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Saving NATO II

Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from Foreign Affairs is an essay by Michael E. Brown explaining how and why NATO went off track in the and after the a 1990s:

http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/138432/michael-e-brown/natos-biggest-mistake
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NATO's Biggest Mistake
It Drifted From Its Core Mission -- And the World Is Paying the Price

By Michael E. Brown

MAY 5, 2014

For 20 years, NATO and European security policy have been guided by four flawed strategic assumptions. First, Western leaders assumed that Russia had become a benign power and that inter-state threats to European security were therefore no longer a concern. Second, because NATO’s core mission -- collective defense -- was no longer a compelling reason to keep the alliance together, leaders argued that NATO needed to go “out of area or out of business.” NATO consequently expanded its membership and took on a new array of global missions. Third, Western leaders assumed that NATO expansion would not provoke a reaction from Russia. NATO’s leaders believed their own rhetoric about the benign nature of NATO expansion, and they assumed Moscow would see it this way as well. Fourth, they believed that the alliance would be successful in carrying out military and stabilization missions in far-off places such as Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya.

In 2014, Western officials are learning about their strategic errors the hard way. They have come to realize that NATO’s collective defense mission in Europe is still vital because Russia is in the business of changing international borders by force, that NATO never had to go “out of area” for a compelling mission, that the Kremlin didn’t see NATO expansion to Russia’s borders as benign, and that NATO missions in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya cost a great deal in lives and money but they only achieved mixed results.

As U.S. and European officials scramble to devise a coherent, credible, effective response to Russian aggression in Ukraine, they must also undertake a fundamental strategic reassessment. Europe still faces inter-state security threats, in the form of Russian aggression. NATO’s core mission -- collective defense -- is still vital. Deterrence and defense are still needed in Europe. And, as in many great-power relationships, the challenge is to deter aggression and reassure allies without provoking escalation.

For U.S. and European leaders -- and for NATO -- it’s back to basics.

OUT OF AREA, OUT OF WHACK

Following the collapse of Soviet power in Eastern Europe in 1989 and the break-up of the Soviet Union itself in 1991, it was natural and inevitable that NATO would change. The alliance had been created to deter -- and, if necessary, defend against -- a Soviet attack on Western Europe. With the Soviet Union gone, the military balance in Europe suddenly and fundamentally shifted. NATO’s raison d’être was called into question.

By the mid-1990s, the conventional wisdom was that NATO must go “out of area or out of business.” This view was promulgated by most (but not all) security policy experts, and it was ultimately embraced by the alliance’s leadership. This led to two main changes in NATO policy.

First, the leadership expanded the alliance from 16 to 28 members, bringing in countries from the former Warsaw Pact and the former Soviet Union, in particular. In 1999, the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland formally joined NATO. In 2004, Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia joined the alliance. Albania and Croatia became NATO members in 2009.

In the 1990s, some scholars and commentators -- including me -- argued that NATO expansion could be counter-productive because it could trigger a backlash in Russia. NATO expansion could give Russian nationalists and political opportunists yet another weapon to use against pro-Western factions in Russia’s domestic political arena. In the worst-case scenario, embittered nationalists or opportunists could come to power and adopt more aggressive policies toward Europe and the United States. “The emergence of a kinder, gentler Russia is far from certain,” I wrote at the time, “but it is not in the interests of the United States or NATO’s European members to take steps that would make Russian authoritarianism and belligerence more likely.”

U.S. and European leaders preferred to believe that their intentions were benign and that Russia’s leaders would see NATO expansion in that benign light. The alliance’s leaders also believed that their diplomatic overtures to Russia -- such as the creation of a NATO-Russia Permanent Joint Council in 1997 -- would further pacify the Kremlin. That was wishful thinking.

In a recent Washington Post article, Jack F. Matlock, the former U.S. ambassador to Moscow, observed that the effect of NATO actions in the 1990s -- alliance expansion and the bombing of Serbia in 1999 without UN Security Council authorization -- was “devastating.” He observed that in 1991, Russian public opinion polls indicated that approximately 80 percent of Russian citizens had a positive view of the United States; in 1999, nearly the same number had a negative view of the country. In 2000, Vladimir Putin was elected president of the Russian Federation.

The second major change in NATO policy, starting in the 1990s, was the adoption of a new array of global missions to justify NATO’s continued existence. The rationale was that NATO’s European members would have to help Washington with its global concerns to keep the United States committed to Europe.

This strategic reasoning was based on several flawed assumptions. First, the global interests of the United States and Europe were not (and are not) in alignment. Second, Europe had limited power-projection capabilities in the 1990s, and these capabilities declined substantially over time. Third, the far-flung security problems that would be tackled -- Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya -- were exceptionally formidable. Success, which would depend on high levels of political will and material commitments sustained over time, would be difficult to achieve.

As he was about to step down as U.S. Secretary of Defense in June 2011, Robert Gates assessed the track record. In Afghanistan, he said in a 2011 speech, the “mission has exposed significant shortcomings in NATO -- in military capabilities and in political will. Despite more than 2 million troops in uniform -- NOT counting the U.S. military -- NATO has struggled, at times desperately, to sustain a deployment of 25-40,000 troops.” In Libya, he continued, “it has become painfully clear that similar shortcomings -- in capability and will -- have the potential to jeopardize the alliance’s ability to conduct an integrated, effective and sustained air-sea campaign.... [While] every alliance member voted for the Libya mission, less than half have participated at all, and fewer than a third have been willing to participate in the strike mission.”

“Going global” did not make NATO more relevant, effective, or credible. To the contrary, these operations entailed tremendous costs -- in terms of lives, money, political unity, and alliance credibility. These operations also drained European military capabilities that were already weak and are now even more steeply in decline. Expectations have been dashed, and the alliance’s credibility has been damaged.

Unfortunately, this has happened just as security threats in Europe have reemerged, in ways that are now obvious to almost everyone. Ironically, these threats have developed in part because of NATO’s own misguided actions.

GRAVE NEW WORLD

U.S. and European leaders are now grappling with the immediate challenge posed by Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, but they must also undertake a fundamental strategic reassessment.

First, they must recognize that Europe still faces inter-state security threats. For decades, Americans and western Europeans believed that inter-state war in Europe was unthinkable; they were confident in the emergence of a Europe that was “whole, free, and at peace.” They believed that Russia would behave as if it were a member of the NATO-EU club, even though there was no chance that it would be admitted to the club any time soon.

Putin has chosen another path. Russian aggression is real, and it may continue. Putin’s, domestic approval ratings are up, and they may stay up unless economic sanctions change Russian public and elite opinion. Putin is not yet looking for an “off-ramp” to defuse the confrontation. To the contrary, he currently has a domestic political incentive for a sustained confrontation with the West.

As President Toomas Hendrik Ilves of Estonia recently observed: “The fundamental understanding of security in Europe has now collapsed. Everything that has happened since 1989 has been predicted on the fundamental assumption that you don’t change borders by force, and that’s now out the window.” General Philip Breedlove, NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander Europe, put it succinctly, “It’s a paradigm shift.”

Second, U.S. and European leaders will have to devise new security responses to counter Russia’s new, semi-covert forms of military aggression. Russia’s campaigns in Crimea and eastern Ukraine have not involved columns of tanks streaming across borders. Instead, Moscow has skillfully used staged provocations, local supporters, unmarked special forces, cyber-attacks, and massive disinformation campaigns to create instabilities that can be used as pretexts for annexation.

To date, the U.S. and European responses have been very modest and almost entirely traditional in character -- verbal assurances; some small, additional troop rotations in eastern Europe; and some small, additional military exercises. NATO needs to think hard and fast about countering Russia’s new form of warfare, especially for NATO members that have Russian minorities. This will entail substantially enhanced internal security, homeland security, training, intelligence, early warning, cybersecurity, and public diplomacy capacities. These will be the keys to deterrence and defense against destabilization operations.

Third, U.S. and European leaders will have to forge a consensus on broader, long-term responses to Russia. Many Europeans are still in denial, and Europe is therefore divided. Belief systems are notoriously resistant to change, and the appeal of a European security nirvana was especially powerful.

Europe’s paralysis is reinforced by economic vulnerabilities (many European countries depend on Russian energy experts) and other economic and business ties with Russia. As a result, there is a range of opinion in Europe on Russia, and it varies according to geography, of course. Countries that are closer to Russia -- Poland and the Baltic states, in particular -- are afraid of Russia and have called for strong Western responses. Bridging these intra-European differences will not be easy.

To forge a consensus, U.S. and European leaders will have to reduce Europe’s dependence on Russia’s energy exports. These vulnerabilities make it difficult for many western European countries to contemplate strong responses to Russia’s aggression. Russia’s energy leverage makes Russian aggression more likely to continue. Reducing Europe’s energy vulnerabilities and simultaneously undercutting Russia’s energy and economic position will reinforce deterrence and stability in Europe.

Fourth, U.S. and European leaders should also re-double their efforts to complete the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (T-TIP), a new U.S.-EU trade agreement. The initial impetus for T-TIP was to give the U.S. and European economies a boost and strengthen their economic ties in the face of a rising China. Completion of the agreement would now have added benefits -- economic, political, and symbolic -- with respect to Russia. It may be difficult to complete a deal prior to the U.S. elections in November 2014. If that proves to be the case, T-TIP should be a top priority in 2015.

Fifth and last, U.S. and European leaders will of course have to continue to engage Putin and Russia. Currently, it appears that Putin has an expansionist agenda: bringing Russian-speakers into the Russian federation (even if they currently live in contiguous, sovereign states); establishing a Russian sphere of influence in Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, and Central Asia; redrawing international borders where possible; maintaining a state of confrontation with the West, which has strengthened his domestic position; and perhaps breaking up NATO itself. It would be a mistake to underestimate Putin’s aspirations and the nature of the threat. Western leaders will have to determine Putin’s ultimate strategic goals and act accordingly.

Building a Europe that is “whole, free, and at peace” is still an achievable goal. It will require a renewed emphasis on European security, discarding the illusions of the past twenty years, and a clear focus on Europe’s new security challenges.


I agree with the four things that NATO did wrong, especially with expansion into Russia's former colonies, and with "out of area" operations.

I'm not quite so sure I agree with Prof Brown's prescriptions ... but that certainly doesn't mean that he's wrong.
 
More on "Saving NATO" (from itself?) in this article by Prof Roland Paris which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-debate/nato-needs-to-get-its-house-in-order-to-face-a-more-dangerous-world/article19258190/#dashboard/follows/
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NATO needs to get its house in order to face a more dangerous world

ROLAND PARIS
Special to The Globe and Mail

Published Friday, Jun. 20 2014

Roland Paris is director of the Centre for International Policy Studies and associate professor in the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Ottawa. He was the Canadian member of the NATO policy experts group. Follow him on Twitter: @rolandparis

Members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization are grappling with big decisions as they prepare for their major annual summit in Wales. What stance should they adopt towards Russia? Should they keep the alliance’s doors open to new members? And what role, if any, should NATO play beyond Europe?

In March, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen invited ten independent experts to provide recommendations on strengthening the alliance. The group, which included a Canadian, an American and eight Europeans, submitted their report last week in Brussels in advance of the September summit.

While the Ukraine crisis is testing NATO’s unity and resolve, this crisis is one of several challenges facing the alliance, the experts group argued. These challenges arise from four major shifts taking place in world affairs.

The first shift is Russia’s emergence as an openly revisionist power whose actions threaten to replace a rules-based order in Europe with one governed by the application of military power and economic coercion. The Ukraine crisis is a manifestation of this change.

The second shift is the sudden unravelling of states and political order across parts of the Middle East and North Africa. These places may seem far away to North Americans, but for many of our European allies, they are practically next door. Radicalization of foreign and local fighters and the spread of weapons in these conflicts pose a long-term challenge to the security of all NATO countries.

The third shift is the rapid escalation of tensions between China and its neighbours. They are engaging in dangerously militarized competition for control over islands, important sea lanes, and strategic resources in the South and East China Seas. NATO has little direct role to play in this part of the world, but all of its members have, at least, an economic interest in maintaining open shipping and regional peace.

The fourth shift is the increasingly strained system of international rules and institutions, which seems less and less able to manage the security challenges arising from the first three shifts.

NATO countries and their publics should look beyond the Ukraine crisis to these broader shifts, all of which pose longer-term challenges to the security and well-being of the transatlantic community.

First and foremost, NATO must adopt a firm stance towards Russia by demonstrating its commitment to defend all its members. This should include regularly exercising NATO combat forces in the eastern areas of the alliance; preparing the NATO Response Force to be deployed at shorter notice; investing in scalable infrastructure and pre-positioning military equipment in Eastern Europe to accommodate larger NATO forces should they be required in an emergency; and holding snap exercises to practice the deployment of these forces at scale.

NATO countries must also develop the doctrines, instruments and techniques to defend against the “non-linear” type of aggression that Russia practiced in Ukraine, which combined the use of special forces disguised as local partisans, mobilization of local proxies, cyber-attacks, mass disinformation campaigns, intimidation through displays of strength, and economic coercion. In addition, reducing the total or near-total reliance of certain European countries on Russian energy imports is critical to the future security of the whole transatlantic community.

NATO’s door should remain open to European democracies that share the alliance’s commitment to democracy and the rule of law. However, before any new members are inducted, all existing NATO allies must be willing and able to defend that country against threats. There should be no ambiguity about this and, conversely, no implied security commitments to non-members.

Nor can there be a return to the NATO-Russia “partnership” of previous years as long as Russia uses military power to threaten and to seize the territory of neighbouring states. This does not mean refusing to communicate with Russia or its president, which would be short-sighted given our common interests on a range of international issues from nuclear proliferation to terrorism.

On matters relating to European security, however, Russia is behaving as an adversary, not a partner. Moscow’s self-declared right to defend Russian-speaking “compatriots” wherever they may live poses a risk to the transatlantic community that is unprecedented since 1989. In addition to shifting NATO’s military presence eastwards and increasing its state of readiness, the allies should maintain economic sanctions on Moscow and tighten these sanctions if Russia’s threatening behaviour continues. NATO members must not trade their core commitment to collective defence in return for national economic benefits.

While buttressing collective defence in Europe is crucial, the alliance should avoid the temptation to turn inwards. NATO cannot afford to ignore rising instability in North Africa and the Middle East. Nor should it overlook China’s more aggressive posture in Asia and the mounting tensions in that region, and other types of threats from cyber-attacks and piracy.

Here is the problem: all of these challenges are growing. Western governments need to recognize – and explain to their populations – that while we now live in an era of relative peace, recent developments are raising longer-term concerns about our security. A stable neighbourhood and a secure international environment cannot be taken for granted.

NATO countries – including those in Europe – must have the capacity to deploy and sustain effective military forces overseas in case of emergency. Reckless overseas interventions will not secure us, but neither will turning away from the world.

Last year, defence spending increased in all the world’s regions but three: North America, Western and Central Europe, and Oceania. While the United States remains the foremost military power today, if these investment patterns continue, Western militaries will eventually lose the technological advantage that they have long relied upon for their effectiveness.

Western diplomacy also appears to be flagging. Ultimately, our security is best ensured through effective international rules and institutions. When the existing structures of global governance are under strain, as they are today, countries such as Canada should be working overtime to renovate and strengthen these institutions.

The shift towards a multipolar world is not a forecast; it is happening now. Adapting the global system of rules and institutions to this new reality is a historic challenge for this generation, but responding to this challenge will require more energetic, ambitious and far-sighted Western diplomacy than we have seen in recent years.

NATO countries, including Canada, have benefited enormously from the relatively peaceful and open international order that has prevailed for nearly 70 years. If they commit to doing so, the Western allies and their global partners should be able to extend this period for decades longer. But it will not happen by itself, and cracks in the foundations of this order are already visible.

Political leaders on both sides of the Atlantic need to describe this situation to their publics. Without fear-mongering, they need to explain that the world is becoming more dangerous and that ignoring these risks is not a solution. If we do not reinvest in both our diplomatic and military capacities today, we will likely pay a much higher price later.


I agree, in part, and disagree, in other parts.

First, I agree with the "four shifts:"

    "Russia’s emergence as an openly revisionist power whose actions threaten to replace a rules-based order in Europe;"

    "The sudden unravelling of states and political order across parts of the Middle East and North Africa. These places may seem far away to North Americans, but for many of our European allies, they are practically next door;"

    "The rapid escalation of tensions between China and its neighbours. They are engaging in dangerously militarized competition for control over islands, important sea lanes, and strategic resources in the South and East China Seas;" and

    "The increasingly strained system of international rules and institutions, which seems less and less able to manage the security challenges arising from the first three shifts."

I also agree, fully, that "NATO must adopt a firm stance towards Russia by demonstrating its commitment to defend all its members." And I accept that this may require the CF to, routinely, exercise (demonstrate our commitment and capability) in Eastern Europe.

I agree further, that: "NATO countries must also develop the doctrines, instruments and techniques to defend against the “non-linear” type of aggression that Russia practiced in Ukraine, which combined the use of special forces disguised as local partisans, mobilization of local proxies, cyber-attacks, mass disinformation campaigns, intimidation through displays of strength, and economic coercion."  and Europe must reduce "the total or near-total reliance of certain European countries on Russian energy imports."

Finally, I agree that we cannot return to any kind of "partnership for peace" with Russia. That was, always, a sham.

Where I begin to part company with Roland Paris is in suggesting that NATO "should avoid the temptation to turn inwards." In fact, I think NATO needs to refocus its attention inwards: towards Russian aggression. Of course it cannot ignore what's happening in its own "near abroad," but we need to remember area of responsibility, area of influence and area of interest and we need to apply that rule.

On the matter of defence spending: it would be politically impossible, even foolish to ask Canadians to increase their (fiancial) support for NATO, through Canada's defence budget, until Europe, especially Germany, has shown  real leadership by rebuilding its armed forces (the Bundeswehr). In 2012 Germany spent only 1.35% of GDP on defence ~ Germany needs to spend 2% or even 3% before experts ask Canadians to spend even a bit more.

(Don't get me wrong: I support a bigger, much bigger and better managed,* defence budget ... but not for NATO.)

_____
* Not managed as a regional job creation slush fund.
 
I'd also go so far as to say no type of partnership with China also...
 
China, I think you will find, isn't looking for any sort of "partnership." They don't want enmity but they are not interested in joining anything in which they are not the undisputed leader (master?).

Russia has, consciously, rejected the post 1989 Western outreach; they have chosen open hostility.

That's the difference between Russia and China in so far as we are concerned: while neither wants "partnership" with the West, China is not interested in hostility, either.
 
E.R. Campbell said:
China, I think you will find, isn't looking for any sort of "partnership." They don't want enmity but they are not interested in joining anything in which they are not the undisputed leader (master?).

So in your view, China is the "undisputed leader" of the Shanghai Cooperative Organization (SCO), which also includes Russia. So you see Putin playing 2nd fiddle to Xi Jinping in that arrangement?  ???

Or would it be better to say "they're not interested in joining any organization/partnership from which they won't get any (diplomatic/strategic) advantage from"?

*Btw, I tried sending you a message via your outside e-mail last week since your PM inbox here was full.
 
I think China sees the SCO, now, as its own forum, one in which Russia is a member. I'm pretty sure the Russians don't see it that way but I suspect the Stans pay more attention to China than they do to Russia.
 
E.R. Campbell said:
In an essay, which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Foreign Affairs website, Jan Joel Andersson of the Swedish Institute of International Affairs, argues that NATO should be further enlarged to include Finland and Sweden:

http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/141377/jan-joel-andersson/nordic-nato

I would support adding both Finland and Sweden to NATO, despite having been quite mildly opposed, to adding Spain in 1982, and to keeping Greece in (after the colonels' coup) and, being much more strongly, opposed to the 1999, 2004 and 2008 expansions.
With Finland and Sweden, NATO would also be an arctic alliance.  While not a selling point to most of the alliance, the inclusion could enhance NATO's relevance to Canada.
 
Well, as I said, I agree with Prof Michael E Brown that previous NATO expansions, especially into what Russia saw as it's sphere of influence, were mistakes. I think Sweden and Finland are more natural fits for NATO than were the Eastern Europeans (although one can, I suppose, make a case for the Baltic states) and even for Spain and, indeed, even for Greece and Turkey in 1952 and Italy in the original twelve founding members. (I agree that Germany needed to be admitted in 1955.) (I understand that strategic rationale for all the expansions up to but not including 1999 and beyond.)
 
E.R. Campbell said:
On the matter of defence spending: it would be politically impossible, even foolish to ask Canadians to increase their (fiancial) support for NATO, through Canada's defence budget, until Europe, especially Germany, has shown  real leadership by rebuilding its armed forces (the Bundeswehr). In 2012 Germany spent only 1.35% of GDP on defence ~ Germany needs to spend 2% or even 3% before experts ask Canadians to spend even a bit more.

(Don't get me wrong: I support a bigger, much bigger and better managed,* defence budget ... but not for NATO.)

In a recent interview the German Defense Minister said Germany plans to increase its defense budget over the next few years. According to him, not near the 2% target, as he argues the GDP value means nothing if the money isn't spent well/properly. Saying he wants to see the German military as a stream lined, effective and highly efficient organization.
 
Related: this goes hand-in-hand with the other thread posted about that Norwegian spy ship.

Yahoo Finance

Norway Wants NATO To Prepare For An Arctic Showdown
Business Insider
By Armin Rosen

According to Saideman, the Norwegians are increasingly worried about possible Russian inroads into the Arctic region, which makes sense as Russian president Vladimir Putin has taken an aggressive stance towards neighbors that threaten Moscow's perceived interests.

" Proximity breeds concern but not contempt," Saideman writes of Norway's view of possible Russian moves in the Arctic. But that concern is focused around NATO's ability to defend the alliance's interests in the Arctic in the face of possible Russian aggression: "The Norwegians want NATO to look at ye olde plans and come up with some new ones," Saidaman writes, "since the old ones were overcome by events in 1989-1991."

In short, Norway wants the alliance to be better prepared to fight a war in an Arctic environment.

" The Norwegians would like to see more NATO activity up in the high north — more training, more doctrine, more exercises and the like — since it is a difficult 'battlespace,'" writes Saideman.

(...EDITED)
 
Russia has given NATO nations plenty to consider with regards both to their own defence spending and to the future of the alliance.  We should not go to war over a non-alliance member, but what do we do with whatever remains of the Ukraine crawl out of the boot-stomping it is about to receive?  What considerations should be given to the arctic, about which Mr Putin has recently commented that Russia will strengthen its influence?

How Vladimir Putin reinvigorated NATO
PAUL KORING
WASHINGTON — The Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Aug. 29 2014, 8:53 PM EDT
Last updated Friday, Aug. 29 2014, 9:49 PM EDT

For decades, as the world perched on the brink of nuclear Armageddon, NATO had more than a million troops pressed against the Iron Curtain, ready and capable of waging war against the Soviet Union.

Until the 1970s, pairs of Canadian Starfighter warplanes, armed with nuclear bombs, were on 15-minute readiness, part of the North Atlantic Treat Organization’s “quick reaction” strike force that was ready to obliterate Russian tank columns in the Fulda Gap before they could reach the Rhine. More than 6,000 Canadian troops were permanently stationed in Germany. It was an era when the stark reality of NATO’s mutual defence pact meant Canadians and Americans were poised – not just pledged – to fight and die to keep Communist legions out of Western Europe.

Now, as NATO leaders gather for what was originally billed as an “Out of Afghanistan” summit, they face the worst military crisis in decades in Europe. Finding a response to Moscow’s incursions in Ukraine – and finding the money to make it credible – poses a grave test for the alliance.

“We take our Article 5 commitments to defend each other very seriously, and that includes the smallest NATO member,” U.S. President Barack Obama vowed as he headed for Estonia and then on to the summit. But whether Russian President Vladimir Putin believes NATO has the political will to back its tough talk with action remains uncertain.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall, NATO spent most of the next quarter-century seeking new roles in far-off conflicts and nearly doubling in membership – from 16 to 28 nations – while dwindling in combat capability and overall defence spending. The alliance, still the world’s most powerful, fought its first “hot” war over Balkan skies in 1999 as warplanes from a dozen nations, including Canada, pounded Serb targets for months, setting the stage for an independent Kosovo.

In the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States, NATO nations collectively waged a long-running counter-insurgency campaign against the Taliban while attempting to prop up the Afghan government in Kabul. Almost all NATO nations, and a dozen non-members, were involved – with the number of foreign troops peaking at more than 150,000. But after more than a decade in Afghanistan, the outcome of NATO’s biggest war remains murky and most nations, including Canada, have packed up and left.

In 2011, NATO warplanes were back in action for eight months of air strikes that eventually toppled Libya’s ruthless dictator Moammar Gadhafi. But the successful air war, commanded by Canadian Lieutenant-General Charles Bouchard, soured in the aftermath as Libya slid into a continuing civil war.

With its expeditionary wars at best a mixed success, NATO was still struggling to find a 21st-century reason to exist. “In some ways, NATO should thank Vladimir Putin because it was really searching for its purpose,” said Heather Conley, director of the Europe Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank. “[It] was having a fairly significant identity crisis and now has now not only been repurposed, it’s been reinvigorated.”

Even before next week’s summit and even as Russian tank columns penetrate deeper into eastern Ukraine, Mr. Obama has made it clear what NATO is not going to do. There will be no war to defend Ukraine, a non-NATO nation.

“It is not in the cards for us to see a military confrontation between Russia and the United States,” Mr. Obama said this week as he prepared for a presummit stop in Estonia.

But NATO will add serious military presence, especially to its rapid reaction force. The Polish base at Szczecin, already a NATO headquarters, will likely host thousands of troops from other nations rotating every few months. The alliance is also expected to step up its multi-national combat air patrols close to the Russian frontier in the three Baltic member states – Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania – and push forward with more warships in the North Atlantic.

Leaders at the summit in Cardiff will be “trying to skate a fine line,” said Colonel George Petrolekas, a former strategic adviser to Canada’s Chief of Defence Staff who served in Bosnia and Afghanistan.

“There’s a need to demonstrate a commitment to NATO’s eastern allies, but not go so far as to provoke a second round of the Cold War.”

Ukraine will dominate the summit but it’s hardly NATO’s only unravelling crisis. In Syria and Iraq, on NATO’s southern flank, major conflicts threaten to spread and destabilize the region. And the end game, at least for the alliance, is playing out in Afghanistan.

Enlargement is supposedly off the agenda, especially for small Balkan aspirants such as Bosnia. Both Finland and Sweden may want in – and together they would redraw the northern flank. Ukraine, in a plea for military help, called Friday for full NATO membership.

With very different wars in Ukraine and in Iraq and Syria where Islamic State extremists are attempting carve out a caliphate, “leaders of NATO member states don’t have the luxury of ignoring one or the other; they are going to have to look at both,” said Janine Davidson at the Council on Foreign Relations.

Perhaps NATO’s biggest challenge, says Ms. Davidson, is how to cope with the “rising threat of unconventional warfare: namely, Russia’s ‘covert, implausibly deniable invasion’ of Ukraine and the rampaging ISIS forces in the Middle East.”

Meanwhile, the Arctic – where climate change is turning a Cold War confrontation zone limited to nuclear-powered submarines into a potential Klondike at the top of the world – will also be on the summit agenda.

On that front, Prime Minister Stephen Harper wants to deliver the message that “we cannot be complacent about Russia and its military activities in the Arctic,” said Rob Huebert, associate director of the Centre for Military and Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary, who was on the Prime Minister’s most recent northern tour.
 
MCG said:
Russia has given NATO nations plenty to consider with regards both to their own defence spending and to the future of the alliance.  We should not go to war over a non-alliance member, but what do we do with whatever remains of the Ukraine crawl out of the boot-stomping it is about to receive?  What considerations should be given to the arctic, about which Mr Putin has recently commented that Russia will strengthen its influence?

This may sound harsh but we shouldn't do anything.  What happens in the Ukraine happens.  They are no part of NATO and that's it.  We can remind Russia that we will defend ALL NATO nations and that's it.  So far Russia hasn't threaten any NATO country and I don't think they would. 

In my opinion, all this tough talk from the west is going to trigger a war that nobody wants.
 
hmm....you might want to wave a paper shouting "peace in our time"........ ::)
 
stellarpanther said:
This may sound harsh but we shouldn't do anything.  What happens in the Ukraine happens.  They are no part of NATO and that's it.  We can remind Russia that we will defend ALL NATO nations and that's it.  So far Russia hasn't threaten any NATO country and I don't think they would. 

In my opinion, all this tough talk from the west is going to trigger a war that nobody wants.
That's great, but irrelevant to my question.  When the dust of this current conflict settles, what relationship does NATO seek with the defeated Ukraine?
 
MCG said:
That's great, but irrelevant to my question.  When the dust of this current conflict settles, what relationship does NATO seek with the defeated Ukraine?

NATO should not seek or have any type of relationship with them.  NATO should be staying out of Russia's backyard just as they should stay out of ours. 
 
As much as I dislike the russians, it's silly to think only the USA can declare a Monroe Doctrine. Ukaine is not a NATO ally and it is a part of Russia's backyard.

 
stellarpanther said:
NATO should not seek or have any type of relationship with [Ukraine].  NATO should be staying out of Russia's backyard just as they should stay out of ours. 
NATO and Russia share backyards, in eastern Europe and the Arctic.  Whether you agree with the decision or not, NATO eastward expansion happened.  The Ukraine and Belarus (and arguably Georgia) constitute the partial line that separates NATO from Russia.  Because both NATO and Russia share boarders with these countries, it is an inevitable requirement that NATO and Russia have relationships with these countries.

Will a beaten Ukraine have any desire to be "Russia's backyard" after the Russian Army has cleaved off the parts desired by Russia?  They will likely come crawling in search of NATO membership.  When the imminent risk of being dragged into a war has passed, some might be inclined to welcome them in to NATO.  Maybe the better relationship is that we keep the Ukraine out with the intent that it becomes the nuclear kill zone if Russian forces ever launch an attack that continues beyond the western boarder.  Maybe the relationship is something in between.  Regardless, NATO needs to have that discussion sooner rather than later.

For that other backyard to which Canada is connected (ie. the Arctic), we should also consider relationships with other countries that one might describe as "Russia's backyard" (ie. Finland).
 
NATO as originally designed made some sense.  Europe was weak and recovering while the USSR was strong.  Europe wanted to ensure that the US would be bound to help them right from the start of a conflict rather than risk having them remain isolationist like they did at the start of the first two World Wars.  The USSR knowing that war in Western Europe automatically would mean war with the US and it's superior nuclear arsenal would be deterred from attacking (there is some question as to if the USSR ever even considered military action against Europe outside the zone of influence it was granted at the Yalta conference). 

My personal opinion is that the situation was fundamentally changed by the time of the collapse of the Soviet Union.  Europe was (is) strong and growing in power while Russia was (is) weaker and ultimately at least not significantly growing in power.  A Western Europe that has a greater population, a much more powerful economy, greater combined defense spending and a larger combined military than Russia no longer needs to rely on American (and Canadian) military support to deter Russia from attacking them since Russia is not capable of defeating them in a conventional war.

I personally think it was a big mistake for NATO to expand into Eastern Europe as it puts us directly into areas that conflict directly with Russia's physical and economic security.  A country's behaviour becomes much more difficult to predict when it's direct national interests are threatened as we are seeing now in Ukraine.  My personal preference would have been for the EU to develop their own military mutual defence alliance.  The promise of the major European powers automatically (by treaty) coming to the defence of countries like Poland would be enough of a deterrent to Russian attack without risking turning a potential conflict into a Global conflict.  It would leave the UN as a potential escape valve for both sides in case of conflict through miscalculation since the US would not be an automatic participant in a Russo-European war.  If it's a NATO show then the Security Council (with only China not directly involved as a veto-wielding member) becomes less of a viable option of halting the conflict. 

In the case of countries with very significant Russian minorities (Ukraine, Latvia, Estonia in particular) I would have preferred to see cooperation and trade with these countries but no direct military guarantees of support so as to avoid exactly the kind of risks of direct conflict that we're seeing in Ukraine.
 
I'm still where I was more than six years ago: NATO has, still, one (and only one) useful (valid) role: to deter Russian aggression.

I happily admit that, six years ago, I didn't see Russia as a huge problem ... but times change.

My problem with NATO, in 2008, was "out of area operations." I remain persuaded that NATO is not well suited to be the "military sub-contractor" that the UNSC needs for operations beyond Europe: the UNSC needs a broader, global alignment (rater than a formal alliance) of nations that are willing to work together to enforce UNSC resolutions. I believe that there is a role for some, several, European countries in such an alignment but it must also have Asian nations and Latin American nations and African nations, too. (Not every nation in the alignment will want to participate in every coalition, I suppose; and that's where alliances can be weak: they are inflexible.)

But, it's not 2008, and the operational problem is in Europe and, so, NATO is the the answer.
 
E.R. Campbell said:
I'm still where I was more than six years ago: NATO has, still, one (and only one) useful (valid) role: to deter Russian aggression.

I happily admit that, six years ago, I didn't see Russia as a huge problem ... but times change.

My problem with NATO, in 2008, was "out of area operations." I remain persuaded that NATO is not well suited to be the "military sub-contractor" that the UNSC needs for operations beyond Europe: the UNSC needs a broader, global alignment (rater than a formal alliance) of nations that are willing to work together to enforce UNSC resolutions. I believe that there is a role for some, several, European countries in such an alignment but it must also have Asian nations and Latin American nations and African nations, too. (Not every nation in the alignment will want to participate in every coalition, I suppose; and that's where alliances can be weak: they are inflexible.)

But, it's not 2008, and the operational problem is in Europe and, so, NATO is the the answer.

Europe 2014 is not Europe 1946... I'd suggest we let them sort themselves out, to a greater extent than we have before.

A resurgent, wealthy (and self-centred and relatively smug) Europe should not need to hide behind Uncle Sam's apron...

http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htmurph/articles/20140831.aspx
 
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