The Art of War
Billions of euros to "innovate" the nuclear NATO
Manlio
Dinucci
"NATO has ended up in the attic," wrote the political
commentators of several newspapers a month ago, after France had withdrawn its
ambassador from Washington on September 16. It was Paris' protest at being
excluded from the strategic-military partnership between the United States,
Great Britain and Australia, announced the day before, and at losing a
lucrative contract for the sale of submarines to Australia, which will be
replaced by nuclear submarines supplied by the U.S. and Great Britain.
A week after the resounding diplomatic break, however, the French
general Lavigne was put in charge of the Allied Transformation Command, with
headquarters in Norfolk in the U.S., and the presidents of the two countries,
Biden and Macron, published a Joint Declaration.
Biden reaffirmed "the strategic importance of the French and
European engagement in the Indo-Pacific" (the region that in
Washington's geopolitics extends from the west coast of the US to that of
India). The reason was explained by the Military Committee of the Chiefs of
Defence of the 30 NATO countries, meeting in Athens: "While Moscow's
aggressive actions are a threat to our security, China’s rise is fundamentally
shifting the balance of power, which has potential consequences for our
security, our prosperity and our way of life.”
In the face of such "threats," they concluded, "we need
Europe and North America to stand strong, bound together". Biden
reiterated in his joint statement with Macron: "The United States
recognizes the importance of a stronger, more capable European Defence Force
that is complementary to NATO". Therefore, a militarily stronger Europe,
but as a complement to NATO: an asymmetrical alliance, to which 21 of the 27
countries of the European Union belong, in which the position of Supreme Allied
Commander in Europe is always held by a general of the United States, which
holds all the other key commands in Europe (such as the JFC-Naples with
headquarters in Lago Patria).
On this background, the meeting of 30 Defense Ministers (for Italy
Lorenzo Guerini, Democratic Party) was held on October 21-22 at the NATO
headquarters in Brussels. It created an "Innovation Fund" with
an initial allocation of 1 billion euros, to be paid by 17 European
countries including Italy, but not by the United States, for the development of
the most advanced technologies for war use. It launched the "Strategy
for Artificial Intelligence", an even more costly program for NATO to
maintain its advantage in this field that "is changing the global defense
environment", i.e. the way war is waged. It decided on "improving the
readiness and effectiveness of our nuclear deterrent," i.e., deploying new
nuclear weapons in Europe, of course with the motivation of defending against
"the growing missile threat from Russia."
On the eve of the NATO meeting, the Russian Defense Minister, Sergei
Shoigu, warned that "the United States of America has stepped up work
with the full support of its NATO allies to modernize tactical nuclear weapons
and their storage sites in Europe" and Russia considers particularly
worrying “the engagement of pilots from the bloc’s non-nuclear member states in
the drills to practice employing tactical nuclear weapons."A message
directed in particular to Italy, where the U.S. is preparing to replace B61
nuclear bombs with the new B61-12s and Italian pilots are being trained in their
use with F-35s. "We regard this as a direct violation of the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons," Russia’s defense chief stressed.
The message is directed to Italy and other European NATO members who,
despite having ratified the Non-Proliferation Treaty as non-nuclear countries,
host US nuclear weapons and train for their use. The implicit meaning of the
message is clear: Russia considers these countries a source of threat and is
taking countermeasures. The message has been ignored as usual by our government
and parliament and, of course, by the media that have put NATO in the attic.
Manlio
Dinucci
(il manifesto, October 26, 2021)
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