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19 September 2010 By Rick Rozoff The current century’s only and history’s largest
military bloc will hold the latest of what have become
annual summits in Lisbon, Portugal this November 19
and 20. Heads of state, defense chiefs and chiefs of
general staff from the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization’s 28 full members will be in attendance,
as will be leaders from an unannounced number of the
military alliance’s forty some odd partner states. Starting last year a 12-member Group of Experts
headed by former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright and ex-president and chief executive officer
of Royal Dutch Shell Jeroen van der Veer toured Europe
and North America to promote NATO’s new Strategic
Concept, its first in the 21st century as the current
version was adopted in 1999, the year of the bloc’s
first expansion into Eastern Europe and its 78-day air
war against Yugoslavia, the first military assault
against a sovereign nation in Europe since World War
II. On May 17 of this year Albright and her cohorts
submitted their recommendations – a set of already
determined priorities for the expanding military
alliance – to the North Atlantic Council, NATO’s top
governing body, to be formally endorsed at the Lisbon
summit. [1] The new Strategic Concept will elaborate upon and
extend the policies of its predecessor and will
reflect the past decade’s transformation of an
erstwhile Cold War-era alliance into an increasingly
global warfighting machine. One which has grown in the
interim from 16 to 28 full members, the 12 new
inductees all in Eastern Europe, 10 of them former
members of the Warsaw Pact and three of those
ex-Soviet republics. When the 1999 Strategic Concept was approved NATO
was conducting its first full-blown war, Operation
Allied Force, a nearly three-month-long relentless
bombing campaign against Yugoslavia, followed by the
deployment of 50,000 troops under NATO command to the
Serbian province of Kosovo. Two years afterward the North Atlantic bloc
intervened in an armed conflict in Macedonia, itself
the offshoot of NATO’s war against Yugoslavia, with
the deployment of troops under the banner of Operation
Amber Fox. Since 2001 all Balkan nations, including ones that
did not exist as the time, have become NATO members or
partners. [2] In the same month, September, NATO activated its
Article 5 collective military assistance provision for
the first time in its then 52-year history the day
after the September 11 attacks in the United States,
although no state actor had been accused of
perpetrating them. In so doing it committed itself to
the following month’s invasion of Afghanistan and all
that has ensued. The war in Afghanistan will enter its tenth year
almost two months before this year’s NATO summit and
there are currently 150,000-strong foreign troops in
the war zone, 120,000 from 50 nations serving under
NATO’s International Security Assistance Force. The
Alliance also has bases in Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan and has conducted shelling and helicopter
and special forces raids inside Pakistan. After invoking its war clause on September 12,
2001, NATO launched the ongoing Operation Active
Endeavor naval surveillance and interdiction mission
throughout the entire Mediterranean Sea, which will
last as long as NATO itself does. NATO has also run troop airlift operations in
Africa, first in the Darfur region of western Sudan
and later in Somalia. Since 2008 it has conducted
naval surveillance, interdiction and boarding
operations off the Horn of Africa. The NATO Training Mission – Iraq continues to
instruct Iraqi officers and soldiers inside the
country and at NATO facilities in Europe. [3] What has occurred since and as a result of the
adoption of the last Strategic Concept at the 50th
anniversary summit in Washington, D.C. while the Czech
Republic, Hungary and Poland were welcomed as member
states and bombs and cruise missiles descended on
Yugoslavia, is a qualitative transformation of the
U.S.-dominated, European-based military alliance into
an international intervention and occupation force.
In 2003 the bloc launched its first rapid reaction
force, the NATO Response Force, described by NATO as
to consist of 25,000 troops “capable of performing
missions worldwide across the whole spectrum of
operations.” [4] Its initial test was in the Steadfast
Jaguar exercise in the African nation of Cape Verde in
2006 with 7,800 troops, U.S. F-16s, German armored
vehicles and Spanish helicopters. NATO’s first major
deployment on African soil. What has transpired in the interim is what Ivo
Daalder, now U.S. permanent representative
(ambassador) to NATO, advocated in a 2006 article in
Foreign Affairs appropriately titled “Global NATO”:
The Alliance has expanded into not only a
combat-capable and expeditionary organization but one
with members and partners far from its original area
of responsibility and one conducting operations around
the world. In the same year as Daalder’s article appeared Kurt
Volker, then Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for
European and Eurasian Affairs and two years later U.S.
ambassador to NATO, said in February and May,
respectively, that “NATO currently has partnership
relationships with 30 countries in Eurasia and another
22 countries in the broader Middle East, and it is
looking at other relationships” [5] and in 2005 had
been “engaged in eight simultaneous operations on four
continents with the help of 20 partners in Eurasia,
seven in the Mediterranean, four in the Persian Gulf,
and a handful of capable contributors on our
periphery.” [6] To bring matters up to date, this September 14 the
Pentagon’s website paraphrased Michele Flournoy,
undersecretary of defense for policy, as maintaining
that “NATO’s roadmap for a new world and its mission
in Afghanistan will be the main topics of discussion
when the alliance’s leaders gather in Lisbon….”
Describing NATO’s global objectives within the context
of the upcoming summit, she said in her own words:
“The first will be revitalizing the alliance for the
21st century and the second will be succeeding as an
alliance in Afghanistan….NATO has now had more than a
decade of experience in the requirements to do
expeditionary operations – to actually have your
command structure actually be able to deploy and
employ forces in real-world contingencies.” She also mentioned a third, critically important,
aspect of 21st century global NATO: Participating in
the belated realization of the Ronald Reagan
administration’s Strategic Defense Initiative,
so-called Star Wars. The same Defense Department
article quoted from above stated, “Missile defense is
another priority for NATO in Lisbon, Flournoy said,
and the United States hopes the alliance will embrace
missile defense as a mission.” [7] A day after returning from a meeting with President
Barack Obama in Washington, NATO Secretary General
Anders Fogh Rasmussen described to Britain’s Daily
Telegraph plans in which “an anti-ballistic missile
‘shield’ would be extended across Nato’s territory,
coordinated by a new command and control system that
would ‘knit together’ existing radar and other sensor
systems, with new SM-3 missiles based on land.” Rasmussen also asserted that he has “full American
backing for a proposed $200 million (£165 million)
defensive ‘shield’, which he hopes will be agreed in
November at a summit of members in Lisbon.” [8] Three days earlier he was cited claiming that “an
alliance-wide territorial missile defense system would
cost about €200 million ($245 million) over the next
10 years. “This is above the €800 million ($1.2 billion)
investment already required to field theater missile
defenses designed to protect deployed troops.” [9] That is, almost a billion and a half American
dollars for a layered, integrated interceptor missile
system expanding from theater to regional to
continental range and ultimately linking up with
Pentagon plans for a worldwide network even reaching
into space. The founding of NATO in the last century allowed
the U.S. to station nuclear weapons in Europe, where
hundreds of them remain, and in the new century NATO
will assist Washington in placing all of Europe under
an American missile shield, one that is being extended
into the South Caucasus and the Middle East. [10] NATO has also provided the Pentagon with the
mechanism for penetrating almost all of Europe,
gaining new bases and other military facilities in the
east of the continent – Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary,
Kosovo and Poland – and integrating the armed forces
of all but three countries – Russia, Belarus and
Cyprus – for interoperability for missions in Europe
and around the world. Perhaps not a day passes that U.S. military
personnel are not leading exercises in Europe, the
South Caucasus and Central Asia in some manner linked
with NATO, especially with its Partnership for Peace
program. This month alone U.S. European Command ran Combined
Endeavor 2010 at the Grafenwoehr Training Area in
Germany from September 2-16, “the world’s largest
military communications and information systems
exercise,” a purpose of which was to build
“interoperability between NATO and Partnership for
Peace (PfP) nations.” [11] Other nations participating
included Austria, Afghanistan, Armenia, Albania,
Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Bosnia, Britain, Canada,
Croatia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, France,
Finland, Germany, Georgia, Hungary, Italy, Iraq,
Ireland, Kazakhstan, Lithuania, Macedonia, Moldova,
Montenegro, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal,
Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Spain,
Serbia, Turkey and Ukraine. On September 13 the latest Northern Coasts military
exercise was begun in Finland, the first time in that
NATO partner state, with “50 warships and 4,000 naval
personnel from 13 countries including Finland,
Germany, France, Great Britain, the United States,
Sweden, Denmark and Norway” in what is “the largest
military exercise ever staged in Finland’s territorial
waters.” [12] Five days before over 300 U.S. and local troops
“kicked off a military exercise…dubbed Medical Central
and Eastern Europe Exercise 2010 (MEDCEUR 2010),” in
Montenegro – the world’s newest nation – a NATO
Partnership for Peace initiative and “the biggest
military exercise held in Montenegro so far.” [13] Last month Canada conducted the largest of regular
military exercises in the Arctic started in 2007 after
Russia renewed its territorial claims in the region.
Operation Nanook 2010 was not only the biggest such
exercise, but for the first time included military
forces from other nations: NATO allies the United
States and Denmark. [14] In early 2009 NATO held a two-day conference in
Iceland called Security Prospects in the High North
which was attended by its secretary general, its two
top military commanders and the chairman of its
Military Committee. [15] This week Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs
Lawrence Cannon [16] disclosed that Ottawa will
contest ownership of the main basis for Russia’s
Arctic claims, the Lomonosov Ridge. On September 15
President Dmitry Medvedev warned “The Russian
Federation is keeping a close eye on this activity
(NATO in the Arctic) because it (Arctic) is a zone of
peaceful and economic cooperation.” [17] The following day Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
met with his Canadian counterpart Cannon in Moscow and
said, “We do not see what benefit NATO can bring to
the Arctic…I do not think NATO would be acting
properly if it took upon itself the right to decide
who should solve problems in the Arctic.” [18] A Chinese analysis of a week before indicated why
the U.S. and NATO – with Canada the proxy and if need
be the sacrificial offering – are moving into the
Arctic Ocean. Author Wang Wei identified two of the
strategic purposes motivating NATO states’ drive into
the Arctic, the third being massive reserves of oil
and natural gas: “[T]he Arctic is important in the
military field. Currently, all global powers are
located in the northern hemisphere just a short
distance to the North Pole. This makes the region the
most strategic place to launch a ballistic missile.
The special landscape of the polar region makes it
easy to hide nuclear submarines. These factors combine
to pose a great challenge to the defense of countries
neighboring the Arctic.” Russian intercontinental ballistic missile-equipped
submarines operating under the Arctic polar ice cap
are that component of the country’s nuclear triad
least susceptible to a U.S. first strike, but in
recent years the U.S. and Britain have conducted joint
anti-submarine warfare maneuvers under the ice cap. “[T]he famous Northwest Passage, a sea route
connecting the Atlantic and Pacific oceans by the
Canadian Arctic Archipelago, will be fully navigable.
There will be no need for European vessels to detour
to the Panama Canal to reach Asia.” [19] It is not only at the top of the world that NATO’s
global ambitions are touching a raw nerve. On the same day that the Russian foreign minister
issued his statement, it was revealed that senior
Brazilian government aides were cited warning that
“Brazil is opposed to any NATO presence in the South
Atlantic or any attempt to forge links between the
north and the south of the oceanic region.” Defense Minister Nelson Jobim “made clear his
country would oppose any inroads by NATO or its
members,” and said that NATO’s intrusion into the
South Atlantic region would be “inappropriate.” [20] He was responding in part to comments by his
Portuguese counterpart, Defense Minister Augusto
Santos Silva, who demanded the new NATO Strategic
Concept address the South Atlantic region, stating it
“does not pay as much attention to the South Atlantic
as NATO should” and that he would raise the matter
with Secretary General Rasmussen. Santos Silva added that the South Atlantic is
“strategic” and that it should be included in NATO’s
“lines of fundamental action.” [21] He made specific
reference to his nation’s historical role in the area,
where it had possessed major colonies on both sides of
the South Atlantic: Brazil in the west and Angola,
Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, and Principe and Sao Tome
to the east. Over the past decade NATO founding member
Portugal has led joint military exercises with all the
above-mentioned nations as well as fellow former
colonies Mozambique and Timor-Leste. NATO’s drive to the east has taken it to China’s
borders and its plans for the south are just as
far-reaching. Moving into the South Atlantic permits
the military alliance to penetrate alike Latin America
and Africa, especially its oil-rich Gulf of Guinea,
and positions it for the impending battle for
Antarctica and its resources which will parallel that
over the Arctic. [22] The expansion of a Northern Hemispheric military
bloc to all compass points, from the South Atlantic
[23] to the North Pole, is a threat that should
concern the people of the world. On September 16 Pavel Zolotarev, deputy director of
the Institute for U.S. and Canadian Studies of the
Russian Academy of Sciences, retired major-general and
professor at the Academy of Military Sciences, wrote
that NATO’s new Strategic Concept “will give it
undivided global responsibility.” Driven by the
“desire by the US to use the military alliance as an
instrument of its foreign policy in the security
sphere, and American plans to replace the UN with
NATO,” [24] he continued, “NATO’s desire to operate in
the whole world first surfaced in the 90s of the 20th
century” when the “US-led aggression against
Yugoslavia showed that the global plan of NATO is to
dominate the world,” adding that the “invasions of
Iraq and Afghanistan are other concrete examples of
the plan.” [25] Zolotarev’s comments are truly the last word on the
subject. 1) 21st Century Strategy: Militarized Europe,
Globalized NATO http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/../21st-century-strategy-militarized-europe-globalized-nato NATO: Global Military Bloc Finalizes 21st
Century Strategic Doctrine http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/../global-military-bloc-finalizes-21st-century-strategic-doctrine Thousand Deadly Threats: Third Millennium NATO,
Western Businesses Collude http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/../thousand-deadly-threats-third-millennium-nato-western-businesses-collude-on-new-global-doctrine 2) Full Circle: NATO Completes Takeover Of
Former Yugoslavia http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/../full-circle-nato-completes-takeover-of-former-yugoslavia Balkans Revisited: U.S., NATO Expand Military
Role In Southeastern Europe http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/../266 Adriatic Charter And The Balkans: Smaller
Nations, Larger NATO http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/../adriatic-charter-and-the-balkans-smaller-nations-larger-n 3) Iraq: NATO Assists In Building New Middle
East Proxy Army http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/../iraq-nato-assists-in-building-new-middle-east-proxy-army 4) North Atlantic Treaty Organization http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/topics_49755.htm 5) U.S. State Department, February 24, 2006 http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/../154 8) Daily Telegraph, September 11, 2010 http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/../nuclear-weapons-and-interceptor-missiles-twin-pillars-of-u-s-nato-military-strategy-in-europe Rasmussen In Poland: Expeditionary NATO, Missile
Shield And Nuclear Weapons http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/../rasmussen-in-poland-expeditionary-nato-missile-shield-nuclear-weapons NATO’s Sixty-Year Legacy: Threat Of Nuclear War
In Europe http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/../natos-sixty-year-legacy-threat-of-nuclear-war-in-europe 11) United States European Command, September 8,
2010 http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/../canada-opens-arctic-to-nato-plans-massive-weapons-buildup 15) NATO’s, Pentagon’s New Strategic
Battleground: The Arctic http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/../natos-pentagons-new-strategic-battleground-the-arctic 16) Loose Cannon And Nuclear Submarines: West
Prepares For Arctic Warfare http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/../loose-cannon-and-nuclear-submarines-west-prepares-for-arctic-warfare 17) Russian Information Agency Novosti,
September 15, 2010 http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/../scramble-for-world-resources-battle-for-antarctica 23) NATO Of The South: Chile, South Africa,
Australia, Antarctica http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/../nato-of-the-south-chile-south-africa-australia-antarctic 24) West Plots To Supplant United Nations With
Global NATO http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/../154 25) Voice of Russia, September 16, 2010 |