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Don't Count on NATO in Iraq
Richard L. Russell
The American military is strained by its current
commitments to Iraq and is ill-positioned to
significantly increase its force presence there,
especially for prolonged deployments. That predicament
leads some observers in the U.S. to clamor for
substantial NATO participation to fill in a perceived
“troop shortage” on the ground in Iraq. President Bush
called for NATO involvement in Iraq recently at the G-8
Summit at Sea Island,
and NATO, at its
Istanbul
summit, agreed to help train Iraqi security forces.
There is much to be said for leveraging NATO to broaden
and deepen multinational representation in Iraq to lend
international political legitimacy to efforts to
stabilize and rebuild the worn torn country.
Unfortunately, a major infusion of NATO troops into Iraq
is a pipedream and expectations that NATO allies would
be willing or able to shoulder major counterinsurgency
responsibilities need to be dampened. NATO allies
willing to run combat risks have already sent to Iraq
what little they have to send. The British are fully
committed to Iraq and have even taxed their force
structure to a greater extent than the Americans. Some
NATO allies have made token military gestures such as
the Dutch, Danes, Italians and Poles, but these and
other NATO countries do not have much in the way of
military forces to tap for Iraq. At least these NATO
allies have shown the resolve to stay in the coalition
in contrast to the Spaniards, who are perceived to have
“cut and run” with the withdrawal of their contingent to
Iraq in the aftermath of the al Qaeda-sponsored attacks
in Madrid.
The major NATO allies that do have large force
structures to potentially draw upon are unlikely to send
any to Iraq in the future. France is second only to the
British in force projection capabilities among European
members of NATO, but it strains the imagination to think
that President Chirac would send a division-sized force,
the likes of which Paris committed to the 1991 Gulf
war. Chirac would be hard pressed to politically
justify any French combat casualties in light of the
anti-American sentiment he has assiduously stoked in
France for the past two years. German Chancellor
Schroeder too has nurtured anti-American sentiment over
Iraq and even managed to ride it to re-election. The
Bundeswehr, moreover, remains entrenched in a Cold War
territorial defense posture and has no significant force
projection capabilities beyond the token German
deployments to Afghanistan that Berlin has undertaken in
a feeble attempt to patch tattered relations with the
United States. Although Ankara has a large standing
military, a large Turkish deployment to
Iraq
would be too politically divisive for Iraqis, especially
the Kurds, who would fear a Turkish geopolitical land
grab for Iraqi territory.
NATO’s European members have in the past enjoyed the
luxury of turning to the United States, particularly in
the Balkans throughout the 1990s, to shore-up their
major security interests and their military capabilities
deficits. Alas, the Americans have no such luxury to
look to European NATO allies to help Washington shore-up
vital security stakes in the Persian Gulf. The lack of
political and military reciprocity in the Alliance
leaves the United States alone to suffer the slings and
arrows and disparaging depictions as “hyper-power,” “hegemon,”
and “aggressive unilateral power” from fair weather
friends and foes alike. Regrettably, Washington and
London will have to bear the heaviest responsibilities
and burdens for constructing some semblance of stability
in the Persian Gulf to the benefit of Americans as well
as Europeans, the Gulf States themselves and the global
community writ large.
The stark reality is that no substantial infusions of
NATO military manpower to Iraq are in the offing. And
that reality would not be altered with a change in White
House occupancy from a Republican to a Democrat, despite
the political rhetoric bantered about in the United
States during this election year.
Richard L. Russell is
Research Associate at the Institute for the Study of
Diplomacy and teaches in the Security Studies Program at
Georgetown University.
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