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Iraq war dominates NATO summit in Prague
By Peter Schwarz
21 November 2002
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The last NATO summit meeting in Washington in April 1999 took
place during the war against Yugoslavia. As the government heads
met in the American capital to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary
of the transatlantic alliance, NATO fighters were bombing Belgrade.
The summit which takes place November 21 and 22 in the Czech capital
of Prague is dominated by military preparations for an American-led
war against Iraq.
The White House has announced that it expects a resolution
from NATO supporting the UN mandate demanding the complete disarmament
of Iraqa mandate that is to serve as the pretext for war.
US President George W. Bush has declared that he will use the
NATO summit to seek support for likely military action against
Baghdad.
The significance of the current summit extends beyond this
issue, however. At stake is the future strategy of NATO, and,
indeed, its very existence. The new National Security Strategy,
recently announced by the Bush government, the so-called Bush
doctrine, sharply delimits the authority of international alliances
such as NATO. At the heart of the Bush strategy lies the presumption
that the US can and will undertake action against any country
that threatens or could potentially threaten US imperialist interests.
The terms of this strategy include the possibility of the US undertaking
preventive wars or even, with minimal justification, employing
nuclear weapons.
Within such a framework, NATO is reduced to the role of an
auxiliary force or military reserve called upon to support the
US whenever the latter considers it necessary. If the Bush government
gets its way, a war against Iraq will serve as a precedent and
model for the future shape of military alliances. According to
Bushs national security advisor, Condoleezza Rice, the Gulf
states are typical, or the most important example, of the
kind of threat that NATO will face in the future.
The Pentagon, in particular, has repeatedly made clear that
it will not allow itself to be bound by decisions made by an alliance
of 19 states, which will shortly be expanded with the addition
of seven additional members. The widely quoted remark by US Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld that the mission determines the
coalition, not the coalition the mission has been understood
in Europe as an open threat to NATO. In the words of one German
defence expert: Based on its own needs and requirements,
the US will decide who is to be its partner and will utilise NATO
as a service base for American-led military operations.
Should an alliance partner fail to live up to the expectations
of Washington, it risks being snubbed and cold-shouldered. The
German government is a case in point. Social Democratic (SPD)
Chancellor Gerhard Schröder came out against US plans for
a unilateral attack on Iraq during the recent German elections.
Although the SPD-Green coalition government has since sought to
adapt itself to Washingtons war policy, Bush continues to
flaunt his hostility to the re-elected regime in Berlin. The US
president has turned aside entreaties from Schröder for a
face-to-face meeting, and made it clear he has no plans for a
direct meeting with the German chancellor in Prague. Bush will
meet separately with the British prime minister and the presidents
of France, Turkey and Russia, but will encounter the German chancellor
only in the official sessions of the summit and a photo session
involving all the heads of state.
European reaction
For some time now the European Union has sought to counter
the American assertion of dominance by developing its own military
capacities independent of the US. Progress along these lines,
however, has been slow.
European nations are currently struggling to fulfil the strict
financial terms laid down in the Maastricht stability pact that
was agreed as the basis for European integration. The budget adjustments
necessary will inevitably involve large-scale attacks on European
welfare systems and will inevitably meet with resistance. Under
such circumstances, the raising of enormous sums of money for
rearmament has not been possible, and Europe has fallen increasingly
behind the US on the military front. At the same time, European
governments are divided amongst themselves as to how they should
face up to the US challenge.
European countries had already decided on the creation of a
60,000-strong European army of intervention, due to come into
effect next year. It is dependent, however, on the infrastructure
and material support of NATO, and such collaboration has been
blocked up to now by a Turkish veto. NATO member Turkey is demanding
the right to participate in any decisions regarding interventions
by the European force, a demand that has been categorically rejected
by European Union (EU) member Greece.
The EU force also faces competition from a US proposal for
a NATO Response Force (NRF). The creation of the NRF is on the
agenda and is slated to be decided upon at the Prague summit.
This multinational force is to comprise 21,000 soldiers. Its purpose
is to enable the alliance, for the first time, to send its own
forces anywhere in the world at short notice. The force is to
be equipped to operate and fight in a war zone on the basis of
its own logistics for a period of at least a month.
The technological, transport and logistical requirements of
this new force will demand enormous sums of money, which will
no longer be available for the EU alternative intervention force.
When Defense Secretary Rumsfeld first made the surprising proposal
for the construction of a new militia at the September NATO meeting
in Warsaw, it was widely seen as a move to torpedo Europes
plans for an independent force.
Against a background of considerable tension in European-American
relations, European government leaders did not dare to publicly
reject the US proposal. Instead they speak of the new force as
a means of applying pressure with regard to American foreign policy.
The German foreign minister, Joschka Fischer, greeted the US
initiative in a government statement, declaring the NATO Response
Force to be a constructive proposal. He then went
on to lay down conditions for the acceptance of the plan. These
included the provision that all interventions be decided upon
by the NATO council, that the establishment of the new force not
involve the creation of any parallel structures to those of an
independent European force, and, finally, that German participation
in interventions by such a force could only be made with the agreement
of the German parliament.
In practice, Fischers conditions mean an overlap in important
areas between the European-proposed and US-planned intervention
armies. Both could be activated only with European agreement,
and the EU force would have access to the NATO infrastructure.
As the military dominance of the US has become more and more
apparent, European governments have increasingly shifted to accommodate
themselves to Americas aggressive foreign policy. It is
anticipated there will be no resistance at the Prague meeting
to the plans for war against Iraq. Instead it is expected that
France will formally drop its demand for a second resolution by
the UN Security Council before military action supported by the
UN can proceed. French participation in a military assault is
regarded as entirely possible.
The German government, whose leaders, during the election campaign,
described a war against Iraq as adventurous and categorically
rejected any German participation, has since extended and expanded
its commitment to the US-led operation in Afghanistan. In so doing,
it is freeing up US troops for invention in Iraq. Additionally,
contrary to earlier claims, German tanks stationed in Kuwait will
remain in the country and, in the event of war, could be drawn
into action.
In his government statement on the NATO summit, Foreign Minister
Fischer did not make a single reference to the Iraq war. Instead
he waxed lyrical over the new role of NATO, which is no longer
to be merely a defence alliance, but will make a decisive
contribution to security and stability in the world. He
expressly declared his support for the Prague Capabilities
Commitment, which commits every NATO member to huge rearmament
efforts, with corresponding increases in state military budgets.
The shift by European governments towards American positions,
already apparent on the eve of the Prague summit, is motivated
by their fear of isolation and of being left empty-handed after
a war. Incapable of preventing a war, they want to have a share
of the booty.
In addition, they fear the implications of a possible break-up
of NATO. After the Second World War, the American presence in
Europe served to mitigate the inner-European conflicts that had
led to two world wars. Not only was NATO a military alliance against
the Soviet Union, it also prevented the emergence of new hegemonic
powers within Western Europe itself. NATOs collapse would
inevitably raise once more the question of the relationship of
forces within Europein particular, between Germany and France.
The recent convergence in relation to Iraq, however, will not
reduce the growing tensions between the United States and Europe.
In the last analysis, these arise from the intensifying rivalry
between the imperialist powers in their struggle for raw materials,
markets and geopolitical influence.
Eastern expansion
Another item on the agenda of the Prague summit is the admission
of seven new members from Eastern Europe.
In 1999, NATO first accepted three former members of the Eastern
bloc into its ranksPoland, Hungary and the Czech Republic.
Now four more Eastern European countries are to followRomania,
Bulgaria, Slovenia and Slovakiaas well as the three former
Soviet republicsLithuania, Estonia and Latvia. The seven
applicants are scheduled to receive an official invitation in
Prague and be fully integrated by May 2004.
Russia has abandoned its initial resistance to the acceptance
of former Soviet republics, a move that has been rewarded with
a strengthening of its position in the NATO-Russia Council, a
body representing NATO member states and Russia that was created
to discuss and decide on issues of mutual concern.
The Eastern expansion of NATO is another disputed issue between
Europe and the United States. The Europeans suspect some candidates
are playing the role of a Trojan horse for Washington.
Romania, as a case in point, is the only European country to
have signed an agreement with the United States granting immunity
to American citizens in relation to the International Court of
Justicea precedent which the EU has tried to prevent. In
contrast to other NATO members and candidates, Romania is neither
a member of the EU, nor among the 10 countries to be admitted
at the EU summit in Copenhagen next month. It is only scheduled
to join in 2007.
At the same time, Washington is applying enormous pressure
on Germany and other European powers to quickly admit NATO member
Turkey into the EU. On the eve of the NATO summit, Bush repeated
his call for Turkey to be accepted into the EU. Speaking on the
telephone to the Danish premier, Andres Forgh Rasmussen, the current
president of the EU Council, he praised the recent political reforms
in Turkey and said that the convergence of Turkey and the Western
world was of strategic significance.
Within the EU there is significant resistance to the admission
of Turkey, which is widely regarded as a close ally of Washington
capable of blocking any joint European foreign policy.
See Also:
Massive security crackdown at Prague
NATO summit
[20 November 2002]
US pressure provokes fissures in European
Union
[19 November 2002]
White House snubs German foreign minister
[6 November 2002]
Tensions flare between Washington
and Berlin
[30 September 2002]
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