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Afghanistan as Pretext for NATO Change: 2003 and Now

by RadiumSoda Sun Feb 17th, 2008 at 04:52:53 PM EST

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


Gates Challenges European Military Leaders on Afghanistan
Defense Secretary Says NATO's Stability Is at Stake

By Craig Whitlock
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, February 10, 2008; 7:07 AM

MUNICH, Feb. 10 - Defense Secretary Robert Gates challenged the European military leaders and lawmakers Sunday to revive flagging support for the international mission in Afghanistan, warning that if members of NATO were no longer willing to shoulder the burdens of war equally, it "would effectively destroy the alliance."

-- snip --

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.

In an interview published Friday by the Sueddeutsche Zeitung, a Munich-based newspaper, U.S. Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns singled out Spain, Italy, France and Germany as NATO members that needed to either provide more troops or loosen restrictions on their ability to fight.

"We need those countries to take their share of the responsibility," he said.

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:

We used to have extensive arguments about out of area and would NATO ever go out of area. Well, we're out of area in a very big way, but that says that NATO has made a transition from a Cold War alliance to a 21st century alliance. It's not come without difficulty. It's not come without some growing pains.

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).

NATO Gets Serious

Publication: Wall Street Journal
Date: 08/11/2003
Author: Nicholas Burns
Is U.S. Ambassador To Nato

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization rewrites history today when it assumes the lead for the U.N.-sponsored force providing security for Kabul. It is the first out-of-Europe operation in NATO's 54-year existence. In parallel fashion, the U.S. is working closely on the ground with international partners to help construct Afghan institutions. A notable example is our cooperation with France and other countries in building the new Afghan National Army.

By taking over the International Security Assistance Force, or ISAF, NATO shows it is serious about a transformation that has been in the works for almost two years. The ISAF operation is an expression of our new emphasis on confronting global terrorism and the threat posed by weapons of mass destruction.

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.

Crossing into South Asia represents further evolution for NATO toward the modern, transformed Alliance needed in our dangerous international security environment.

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).

NATO has committed itself to going wherever it is needed to defend its members against the threats of terrorism and weapons of mass destruction. The down payment on that promise is NATO's historic decision last month to take over the International Security Assistance Force in Kabul in August. NATO's new leading role in Afghanistan - the alliance's first military operation outside Europe - will give it a key mission on the front lines of the global war on terror.

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.

Some Europeans, on the other hand, think they can create a unified continental foreign policy with opposition to the United States as its raison d'être. They call for Europeanonly military headquarters that would needlessly duplicate what NATO already offers and have zero real utility, unless the objective is to weaken our ability to work together. Their vision of Europe as a countervailing power to the United States is one that would destroy the cooperative spirit that has held us together in NATO.

These U.S. and Continental unilateralists present us with a false choice, one that would weaken NATO's preeminent role in tying North America to Europe. Fortunately we don't have to play by their zero-sum rules.

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:

"Some allies ought not to have the luxury of opting only for stability and civilian operations, thus forcing other allies to bear a disproportionate share of the fighting and the dying," he said. He repeated comments made in Washington last week that NATO risked becoming a "two-tiered alliance" if certain countries, which he did not name, continued to shy away from combat.

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)

Display:
Re: "The Bush administration is using Afghanistan to alter NATO culture and policy, in ways that may last beyond his presidency."

Gates' dithering over NATO and Afghanistan is a case in point and illustrates a blatant attempt at a final push for the Bush-Cheney US sepramcist doctrine.

Absolutely pathetic.

by The3rdColumn on Sun Feb 10th, 2008 at 03:53:38 PM EST
I agree entirely.
by RadiumSoda on Sun Feb 10th, 2008 at 04:00:30 PM EST
[ Parent ]
It is increasingly obvious that NATO's roles today are as follows:

  • as supplemental forces to US troops around the world, in places where the US wants to fight, but cannot for various reasons (it's boring - peacekeeping, it's politically sensitive, it does not have enough troops);

  • as a source of legitimacy for US imperialism ("it's not the US, it's the "international community" - see all these countries who are joining in this good fight");

  • as a way to keep European diplomacy and military forces tied to the US.


In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes
by Jerome a Paris (etg@eurotrib.com) on Sun Feb 10th, 2008 at 04:05:05 PM EST
Then, NATO must try not to succumb to such high handed tactics. Its inconceivable that even dumb Bush and Cheney cannot see beyond the tip of their noses, i.e., Gates' Zugzwang tactics are bound to have adverse effects that can weaken the US ultimately -- think Russia! Absolutely
by The3rdColumn on Sun Feb 10th, 2008 at 04:12:11 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Thanks for asking.

I don't expect this to change under a new President; I expect this to be one of the ways of sustaining a Bush policy under the radar of US citizen awareness.

But if NATO countries object strongly enough, I think or hope that a Democratic President would be more open to flexibility.

One question is: what would a Democratic President's reaction be to a Europe-only military alliance?  Almost certainly very negative, if only because the Republican party would use it against him or her in the next election.  "Clinton/Obama allowed Europe to become a rival under his/her watch" and so on.

I'm sure you all have thought this through much more than Daily Kos has.  It's a large issue.

by RadiumSoda on Sun Feb 10th, 2008 at 04:12:25 PM EST
[ Parent ]
RadiumSoda, Re: "One question is: what would a Democratic President's reaction be to a Europe-only military alliance?"

I can see that some Americans might like that, i.e., those who are against US military dispersing to the 4 corners of the world but the implication for the US will be so enormous that I don't see a new administration allowing that to happen so blatantly, hence new adminsitration will be flexible as you rightly say.

So far, there's been nothing in the pronouncements of the 4 current candidates that point in the direction of a weakening US resolve to remain in NATO.

I'd be very very surprised if the next US pres would undermine NATO in the same manner Bush, Gates and Rice have been doing it today.

by The3rdColumn on Sun Feb 10th, 2008 at 04:28:02 PM EST
[ Parent ]
The US has been opposing independent European military capabilities for ever. One of the reasons that European NATO members don't have certain capabilities is that the US has done it's damnedest to make sure they don't.
by Colman (colman at eurotrib.com) on Mon Feb 11th, 2008 at 01:28:32 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Like what ??? (just curious)!

"What can I do, What can I write, Against the fall of Night". A.E. Housman
by margouillat (hemidactylus(dot)frenatus(at)wanadoo(dot)fr) on Mon Feb 11th, 2008 at 01:36:13 PM EST
[ Parent ]
gobsmacking in the extreme
by The3rdColumn on Sun Feb 10th, 2008 at 04:12:56 PM EST
Seems Bush is hellbent on being at loggerheads with the Europe -- I believe NATO is only a part of an overall plan by the ebbing Bush presidency to maintain a supremacist hold over Europe via a two-pronged attack: on NATO & EU.

America is pressuring the EU to buckle under US demands precisely to hone in their point.

This is fearmongering at its worst!

From Guardian: Bush orders clampdown on flights to US Monday February 11 2008 on p1 of the Top stories section.

The US administration is pressing the 27 governments of the European Union to sign up for a range of new security measures for transatlantic travel, including allowing armed guards on all flights from Europe to America by US airlines.

The demand to put armed air marshals on to the flights is part of a travel clampdown by the Bush administration that officials in Brussels described as "blackmail" and "troublesome", and could see US visas being introduced for west Europeans and Britons travelling to the US if their governments balk at the American requirements.

According to a US document being circulated for signature in European capitals, EU states would also need to supply personal data on all air passengers overflying but not landing in the US in order to gain or retain visa-free travel to America, senior EU officials said.

And within months the US department of homeland security is to impose a new permit system for Europeans flying to the US, compelling all travellers to apply online for permission to enter the country before booking or buying a ticket, a procedure that will take several days.

.../...

The Association of European Airlines, representing 31 airlines including all the big west European national carriers, has told the US authorities that there is "no international legal foundation" for supplying the US with data about passengers on flights overflying US territory.

.../....

If the Americans persevere in the proposed security crackdown, Brussels is likely to respond with tit-for-tat action such as calling for visas for some Americans.

by The3rdColumn on Sun Feb 10th, 2008 at 07:58:35 PM EST
Excellent contribution, RS/LC, thanks a lot!
by afew (afew(a in a circle)eurotrib_dot_com) on Tue Feb 12th, 2008 at 02:11:09 PM EST
I'm always amazed by the fact that, in all the talk in the so-called "mainstream" press, and then later derivations of discussions found in those very same semi-official organs of Western business and outside of them, one or two steps removed, how we talk about America, Nato, European interests, maybe in a more complete 360 view, Pakistan's interests as well.

But we never, virtually ever talk about real Afghani people and their interests.

Ah, the great game! The century may change, but the game remains the same. Same class sees their kids get killed. Only the names change...

The Hun is always either at your throat or at your feet. Winston Churchill

by r------ on Mon Feb 18th, 2008 at 10:32:01 AM EST
Nice diary and good comments above.  Looking at the big picture, I trust and hope that the cumulative effect of the Bush Adm. debacles, beginning with Iraq, Afghanistan (actually, the entire Middle East!), Russia and the financial crisis (the latter, while probably not attributable to Bush, will likely influence the former imperial agenda via the economy - ie. with social security, health care, etc. clamoring for solutions) will force the pendulum to swing in the other direction, so to speak.  Gates is a combination damage control and final attempt (along with Petreus in Iraq) to push the pendulum further.  I just can't concieve of these fools pushing the pendulum any further in the same direction without 'breaking the grandfather clock' altogether.

As for Nicholas, I think we'll see his surname turn into a verb ....

"Beware of the man who does not talk, and the dog that does not bark." Cheyenne

by maracatu on Mon Feb 18th, 2008 at 11:10:04 AM EST


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