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NATO...Are Its Final Days Just Ahead
US, Europe Still Split on NATO's Role
By: Deutsche Welle
At the NATO Summit on Tuesday, Europe and the US will discuss the
direction the alliance will take. Behind all the talk of harmony are
some major differences on how much political power the organization
should have.
In the days after he made them, German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder's
comments that NATO was no longer the "primary venue" for discussing
global strategy offered a cue for every one to jump into an increasingly
controversial debate.
US President George W. Bush saw in them a threat to sideline the
security organization and told German television that he "looked forward
to reminding Gerhard Schröder that NATO is an active institution."
NATO head Jan Hoop de Schaeffer, while rejecting Schröder's call to set
up a panel of experts to look at rehauling the organization, said it
reflected efforts he has made in recent years to make NATO more
politically active.
Behind the semantics are very real questions about what shape the
26-nation institution will take as Europe grows closer to forging a
security and defense policy that could supplement some of NATO's tasks.
It is an issue on which parts of Europe and the United States are still
divided. France, for example, favors making the European Union ever
stronger in defense matters, part of a grander strategy of providing a
counterweight to the United States in the world.
US: No NATO competition
The United States, encouraging but at the same time wary of the European
Union's military ambitions, is on edge when talk of changing the
alliance comes up. Thierry Balzacq at the Center for European Policy
Studies said the paranoia stems from plans Belgium, France, Germany and
Luxembourg drew up at a summit last year calling for a military planning
council that Washington saw as competition to NATO.
"Every time one of these countries says something, even if they're
supporting NATO, the other side will always come and say 'oh, they are
trying to undermine NATO's policy'," he said.
When he meets with President Bush in Mainz on Wednesday, Schröder will
take care to distance himself from the French position without selling
out completely on Europe, said Henning Riecke, a transatlantic security
expert.
A certain ambiguity
"I think NATO is very important for the Germans, but they aren't able to
issue this NATO first principle the Americans would like to hear," said
Riecke, who works for the Berlin-based Council on Foreign Relations. "So
there has to be a certain ambiguity."
Schröder himself left nothing to doubt when he defended his remarks two
days after his defense minister read them out at the Munich Security
Conference on Feb. 14. He lobbied again for an expert panel to look for
ways to expand the organization's involvement in policy discussions.
Schröder's comments on NATO prompted a curt reply from Bush
"I really believe that it contributes to a strengthening of NATO and
transatlantic relations if we speak more openly on political issues than
we have tended to in the past," he said.
Providing troops - and strategic direction?
At issue is whether NATO, an organization that provides the troops,
weaponry and logistical support for peacekeeping missions from
Afghanistan to Sarajevo, will have a greater say on how that weaponry
and manpower gets used.
Since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the organization has made great
strides in increasing its military prowess, investing in technology and
creating a rapid response force which is able to deploy anywhere in the
world within a few days. But differences between some NATO allies --
like France and the US -- over the Iraq war, kept the alliance from
discussing ways to increase NATO's say in strategic planning, said
Riecke.
"What is lacking is a strategic understanding of what these troops
should be used for," he said.
While NATO improved its capabilites, the EU for the first time got
serious about developing a military wing. They pledged to develop a
military response force simliar to NATO's and took over the
organization's policing mission in Bosnia.
No clear resolution
Some in Washington worry that the steps taken both by NATO and the
European Union are on a collision course. In the best of both worlds,
the NATO would serve as the big stick to the European Union's
well-intentioned diplomacy, say some observers. But NATO, and its
biggest member, America, will not always have the same interests in a
crisis region as the European Union.
The Europeans "might need (military) capabilities to keep the
neighborhood in order, like in the Balkans," said Riecke.
No one expects any clear position to emerge from the NATO discussions
Tuesday. Most analysts agree that Bush's visit will be a charm offensive
designed to show European allies that the United States still cares. But
many don't expect a more substantive indication on how their differences
on NATO will get resolved.
The visits by Condoleezza Rice and Bush are "clear signals that Europe
is being taken seriously as a strong partner," said Reicke. We'll have
to see what the wrangling on the working level will turn out to be, how
this might poison the picture a bit."
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