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NATO...Are Its Final Days Just Ahead
Overstretched US
puts Nato under pressure
Simon Tisdall - The Guardian
US demands on the Nato alliance are growing more onerous as the American
military struggles to meet global commitments. And Nato, which lost an
evil empire and failed to find a role, is feeling the strain.
This week's US proposal to integrate Nato's peacekeepers in Afghanistan
with US combat troops fighting the "war on terror" there is a case in
point.
Germany and France, which jointly lead the 9,000-strong International
Security and Assistance Force in Kabul, rejected the idea. They do not
want their soldiers under US command. And they suspect the US would use
a merger as cover for troop withdrawals.
But as usual with its Nato initiatives, the US expects to get its way.
Undaunted, US ambassador Nicholas Burns said he wants a blueprint on the
table by next February.
The US is also pressing Nato to do more in Iraq. Most members of the
26-nation alliance are already involved in one way or another. But a
formal Nato role is a different matter.
After bitter wrangling, a modest Nato training mission to Baghdad has
been agreed, beginning this winter. But the Americans want more - and
fast. At last June's Nato summit in Istanbul, President George Bush
urged the alliance to take on a much bigger role
Tony Blair said at the time that Nato, confined historically to the
European sphere, must be ready to rise to "new challenges and threats
beyond its borders". Mr Burns goes further: "Nato must be present on the
front lines of the war on terrorism".
The Democratic presidential candidate, John Kerry, also wants an
expanded international military presence in Iraq.
But whether he or Mr Bush occupies the White House, a basic problem
remains: how to reconcile America's ever more importunate demands for
Nato military backing with a highly political US global agenda which
many European members view with deep misgivings.
Despite the end of the cold war, September 11 and the "war on terror",
the US vision for Nato has not fundamentally changed since Soviet times.
Europeans see themselves as partners. The Bush administration sees them
as followers - or else, renegades.
Immediately after 9/11, Mr Bush snubbed Nato's offer to help. Now the US
has realised that it badly needs Nato's assistance (and likewise that of
the UN).
But its effort to involve both organisations more deeply in Afghanistan
and Iraq is "as much an act of desperation as anything else to rescue a
failing venture", Brent Scowcroft, George Bush Snr's national security
adviser, told the Financial Times.
The stresses on Nato do not stop there. US pressure to increase
deployable troop numbers, spending and capabilities is unremitting.
Nato's 18,000-strong mission in Kosovo is meanwhile held hostage to a
stalemated political process. Elections next week in the breakaway
Serbian province could be a catalyst for renewed violence.
The scheduled December handover to EU peacekeepers in Bosnia, while
promising some respite for Nato, is also a reminder of the competing
claims on manpower and resources represented by Europe's advancing
military ambitions.
Nato announced in Romania this week that its 17,500- strong response
force, another US-initiated project, is now operational. The EU is
simultaneously building its own 14,000-strong rapid reaction force, part
of an EU "army" mustering 60,000 troops by 2007. But some of these
soldiers are being counted twice or even three times.
Nato's headaches arise not just from US pressure but also from US
weakness. The US military, with 140,000 troops in Iraq alone, is
seriously over-committed worldwide.
A Pentagon panel recently warned that a big increase in total forces was
essential unless the number and aims of US war-fighting and
stabilisation missions were reduced. Mr Kerry says 40,000 more soldiers
are needed.
In Iraq, half the US forces are National Guard or reservists, not
regular troops; tours of duty have been extended, leading to
difficulties in recruiting and re-enlistment. Morale has suffered.
Recently announced US base closures in Germany are not nearly enough.
And planned troop withdrawals from South Korea have in any case been
postponed because of worries about the North.
This military overstretch is generating intense political, financial and
electoral pressures within the US. Hence the relentless push for the
Nato allies to do more - whether they want to or not.
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