The Art of War
Expandable and always more expensive,
NATO is spreading across Europe
by Manlio Dinucci
The NATO summit for the heads of State and governments of the 29 member
nations was held in Brussels on 11 and 12 July - in first place, US President
Donald Trump, who, only a few days ago, asked the allies to increase the
defence of the Atlantic, otherwise, he would « lose patience ». The
summit confirms, at the very highest level, the rise in power of the command
structure, mainly in its anti-Russian function. There is to be:
Ø a new Joint Command for the Atlantic at Norfolk USA,
to counter the « Russian submarines which are a threat to the lines of
maritime communication between the United States and Europe »,
Ø a new Logistical Command, at Ulm in Germany, as
an anti-Russian
« dissuasion », with the mission of « moving troops more quickly
across Europe in times of conflict ».
By 2020, NATO will have in Europe 30 mechanised battalions, 30 aerial
squadrons and 30 combat ships, deployable in 30 days or less against Russia.
President Trump will therefore have stronger cards in his hand at the Bilateral
Summit with Russian President Putin, which will be held on 16 July in Helsinki.
Whatever the US President presents at the negotiating table, it will profoundly
affect the situation in Europe.
NATO – which was created in 1949, six years before the Warsaw Pact,
formally on the basis of the principle established in Article 5 – has been
transformed into an alliance which, on the basis of the « new strategic
concept », engages its member nations to « carry out punitive
responses to crises which are not provided for in Article 5, outside of the
territory of the Alliance ». On the basis of the new geostrategic concept,
the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation has spread as far as the Afghan
mountains, where NATO has been at war for 15 years.
What has not changed in the mutation of NATO is the hierarchy within the
Alliance. It is always the US President who nominates the Supreme Allied
Commander for Europe (« SACEUR »), who is always a US general, while
the allies do nothing more than approve the choice. The same thing is true for
the other key commands. US supremacy has been reinforced with the expansion of NATO,
because the Eastern countries are more closely linked to Washington than to
Brussels.
Even the Treaty of Maastricht, in 1992, established the subordination of
the European Union to NATO, of which 22 of the 28 countries of the EU are
members (with Great Britain on its way out of the Union). It stipulates, in
Article 42, that “« the Union respects the obligations of certain member
states, who are aware that their common defence is guaranteed by NATO, in the
context of the North Atlantic Treaty ». And protocol n°10, concerning the
cooperation instituted by Article 42, points out that NATO « remains the
foundation of the defence » of the European Union.
The Joint Declaration on the cooperation between NATO and the EU, signed
yesterday in Brussels on the eve of the Summit, confirms this subordination:
« NATO will continue to play its unique and essential role as the
cornerstone of the common defence for all the allies, and the efforts of the EU
will also strengthen NATO » [1]. The Permanent Structured Cooperation
(« PESCO ») and the European Defence Fund, noted Secretary General
Stoltenberg, « are complementary, not alternative to NATO ».
« Military mobility » is at the centre of the cooperation between
NATO and the EU, guaranteed by the Joint Declaration. The « maritime
cooperation between NATO and the EU in the Mediterranean is also important in
order to fight the traffic of migrants and alleviate human suffering ».
NATO's reach now extends well beyond Europe, which has a series of partners
linked to the Alliance by several varied programmes of military cooperation.
Amongst the twenty which enter into the Euro-Atlantic Partnership are Austria,
Finland and Sweden. The Mediterranean partnership includes Israël and Jordan,
which have official permanent missions at NATO headquarters in Brussels, as
well as Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco and Mauritania. The Gulf partnership
includes Kuwait, Qatar and the UAE, which have permanent missions in Brussels,
plus Bahreïn. NATO also have nine « World Partners » in Asia, Oceania
and Latin America - Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Mongolia, South Korea, Japan,
Australia, New Zealand and Colombia – some of whom « actively contribute
to NATO's military operations ».
Under pressure from the USA, the European allies and Canada have
increased their military spending by 87 billion dollars since 2014. Despite
that, President Trump will bang on the table at the Summit, castigating the
allies because, all counted together, they are spending less than the United States.
« All the allies are in the process of increasing their military
spending », assures NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg.
The countries which dedicate at least 2% of their GNP to military
spending numbered three in 2014 and eight in 2018. We can therefore estimate
that between today and 2024, the European allies and Canada will be increasing
their military spending by 266 billion dollars, bringing NATO's total military
expenditure to more than 1,000 billion dollars annually. In 2019, Germany will
increase its military spending to an average of 114 million Euros per day, and
plans to increase it by 80% between today and 2024. Italy has already agreed to increase its
spending from the current 70 million Euros per day to about 100 million Euros
per day. As required by the organisation which, in the government programme
« contract » between the 5 Star Movement and the Ligue, is defined as
the « privileged ally of Italy ».
il
manifesto, July 11, 2018
Traduction: Pete
Kimberley
NO WAR NO NATO
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