our democratic values against those who try to undermine them".
To this end, the US and Great Britain assure their Allies that they will
always be able to count on "our nuclear deterrents" and that
"NATO will remain a nuclear alliance”.
The G7 Summit, held in Cornwall from June 11 to June
13, ordered Russia to "stop its destabilising behaviour and malign
activities, including its interference in other countries’ democratic systems",
and it accused China of "non-market policies and practices which
undermine the fair and transparent operation of the global economy".
With these and other accusations (formulated in Washington's own words), the
European powers of the G7 - Great Britain, Germany, France and Italy, which
are at the same time the major European NATO powers - aligned with
the United States before the NATO Summit.
The NATO Summit opened with the statement that
"our relationship with Russia is at its lowest point since the end of
the Cold War. This is due to Russia’s aggressive actions” and that “China’s
military build-up, growing influence and coercive behaviour also poses some
challenges to our security”. A
veritable declaration of war that, by turning reality upside down, leaves no
room for negotiations to ease the tension.
The Summit opened a "new chapter"
in the history of the Alliance, based on the "NATO 2030"
Agenda. The "Transatlantic link" between the United States
and Europe is strengthened on all levels - political, military, economic,
technological, space, and others - with a strategy that spans on a global
scale from North and South America to Europe, from Asia to Africa. In this
context, the US will soon deploy new nuclear bombs and new medium-range
nuclear missiles in Europe against Russia and in Asia against China. Hence
the decision of the Summit to further increase military spending: the United
States, whose expenditure amounts to almost 70% of the 30 NATO countries’
total, is pushing the European Allies to increase it. Since 2015, Italy has
increased its annual spending by 10 billion, bringing it to about 30 billion
dollars in 2021 (according to NATO data), the fifth nation in order of
magnitude among the 30 NATO countries, but the level to reach is more than 40
billion dollars annually.
At the same time, the role of the North Atlantic
Council is strengthened. It is the political body of the Alliance,
which decides not by the majority but always "unanimously and
by mutual agreement" according to NATO rules, that is,
in agreement with what is decided in Washington. The strengthened role of the
North Atlantic Council entails a further weakening of the European
Parliaments, in particular the Italian Parliament that is already deprived of
real decision-making powers on foreign and military policy, given that 21 out
of the 27 EU Countries belong to NATO.
However, not all European countries are on the same
level: Great Britain, France and Germany negotiate with the United States on
the basis of their own interests, while Italy agrees to Washington’s
decisions against its own interests. The economic contrasts (for example the
contrast on the North Stream pipeline between Germany and the USA) take a
back seat to the superior common interest: to ensure that the West maintains
its dominance in a world where new State and social subjects emerge or
re-emerge. Manlio Dinucci
Manlio
Dinucci
(il manifesto,
June 15, 2021)
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