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by RadiumSoda
Today [editor's note, by Migeru February 10th], Defense Secretary Robert Gates spoke at the annual Munich Conference on Security Policy. He reiterated Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's recent comments in London that NATO is at risk of collapse if member nations fail to meet their military obligations in Afghanistan.
In this diary we look back at the NATO takeover of leadership of (International Security Assistance Force) ISAF-Afghanistan in 2003, to see what US officials were saying at the time. What we're going to find is a continuing insistance from the US that the very viability of NATO depends on commitments to security in that non-NATO country. Again and again, we see evidence that the real point of this near-hysterical rhetoric is to solidify a US-urged change in NATO's mandate, from Eurpoean defense to world-wide interventionism.
Starting with Gates' remarks today in Munich, we see a strange-seeming doomsdayism about the importance of NATO participation in Afghanistan. Diary rescue by Migeru
There was some concern in the audience that Gates was singling out Germany for its recalcitrance. Gates assured them he wasn't naming names. But earlier, Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns was less circumspect.
Remember that name, Nicholas Burns. He'll come up later. A few days ago, similar rhetoric came from Secretary Rice at a stop in London as she was on her way to a surprise visit to Afghanistan. She characterized NATO commitment to ISAF as a "test" for member nations. In particular, she emphasized the importance of member nations not bowing to popular -- that is, democratic -- pressure to keep out of Afghanistan. Very interestingly, she characterized this test as not just being about Afghanistan, but about whether NATO countries could get "our populations" to accept the new NATO mandate to intervene around the world as part of the war on terror and more generally the wider scope of post-cold war interventionism. Rice made the argument that Afghanistan represents a defacto expanansion of NATO's mission. Even though no one voted on it, NATO now has a new calling:
What I want to point out right now is that news accounts of Gates's and Rice's recent push for more troops in Afhganistan have made it seem like this "test for NATO" rhetoric is new. It is not. The US has been using the Afghanistan mission as a pressure point for expanding NATO's mission all along. Back to this Nicholas Burns person. In 2003, he was the US ambassador to NATO. In August 2003, NATO took over ISAF-Afghanistan leadership from the UN. Burns wrote some op-ed columns at the time. Here is what Nicholas Burns wrote on the day of the takeover in the Wall Street Journal. (Warning PDF).
Note the rhetoric. Member nations of NATO had not been "serious" prior to agreeing to an escalated mission in Afghanistan. By agreeing to it, member nations are implicitly agreeing to a shift from a cold-war defense footing to a broad interventionist policy.
Compare that to Rice's recent comments, above, about the defacto change in the NATO mission. On May 24, 2003, Nicholas Burns offered similar words of praise for the expected (but not yet enacted) NATO expansion. (Warning PDF).
Note the point about Afghanistan as "down payment" on the change in mission. N. Burns went on to note that some "unilateralists" in Europe don't want to see NATO succeed. Indeed, those "unilateralists" would like to see Europe form its own internal defense pact, to set up a countervailing force to US dominance. Burns writes that the mission in Afghanistan represents a rebuke to those who would shun the US-led defense pact.
This is very significant. It indicates that US doomsday rhetoric about the failure and the "test" and the "viability" of NATO is meant to stave off the threat of a rising European military alliance and more general failure of US control. The mission in Afghanistan, then, is largely meant to solidify the status quo and the expansion of the US-led NATO mission around the world. Gates, today, said:
Seen in context, this rhetoric, tying Afghanistan to NATO member loyalty and commitment, is not new, and makes more sense. The Bush administration is using Afghanistan to alter NATO culture and policy, in ways that may last beyond his presidency. If this change is not welcomed by (to use Rice's phrase) "our populations", then they need to be better educated and informed. This is disturbingly anti-democratic and indicates, too, another example of Bush Administration attempts to increase US government dominance over its own citizens, Europe, and the rest of the world. (Cross-posted at Docudharma and Daily Kos) |
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Afghanistan as Pretext for NATO Change: 2003 and Now | 13 comments (13 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
Afghanistan as Pretext for NATO Change: 2003 and Now | 13 comments (13 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
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