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NATO = DEAD jsut admit it! US Sec of Defence Gates

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http://www.independent.co.uk/opinio...h-its-just-that-we-wont-admit-it-2297912.html

Adrian Hamilton: Nato is dead – it's just that we won't admit it

International Studies

Thursday, 16 June 2011

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If ever the death knell was sounded for an organisation, it was sounded by the US Defence Secretary, Robert Gates, in a farewell speech to Nato in Brussels last Friday.

Of course, in talking of the 60-year-old alliance facing a "dim if not dismal" future of "military irrelevance", he was primarily expressing Washington's growing irritation with its European allies for not doing more in Afghanistan and over Libya. If they didn't pull their socks, up, he said with the bluntness that only a departing minister can voice, it would all be over for Nato.

You can't fault his analysis. The longer the Libyan intervention has gone on, the more it has shown up an alliance whose European members are divided on the goals and whose leader, the US, just doesn't want to go on providing the heavy lifting for something it feels should be a European show.

But then this only reflects the fundamental dichotomy of view between the US and Europe over how they see their security interests now. For most European countries, the fall of the Berlin Wall meant the end to the most direct military threat to their security, the raison d'être of Nato. Their populations looked for a scaling down of defence investment, not an expansion.

For the US, on the other hand, the Fall of the Wall left a fractious and unstable world in which they, as the sole hyperpower, now had to hold the ring. What they wanted was support from their allies, not a lessening of it.

It is this divergence of interest which is coming to the surface with the interventions in Bosnia, Iraq, Afghanistan, and now Libya. To the military leaders of the organisation in Brussels and some of the more enthusiastic political supporters, such "out-of-theatre" operations were seen as a welcome opportunity to reassert Nato's relevance in the post-Cold War world. To the population of most European countries, they were aberration.

There was never the political consensus behind either Iraq or Afghanistan intervention, still less so as the costs escalated and the purpose became more confused. Washington might paper over the cracks with the help of Britain and some tokenism by others in Afghanistan, but the longer the entanglement lasted, the lower became the enthusiasm for it.

Could Libya prove the straw that breaks the alliance's back? In one sense it ought not, for the Europeans, led by David Cameron and President Sarkozy, were the ones who forced the pace of this intervention.

But the same problems of sustaining determination in a long haul that we have seen in Afghanistan applies to Libya as well, while the big difference this time round is in Washington's willingness to lead.

Behind Gates's speech was the clear implication that the US itself is beginning to tire of shouldering the burden. "The blunt reality," he said, "is that there will be dwindling appetite and patience in the US Congress – and in the American body politic writ large – to expand increasingly precious funds on behalf of nations that are apparently unwilling to devote the necessary resources to make the necessary changes to be serious and capable partners in their own defence."

Gates might phrase this as a warning to Europe, but the "blunt reality", as he knows himself, is that it isn't the pusillanimity of its Nato allies which is driving Washington to think again but an American public that is turning more inward and has grown tired itself of expensive foreign wars.

Washington will no doubt try to keep up its obscenely large military expenditure (the equivalent of the budgets of all its allies put together), if only in response to China's rising spending. But – and President Obama's recent speeches reflect this – America is turning away from the idea of working through alliances towards taking care of the threats it sees as directed towards itself.

China's rise is one. Terrorism from Pakistan is another. But Europe and Nato, once the troops are out of Afghanistan, don't really figure.

The implications for Europe, including Britain, are clear enough if only any politician was willing to own up to them. The transatlantic partnership, in so far as it was a military alliance based on the mutual self-interest, has reached the end of its shelf life. Attempts to give it new meaning as an arm of US post-Cold War policy and as a global intervention force have proved expensive and divisive.

Of course it would be more effective to keep the US involved in European defence matters, and they may well see it in their continued interests to do so. There are many mutual concerns, from terrorism to the Arab Spring. If it helps to keep Nato alive as a pact, then it may serve a purpose.

But it is really up to the Europeans to organise their own defence now for a new era. Britain and France have made a start in co-ordinating their forces, as much for financial as strategic reasons. But there is no point in repeating the mistakes of Nato in the last decade, with one tier of the "willing", ready to offer up "hard power" troops and equipment, and another of the reluctant, giving only soft-power support in a non-combat role.

You're not at the moment going to get public backing for European states to up dramatically their defence spending, nor to see in defence an arm of an expansionist EU foreign policy. But Libya has given a start in propelling Britain and France together. Given the leadership, wider integration is possible. It's not as though there are plenty of security challenges in the region, from what is happening now in North Africa and the eastern Mediterranean to troubles in former Soviet republics.

On this, at least, Robert Gates is right. It's time for Europe, including Britain, to get its defence act together.

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http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jun/14/death-of-nato-long-overdue

The death of Nato is long overdue

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The Guardian, Tuesday 14 June 2011
Article history

Robert Gates, appointed by his Nobel peace prize-winner US president to maintain continuity as well as secure change in US defence policy, makes an ungenerous farewell speech (Gates hits out at Europe over Nato, 11 June). Nato allies honourably joined the US after 9/11 in its costly Afghan war on the "all for one" principle, although no other state had then been attacked. Nato agreed with the current Libyan action following UN resolution 1973, despite the reservations several of its member states had in the security council. Europe already spends more than enough on "defence". The US maintains an absurdly large military budget, costing every American family over $5,000 a year, inherited from the cold war – to the "formative influence" of which Gates harks back nostalgically. A present-day Bourbon, he has learned nothing and forgotten nothing. The future must and should be with the humanitarian and peacekeeping missions for which he has such contempt.

Peter Nicholls

Colchester, Essex

• Robert Gates has warned of the possible death of Nato. It is about time it died, since its ostensible purpose as a defensive alliance vanished two decades ago when the Warsaw Pact was dissolved. Since then it has gained new members from eastern Europe that have seen a political advantage in flattering the US's sense of importance as a world power but have far more urgent uses for their money than military hardware that they have no wish to use. There has been pressure to justify the continued existence of this apparently useless alliance by finding it wars to fight even if they are outside its official area of interest, as with Afghanistan or now Libya. But even Britain is having to temper its addiction to fighting wars because of economic necessity.

Anthony Matthew

Leicester
 
Russia & PRC Rocks!

USA & EU dead and broke!

:D

http://news.xinhuanet.com/world/2011-06/20/c_121556541.htm


英报:北约已死——只是我们不愿承认罢了!
2011年06月20日 09:18:27  来源: 新华国际 【字号 大小】【收藏】【打印】【关闭】 分享到新华微博




6月3日,在地中海海域的一艘法国“西北风”级两栖攻击舰上,一架武装直升机准备执行首次打击任务。北约4日发表声明说,当天在对利比亚的军事行动中,北约首次出动武装直升机,打击包括军用车辆、军事装备和地面部队等在内的地面目标。新华社/路透

【英国《独立报》网站6月16日文章】题:北约已死——只是我们不承认罢了!(作者 该报评论员阿德里安·汉密尔顿)

如果说有谁给一个机构敲响了丧钟,那就是美国国防部长罗伯特·盖茨,在他上周五(6月10日)在布鲁塞尔向北约发表告别演说的时候。

盖茨谈道,这个有60年历史的联盟面临“即便不是凄惨的,也是黯淡的”未来,即变得在“军事上可有可无”。

你从他的分析中挑不出什么错。对利比亚的军事行动持续时间越长,就越清晰地表现出这一联盟中欧洲成员在行动目标上的分歧,而联盟领导者美国不愿意为了某项它认为应该由欧洲出面处理的事务继续承担繁重责任。

但这也恰恰反映出美国和欧洲目前对于它们各自安全利益看法的根本差别。对大多数欧洲国家来说,柏林墙的倒塌意味着对自身安全最直接的军事威胁的消失——而这些威胁正是北约存在的理由。

而另一方面,对美国来说,柏林墙的倒塌留下的是一个不好对付和动荡不安的世界,在这个世界里,美国是唯一的超级大国,眼下不得不出头维持秩序。他们想要得到盟友的支持,而不是看到支持日益减少。

对波黑、伊拉克、阿富汗和眼下利比亚的军事干预,让这种利益分歧浮出水面。对布鲁塞尔北约总部的军事领导人和一些更加狂热的政治支持者来说,这样的“战区外”行动被视为可喜的机会,可以让北约重申其在冷战后世界中的重要性。而对欧洲大部分国家的人们来说,这些行动是错乱行为。

在伊拉克和阿富汗的军事行动从来没有获得政治上的一致支持,随着花费激增和目标变得愈发混乱,这种支持越发少了。利比亚是证明压垮联盟的那根稻草吗?某种意义上来说,应该不是,因为是戴维·卡梅伦和萨科齐领导下的欧洲才推动了对利比亚的军事行动。

但是,我们在阿富汗曾见过那种长时间苦苦维持战争决心的问题,如今也出现在了利比亚。而这一次截然不同的是,华盛顿不再愿意担起领导责任。

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英报:北约已死——只是我们不愿承认罢了!
2011年06月20日 09:18:27  来源: 新华国际 【字号 大小】【收藏】【打印】【关闭】 分享到新华微博



121556541_21n.jpg

美国国防部长罗伯特·盖茨

盖茨的演讲明确暗示了美国开始厌倦挑大梁。盖茨或许是在给欧洲发出警告,但是他自己也清楚,“明确的现实、”不是北约盟友的优柔寡断驱使华盛顿重新考虑立场,而是美国公众的关注移向国内,并且厌倦了耗资巨大的海外战争。

哪怕只是为了应对中国的军费增长,美国也无疑会努力保持增加其过于庞大的军费开支(相当于美国所有盟国军费预算的总和)。但是,美国正在摒弃通过联盟采取行动的想法,而是转向只关心它认为直接针对自身的威胁。奥巴马总统最近的讲话反映出了这一点。

中国的崛起是一个威胁。巴基斯坦的恐怖主义是另一个威胁。但是一旦军队从阿富汗撤走,欧洲和北约的地位就不那么重要。

对欧洲(包括英国在内)的影响足够明白,只要有政治家愿意坦白承认。这个跨大西洋的合作组织——从某种程度上说是建立在各自利益基础上的军事同盟——现在已经到达保质期的末尾。事实证明,赋予其新含义的各种努力——例如把北约看做冷战后美国政策的臂膀和一支全球军事力量等—— 都代价很高而且引发分歧。

当然,让美国继续参与欧洲防务会更有效,而且美国人完全可以认识到,这样做是符合其自身利益的。欧洲与美国双方有很多共同的担忧,比如恐怖主义和“阿拉伯之春”。如果这能有助于北约以协定的形式继续存在下去,那么它也许还有可取之处。

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