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Opinions About the NATO Summit in Riga and the Future of the AlliancePosted by Joerg Wolf in Transatlantic Relations on Tuesday, November 28. 2006 The leaders of 26 NATO member countries meet in the Latvian capital Riga from 28-29 November to "chart the way ahead for the Alliance" operations, transformation and partnerships." Reuters has learned that "a U.S. plan to forge a network of partnerships around NATO from Scandinavia to Asia will get the thumbs-down from members wary of the alliance going global, diplomats said on Friday." See the Atlantic Review's post about Ivo Daalder's concept of a global NATO. Here's a round-up of opinions on the eve of the summit: • In Time for Backbone in the Alliance, Nile Gardiner gives advice for the Bush administration. For some reason the Heritage Foundation considers it fit to publish his article, although it includes phrases (like "moral cowardice" to describe European countries) that are usually only seen on right-wing blogs :
European Defense Identity: Along with widespread apathy, moral cowardice, and European countries' general unwillingness to fight, the greatest threat to the future of NATO is posed by the drive for further political and defense integration in the European Union. The United States must firmly oppose moves in Europe to establish a European defense identity separate from, and in competition with, NATO.• British Conservative "Shadow Defence Minister," Dr. Liam Fox. told Time Magazine that NATO's biggest problem is that the troops in Afghanistan do notoperate as a unified force. 37 countries have troops in Afghanistan but with more than 70 operating caveats. (HT: Joe, Shawn) • The German Marshall Fund has commissioned five papers from leading thinkers on both sides of the Atlantic on the future challenges facing NATO. These original policy papers frame the critical issues both on and off the Summit agenda. Ronald D. Asmus and Richard C. Holbrooke wrote about Re-reinventing NATO, which provides an ambitious American view on the Alliance's future from two individuals deeply involved in NATO reform in the 1990s. Christoph Bertram, the former director of Germany's leading thinking tank SWP, writes about NATO's Only Future: the West Abroad. • Johns Hopkins professor Dan Hamilton just published the op-ed "NATO summit I: In area, or in trouble": If NATO is visible in expeditionary missions but invisible when it comes to protecting our societies, support for the alliance will wane. Its role will be marginalized and our security diminished. NATO's new mantra must be "in area or in trouble." Unfortunately, the topic is not even on the Riga agenda.• The International Herald Tribune has learned that Divisions between "Old" and "New" Europe are fading as NATO faces new challenges: Support for joint military operations with the United States no longer seems unconditional in Central and Eastern European countries. Slovakia, for example, deployed more than 100 non-combat troops in Iraq with an open mandate under a reformist, pro-U.S. government in 2003, only for the current populist Prime Minister Robert Fico to announce a pullout last summer, saying "we don't belong there." Hungary pulled out its 300 non-combat troops from Iraq in 2004, and Bulgaria withdrew a 450-member infantry battalion from the Mideast country in 2005, though it redeployed 120 non-combat soldiers in March.• Spiegel International writes about German Troops in Afghanistan: "One couldn't help but feel like a lousy comrade" • Time Magazine discusses many questions regarding Afghanistan and quotes Christoph Bertram, the "dean of German security experts," as saying that the NATO summit in Riga will be "like a Christmas service for agnostics, who for most of the year do not pray together or sing from the same hymnbook." Time writes about the pressure on Germany: Germany, the third biggest troop contributor to ISAF, has been the focus of the caveat debate because its 2,900 troops are restricted to the more secure regions of Kabul and the north. Karsten Voigt, coordinator for U.S.-German relations in the Foreign Ministry, says he is under constant pressure to do more in Afghanistan: in Washington last month, he says, one interlocutor told him that "Germans have to learn how to kill."Re the crucial question "Is NATO fighting the right way in Afghanistan?": Many are beginning to wonder. NATO says its two-week offense in September, Operation Medusa, drove insurgents out of the Taliban strongholds of Panjwai and Zhari districts in Kandahar province. Daan Everts, NATO's senior civilian representative in Afghanistan, calls it a "critical turning point." But that operation also killed at least a dozen civilians. "If NATO cannot bring our people security and a peaceful life, then it has failed," says Noorolhaq Olomi, an M.P. from Kandahar and chairman of the parliament's defense committee. "There is no reconstruction, just destruction." Despite efforts to help reconstruction work around the country, a military force like NATO doesn't have the resources or expertise to make Afghanistan's huge deficits -- poverty, pervasive corruption, poor education, a thriving drug trade -- quickly disappear.The German media has written a lot about NATO's pressure on Germany and the charges about a lack of solidarity. It is my impression that by and large the German press takes these charges seriously and admits that NATO partners are right to criticize the caveats and an unfair burden-sharing in terms of fighting and casualties. Though, moving German troops from the North to the South is not seen as the solution to NATO's problems in the South. There is also criticism of the counter-insurgency operations in the South. I think Germans will not support sending troops to South Afghanistan, especially if nobody convinces them that NATO's existing strategy for the South can indeed stabilize the country rather than continue to alienate the Afghans. Chancellor Merkel and Defense Minister Jung are expected to focus their speeches at the NATO summit on proposing a new connected security strategy with more reconstruction efforts. (More later) Also see the Atlantic Review's posts about two Germans arguing in favor and against sending German troops to Southern Afghanistan and about having pursued the Afghanistan Intervention on the Cheap. Welcome! You are reading the ATLANTIC REVIEW -- a Press Digest on Transatlantic Relations combined with commentary and analysis by three young professionals from Germany, the Netherlands and the United States. More about us. The horizontal menu bar at the top helps to navigate this site. 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mbast
- #1 - 2006-11-28 19:12 - (Reply)
"There is no reconstruction, just destruction." Despite efforts to help reconstruction work around the country, a military force like NATO doesn't have the resources or expertise to make Afghanistan's huge deficits -- poverty, pervasive corruption, poor education, a thriving drug trade -- quickly disappear."
JW-Atlantic Review
- #1.1 - 2006-11-28 19:41 - (Reply)
I agree with all points.
mbast
- #1.1.1 - 2006-11-28 20:06 - (Reply)
"Germany serves as the convenient scapegoat to blame for all the problems in Afghanistan."
Don S
- #1.1.1.1 - 2006-11-29 01:56 - (Reply)
"Yup. That's the whole point of this "Germans are all cowards" argument"
mbast
- #1.1.1.1.1 - 2006-11-29 21:01 - (Reply)
@don.
Don S
- #1.1.1.1.1.1 - 2006-11-29 23:45 - (Reply)
The Danish comments on the 'German model' for PRT deployment were - interesting. That might be diplomatically described as 'prudent'.
Don S
- #1.1.1.2 - 2006-11-29 02:01 - (Reply)
Oops! Here is the rest of my reply!
Don S
- #1.1.2 - 2006-11-29 01:39 - (Reply)
Ummm, Joerg? Have you looked at any maps of the area recently, with attention to the routes into Afghanistan? Let me enumerate:
ADMIN
- #2 - 2006-11-28 19:16 - (Reply)
Please also see the interesting debate in the comments section of the previous post concerning "Should Germany Send Troops to Southern Afghanistan?"
ADMIN
- #2.1.1 - 2006-11-28 19:44 - (Reply)
This is the right thread. You quoted this new post.
Yank
- #3 - 2006-11-28 22:08 - (Reply)
"For some reason the Heritage Foundation considers it fit to publish his article, although it includes phrases (like "moral cowardice" to describe European countries) that are usually only seen on right-wing blogs."
JW-Atlantic Review
- #3.1 - 2006-11-28 22:28 - (Reply)
Moral cowardice by any other name is moral cowardice.
Zyme
- #3.2 - 2006-11-28 22:34 - (Reply)
"So, within a few years there will be a great big sucking sound heard round the world as America turns its back on Europe ... and Germany, France, and Russia scramble to fill the power vacume. Then they can start throwing their weight around again."
mbast
- #3.3 - 2006-11-28 23:02 - (Reply)
"This discussion is pointless, in a way."
Yank
- #3.3.1 - 2006-11-29 03:10 - (Reply)
What a vivid imagination you have. You can psychobabble anything out of anything. Your reply is completely off the wall, not addressing head-on anything I said - just flying off at obtuse angles. It is all beside the point.
mbast
- #3.3.1.1 - 2006-11-29 20:22 - (Reply)
"Your reply is completely off the wall, not addressing head-on anything I said"
Isolationist
- #4 - 2006-11-28 23:32 - (Reply)
In a few years...loud sucking sound...US will turn its back on Europe...etc.
Zyme
- #4.1 - 2006-11-29 00:19 - (Reply)
Oh yeah, you will have to leave very soon. I don´t know this Styne-Guy - but have you heard of the secret pact we signed which binds every german to die until 2050, to make sure our islamist brothers can peacefully gain new territory to praise Allah? There are many preparations to be made for our own extinction though - and the last thing we need is a bunch of americans distracting us constantly. Please go home and enjoy the fruits your most glorious nation :D
Don S
- #4.1.1 - 2006-11-29 01:46 - (Reply)
What 'styne' (sic) guy, Zyme? Do you mean the Canadian Mark Steyn perchance? ;)
Isolationist
- #5 - 2006-11-29 05:21 - (Reply)
Dom S,
Zyme
- #6 - 2006-11-29 11:17 - (Reply)
"John Hawkins: Now, here's an even more relevant question: is there any plausible way you can see to get them [europeans] breeding again?
Bill
- #7 - 2006-11-29 14:58 - (Reply)
Good roundup of news coverage about the NATO Summit Jörg. Thanks. Saves me lot's of time. Boy, the words "coward" and "cowardice" really gets some of your readers riled up. Wonder why? Everybody experiences cowardice at least once in their lives and some people deal with it everyday.
mbast
- #7.1 - 2006-11-29 22:04 - (Reply)
"Boy, the words "coward" and "cowardice" really gets some of your readers riled up. Wonder why?"
Don S
- #7.1.1 - 2006-12-01 23:25 - (Reply)
Mbast, I am uncomfortable with painting an entire nation as 'cowrds' or describing my nation as sonsisting completely of courageous people - when clearly we have our share of cowards as well. But....
Anonymous
- #8 - 2006-11-30 01:46 - (Reply)
Praised by Bush and Blair last week, but now:
joe
- #9 - 2006-11-30 15:37 - (Reply)
The comments made have been interesting as they provide wide ranging perspectives and perceptions.
Bill
- #9.1 - 2006-11-30 17:14 - (Reply)
I'm with you Joe. Let's cut the name-calling BS and get down to business. I believe that Dr. Nile Gardiner raised some good points in his article "Time for Backbone in the Alliance". Some of what Gardiner points out overlaps with questions Joe has raised. For example in the paragraph titled "Afghanistan: A Test Case for NATO" he writes:
mbast
- #9.1.1 - 2006-11-30 20:18 - (Reply)
"Let's cut the name-calling BS and get down to business."
Bill
- #9.1.1.1 - 2006-12-01 14:48 - (Reply)
Good to see that you have a sense of humour mbast. Re: your statement:
mbast
- #9.1.1.1.1 - 2006-12-11 23:08 - (Reply)
@Bill: sorry for the late reply. Real life intrudes from time to time ;-).
Bill
- #9.1.1.1.1.1 - 2006-12-12 17:16 - (Reply)
Mbast, it is apparent to me that you have not read the EUFOR-RDC Mission Statement or the UN Resolution 1671 that is the legal basis for the mission. Therefore, go over to the EUFOR RDC website and educate yourself. Start with the mission backgrounder, it's only four pages long.
mbast
- #9.1.1.1.1.1.1 - 2006-12-12 21:39 - (Reply)
"Mbast, it is apparent to me that you have not read the EUFOR-RDC Mission Statement or the UN Resolution 1671 that is the legal basis for the mission. Therefore, go over to the EUFOR RDC website and educate yourself. Start with the mission backgrounder, it's only four pages long."
JW-Atlantic Review
- #9.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 - 2006-12-13 03:02 - (Reply)
@ Bill
mbast
- #10.1 - 2006-12-12 21:55 - (Reply)
"So NATO is not the topic."
JW-Atlantic Review
- #11 - 2006-12-03 18:27 - (Reply)
@ Bill
ADMIN
- #12 - 2006-12-13 03:05 - (Reply)
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