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NATO...Are Its Final Days Just Ahead
Nato is a
threat to Europe and must be disbanded
Jonathan Steele - The Guardian
Our security doesn't depend on the US; we should free up our thinking.
They walk the walk. They talk the talk. But they don't think the think.
In the wake of the huge support given to George Bush last week, it's
time we realised how different America's majority culture is, and
changed our policies accordingly.
What Americans share with Europeans are not values, but institutions.
The distinction is crucial. Like us, they have a separation of powers
between executive and legislature, an independent judiciary, and the
rule of law. But the American majority's social and moral values differ
enormously from those which guide most Europeans.
Its dangerous ignorance of the world, a mixture of intellectual
isolationism and imperial intervention abroad, is equally alien. In the
United States more people have guns than have passports. Is there one
European nation of which the same is true?
Of course, millions of US citizens do share "European" values. But to
believe that this minority amounts to 48% and that America is deeply
polarised is incorrect. It encourages the illusion that things may
improve when Bush is gone. In fact, most Kerry voters are as
conservative as the Bush majority on the issues which worry Europeans.
Kerry never came out for US even-handedness on the Israel-Palestine
conflict, or for a withdrawal from Iraq.
Many commentators now argue for Europe to distance itself. But vague
pleas for greater European coherence or for Tony Blair to end his close
links with the White House are not enough. The call should not be for
"more" independence. We need full independence.
We must go all the way, up to the termination of Nato. An alliance which
should have wound up when the Soviet Union collapsed now serves almost
entirely as a device for giving the US an unfair and unreciprocated
droit de regard over European foreign policy.
As long as we are officially embedded as America's allies, the default
option is that we have to support America and respect its "leadership".
This makes it harder for European governments to break ranks, for fear
of being attacked as disloyal. The default option should be that we,
like they, have our interests. Sometimes they will coincide. Sometimes
they will differ. But that is normal.
In other parts of the world, a handful of countries have bilateral
defence treaties with the US. Some in Europe might want the same if Nato
didn't exist. In contrast, a few members of the European Union who chose
to take the considerable risk of staying neutral during the cold war -
such as Austria, Finland, Ireland and Sweden - see no need to join Nato
in the much safer world we live in today.
So it makes no sense that the largest and most powerful European states,
those who are most able to defend themselves, should cling to outdated
anxiety and the notion that their ultimate security depends on the US.
Do we really need American nuclear weapons to protect us against
terrorists or so-called rogue states? The last time Europe was in dire
straits, as Nazi tanks swept across the continent in 1939 and 1940, the
US stayed on the sidelines until Pearl Harbor.
There is a school of thought which says that Nato is virtually defunct,
so there is no need to worry about it. That view is sometimes heard even
in Russia, where the so-called "realists" argue that Russia cannot
oppose its old enemy, in spite of Washington's undisguised efforts to
encircle it with bases in the Caucasus and central Asia. The more Moscow
tries, they say, the more it seems to justify US claims that Russia is
expansionist - however odd that sounds, coming from a far more
expansionist Washington.
It is true that Nato is unlikely ever again to function with the
unanimity it showed during the cold war. The lesson from Iraq is that
the alliance has become no more than a "coalition of the reluctant",
with key members like France and Germany opting out of joint action.
But it is wrong to be complacent about Nato's alleged impotence or
irrelevance. Nato gives the US a significant instrument for moral and
political pressure. Europe is automatically expected to tag along in
going to war, or in the post-conflict phase, as in Afghanistan or Iraq.
Who knows whether Iran and Syria will come next? Bush has four more
years in power and there is little likelihood that his successors in the
White House will be any less interventionist.
Nato, in short, has become a threat to Europe. Its existence also acts
as a continual drag on Europe's efforts to build its own security
institutions. Certain member countries, particularly Britain, constantly
look over their shoulders for fear of upsetting big brother. This has an
inhibiting effect on every initiative.
France's more robust stance is pilloried by the Atlanticists as
nostalgia for unilateral grandeur instead of being seen as part of
France's pro-European search for a security project that will help us
all.
Paradoxically, one argument for voting no in the referendum on the
European constitution is based on this. Paul Quiles, a French socialist
former defence minister, points out that Britain forced a change in the
constitution's text so that Europe's common security policy, even as it
tries to gather strength, is required to give primacy to Nato. Without
control over its own defence, he argues, greater European integration
makes little sense.
The immediate priority on the road to European independence is to
abandon support for Bush's disastrous Iraq policy and get behind the
majority of Iraqis who want the US to stop attacking their cities and
leave the country. They feel US forces only provoke more insecurity and
death.
Since Bush's victory two Nato members, Hungary and the Netherlands
(which has a rightwing government), have said they will pull their
troops out in March next year. Their moves show the falsity of the "old
Europe, new Europe" split. In the post-communist countries, as much as
in western Europe, majorities consistently opposed Bush's Iraq
adventure, whatever their more timid governments said. Wanting to
withdraw support for US foreign policy is not a left or right issue.
Ending Nato would not mean that Europe rejects good relations with the
US. Nor does it rule out police and intelligence collaboration on issues
of concern, such as the way to protect our countries against terrorism.
Europe could still join the US in war, if there was an international
consensus and the electorates of individual countries supported it.
But Europeans must reach their decisions from a position of genuine
independence. The US has always based its approach to Europe on a
calculation of interest rather than from sentimental motives. Europe
should do no less. We can and, for the most part, should be America's
friends. Allies, no longer.
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