|
Is Europe
with Us, Against Iraq?
No Spectators, Please.
Lt.
Col. Steve Williams (U.S. Army, Ret.)
As
east European celebrations subside after NATO's November
Prague summit, where the alliance agreed to grow from 19
to 26 members, Europe's inaction and failure to
modernize its forces contrast with U.S. efforts to
transform NATO to meet tomorrow's threats.
NATO's
formal decision-making process, requiring unanimity, was
a burden during the 1999 bombing campaign against
Yugoslavia. Target lists had to be approved by 19
alliance members, many of which had little understanding
of how to use military airpower, especially Poland, the
Czech Republic, and Hungary, which had joined NATO just
weeks before the campaign began.
As
a result of the unanimity requirement, NATO's collective
forces will only be as ready and willing as the
alliance's most hesitant member. With Germany leading
the opposition against an Iraq campaign, the alliance
will be absent when the campaign begins, just as it was
during the operations in Afghanistan and during the Gulf
War.
Europe
and NATO will be a key logistical base in an Operation
"Desert Storm II."
Coalition partners will include allies from
Europe, but a NATO or EU flag will not figure
prominently on battlefields in the Middle East.
Transatlantic ties are strong, despite Europe
bashing in the U.S. and official anti-American rhetoric
in Europe. As
forces gather to force Saddam out of power, do not
expect America to cast aside European interests, as was
arguably the case during the Suez crisis or Soviet
operations against Czechoslovakia and Hungary 40 years
ago. Nor
should one expect Europe to deny the United States
access to bases and airspace as it did during the 1986
Operation Diablo Canyon against Libya's Qaddafi.
Those attacks on Libya were, ironically, in part
a response to terrorist bombings in Berlin.
If Europe now, as individual states or with
vetoes within NATO, denies the United States access or
transit, it would be detrimental to the Euro-American
defense relationship.
Because
of post-Cold War NATO's inability to transform itself
into a war-fighting alliance with global reach, NATO
will be a bystander in wars outside Europe in the
future. NATO will remain Europe's pre-eminent security
institution, but, without a change in Europe's
priorities and its level of defense spending, the
alliance will basically serve as a provider of forces
for coalition operations led by the U.S.
Article
V, the collective security guarantee of the NATO Treaty,
was invoked for the first time after the attacks of
September 11, on the initiative of European allies. It
was a noble and appreciated gesture, but what did Europe
have to offer? Washington's desire to strike back --
first in Afghanistan and soon in Iraq -- could not be
delayed through diverting U.S. aircraft to pick up
European forces incapable of getting themselves to the
battlefield. Even Britain had to lease and borrow
airlift to get into the theater of operations in
Afghanistan.
When
NATO's Reaction Force of 20,000 troops becomes
operational in 2004, it will depend on the strategic
airlift and select capabilities of the United States,
which strongly backed the establishment of the force.
European hesitancy and lack of consensus in the heat of
battle will limit NATO operations to policing missions
within Europe and to peacekeeping on Europe's periphery,
with risks of decisive combat operations kept below
battalion level. The European Union's flirting with its
own defense institutions, such as the European Security
and Defense Policy (ESDP), is unlikely to overcome a
chronic lack of military capabilities and vetoes from EU
members such as Ireland.
At
the last NATO summit, in Washington in 1999, leaders
pledged to improve military capabilities and to prepare
for defending against weapons of mass destruction and
asymmetric threats. Similar pronouncements were made at
the Prague summit, and they will no doubt be on the
agenda at the next alliance summit in May 2004, when the
seven invitees will become formal members.
After
2004, NATO will have 60 percent more members than it had
during the Gulf War. It is difficult to envision a
larger alliance commanding fluid combat operations
without first revising its structure and focus.
There
is talk of NATO involvement in Afghanistan, which now
hosts a peacekeeping operation, but what about Iraq? Is
the alliance to be a spectator with regard to the next
large war that involves mostly Americans and some
Europeans? Against the backdrop of military actions
since the end of the Cold War, the alliance will not
have a commanding role to play. The U.S. cannot and will
not risk being defeated on the battlefields in Iraq and
elsewhere because of endless debates in Europe.
Since
the conclusion of Operation Desert Storm in 1991,
Saddam's game of cat and mouse with the West, caused
repeated and expensive military posturing by the U.S. in
the Gulf region, and facilitated an Iraqi accumulation
of weapons of mass destruction and support for
international terrorism. European policy toward Iraq has been one of appeasement, a
disastrous policy not unlike that of France and the UK
in the late 1930s toward Germany.
Apart
from NATO Secretary General Lord Robertson, leaders from
the UK, and select others such as Italian Prime Minister
Berlusconi, European leaders shy away from the use of
military power due to their overwhelming personal lack
of military experience and lack of nation capabilities.
Dutch forces watched as Serbian forces conducted
a massacre at Srebrenica in the Balkans.
European squabbling constantly delayed targeting
and military operations during Operation Allied Force's
ouster of Milosevic.
The Danes opted out of their foreign and security
leadership duties, during their presidency of the EU
last year. Greece's
presidency of the EU this year started with pronouncing
a list of priorities that omitted Iraq.
By contrast, President Bush's team, Defense
Secretary Rumsfeld, Secretary of State and retired
General Powell, Condoleezza Rice and Vice President
Cheney have unparalleled experience in providing for
global security and are backed by a battle-hardened
military.
The
United States went to Prague and elsewhere looking for
partners that would take on their share of global
responsibilities. Partnerships with the U.S. team
require hard commitments and results, not well crafted
meeting communiqués or empty promises.
Operational
requirements of the United States, NATO, and Europe will
have to be balanced with the interests of the alliance's
member states. In 1998, the revision of the alliance's
command structure favored the interests of individual
member countries. In this round of revisions, the
balance needs to be in favor of the collective interests
of NATO. A leaner and meaner command structure and its
ability to project power globally will help protect the
interests of both Europe and the United States. Europe
is not likely to agree, as this will not be a high
priority for many alliance members.
It
is ironic that it was a reluctant United States,
protected by vast oceans, which resisted desperate calls
by Churchill and others to join in the struggle against
the Axis powers. Since
World War II, the U.S. has provided protection for
Europe against invasion, against threats to free global
markets, and against threats to western access to oil.
For many Europeans, only their own Pearl Harbor
or September 11 will convince them of the need to stand
up to the likes of Saddam and Al-Qaeda.
If
NATO's future is to encompass a global role and if
Europe is to become a more equal partner for the U.S. in
policing the world, Europe must be a team player.
No more free rides and no spectators, please.
Steve
Williams is an Adjunct Fellow with the Western Policy
Center, a former U.S. Army Foreign Area Officer and
Combat Arms Officer, and currently the President of
NetVersant-MidAtlantic, a security and network company.
He was the Pentagon's expert on the eastern
Mediterranean and a policy advisor and operational
planner with the Office of the Secretary of Defense
(2000-2002) and Joint Chiefs of Staff (1998-2000).
This piece is expanded and adapted from a
commentary for the Western Policy Center (http://www.westernpolicy.org).
|