The breaking of NATO

Aug 24, 2008

THE North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), is a remarkable case of institutional survival in the face of changing circumstances. It was created in 1949 to protect Western Europe from the Soviet threat, and in 1989 the Soviet threat vanished.

By Gwynne Dyer

THE North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), is a remarkable case of institutional survival in the face of changing circumstances. It was created in 1949 to protect Western Europe from the Soviet threat, and in 1989 the Soviet threat vanished.

Yet NATO not only survived the collapse of the Soviet Union but expanded, taking in all the former satellite states of Eastern Europe and even the Baltic Republics that had been part of the Russian empire for more than two hundred years. But the Georgian debacle could break NATO.
In those Eastern European countries that were so recently ruled from Moscow, the presence of Russian troops in Georgia has reawakened all
the old fears.

On Thursday, Poland hastily agreed to let the US place anti-ballistic missile sites on its soil, on condition that there must also be a full-fledged US military base in the country. Why? Because then, if Russia attacked Poland, the US would automatically become involved.

The rhetoric in the new NATO members has been almost as hysterical as that in Georgia itself, where President Mikhail Saakashvili has been
calling the Russians “21st century barbarians” who “despise everything new, everything modern, everything European, everything civilised.” Similar
rhetoric pervades the parallel universe of the US media, where the fact that it was Georgia that started this war by unleashing a merciless artillery barrage on South Ossetia and then invading it has been virtually erased from the story-line.

Very few Americans know that there was only one battalion of Russian peace-keeping troops (less than a thousand men) in South Ossetia when the Georgian tanks rolled in less than two weeks ago. It’s all “plucky little Georgia” and democratic values versus the Russian bear.

It is a rousing morality tale that hits all the right notes for an American sensibility, and it is not just Georgia’s PR firms that are pushing this line. It is also the US state Department and the Pentagon, which had been building Georgia up as a key US ally on Russia’s southern flank.

Yet US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice looked deeply uncomfortable on
Friday in Tbilisi as she stood beside the ranting Saakashvili.

Perhaps she was pondering the fact that while the “new Europe” of former Soviet-bloc countries uncritically backs Georgia and the US commitment there, the “old Europe” of Germany, France, Italy and their neighbours mostly does not.

This is a problem if she wishes to pursue her goal of bringing Georgia and Ukraine into NATO, since “old Europe” is the core of NATO, with three times the population and five times the wealth of
“new Europe.”

Any American secretary of state can rely on the reflex loyalty of the British government, at least in its current “New Labour” configuration,
but none of the other great states of Western Europe thinks that having a
confrontation with Russia over Georgia is a good idea. In fact, they think it’s crazy.

Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, put it quite carefully after she met Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Friday: “Some of Russia’s actions were disproportionate (but) it is rare that all the blame is on oneside. In fact, both sides are probably to blame. That is very important to understand.”

The Italian government warned against trying to build an “anti-Moscow coalition.” French foreign minister Bernard Kouchner works for
the most pro-American French leader in recent history, President Nicolas Sarkozy, but he still said: “Don’t ask us who’s good and who’s bad here. We shouldn’t make any moral judgments on this war.”

This will all be seen as “appeasement” by the neo-conservatives who still rule the roost in Washington, but many in Western Europe would call
it common sense.

The Russians will stay in Georgia until they have dismantled the Georgian army and navy bases that could threaten the ethnic enclaves of South Ossetia and Abkhasia again, removing all the new American weaponry that gave Georgia an offensive military capability, and then they will withdraw to the enclaves as the ceasefire agreement requires.

Sarkozy brokered that ceasefire, and he agreed to write those clauses into it.
He knew that they allowed Russian forces to stay on Georgian territory until the military threat had been nullified, and he accepted them.

He did so because he did not really see Russia as an aggressor in this crisis (although he will not contradict America publicly by saying it in so many words.) But if the US pursues its goal of bringing Georgia and Ukraine into NATO, there are only three options.

If “old Europe” digs in its heals and refuses, on the grounds that it does not need Russia as an enemy, then either the US drops its demand, or NATO breaks up.

The third alternative (and perhaps the likeliest) is that “old Europe” agrees to let the two former Soviet Republics join — but with the unspoken reservation that they will never actually go to war with Russia to protect them. That would be a less dramatic end for NATO, but it would be an end. A two-tier alliance is no alliance at all.

The writer is a London-based Independent Journalist

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