"[NATO�s goal is] to keep the Russians out, the Americans in, and the Germans down.� --Lord Ismay, first NATO
Secretary-General
�We should immediately call a meeting
of the North Atlantic Council to assess Georgia�s security and review measures
NATO can take to contribute to stabilizing this very dangerous situation.� --Sen.
John McCain, (August 8, 2008)
�If we would have preemptively worked
with Russia, with Georgia, making sure that NATO had the kind of ability and
the presence and the engagement, we could have perhaps avoided this� [The
invasion of S. Ossetia by Georgia and the subsequent Russian response]. --Tom
Daschle, former Senate Majority Leader and adviser to Sen. Barack Obama,
(August 17, 2008)
�Of all the enemies to public liberty,
war is perhaps the most to be dreaded because it comprises and develops the
germ of every other.� --James Madison (1751-1836), fourth American
President
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is a relic of the Cold War. It was
created on April 4, 1949, as a defensive alliance of Western Europe countries
plus Canada and the United States to protect the former countries from
encroachments by the Soviet Union.
But since 1991, the Soviet empire no longer exists and
Russia has been cooperating economically with Western European countries,
supplying them with gas and oil, and all types of commodities. This has
increased European economic interdependence and thus greatly reduced the need
for such a defensive military alliance above and beyond European countries� own
self-defense military systems.
But the U.S. government does not see things that way. It
would prefer keeping its role as Europe�s patronizing protector and as the
world�s sole superpower. NATO is a convenient tool to that effect. But maybe
the world should be worried about those who go around the planet with a can of
gasoline in one hand and a box of matches in the other, pretending to sell fire
insurance.
As of now, it is a fact that the U.S. government and the
American foreign affairs nomenklatura see NATO as an important tool of American
foreign policy of intervention around the world. Since many American
politicians do not anymore support de facto the United Nations as the supreme international organization
devoted to maintaining peace in the world, a U.S.-controlled NATO would seem to
be, in their eyes, a most attractive substitute to the United Nations for
providing a legal front for their otherwise illegal offensive military
undertakings around the world. They prefer to control totally a smaller
organization such as NATO, even though it has become a redundant institution,
than to have to make compromises at the U.N., where the U.S nevertheless has
one of the five vetoes on the Security Council.
That is the strong rationale behind the proposals to
reshape, reorient and enlarge NATO, in order to transform it into a flexible
tool of American foreign policy. This is another demonstration that redundant
institutions have a life of their own. Indeed, when the purpose for which they
have been initially established no longer exists, new purposes are invented to
keep them going.
Regarding NATO, the plan is to turn it into an aggrandized
offensive imperial U.S.-dominated political and military alliance against the rest
of the world. According to plan, NATO would be enlarged in the Central-Eastern
European region to include not only most of the former members of the Warsaw Pact (Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Bulgaria,
Romania, Albania and Hungary) and many of the former republics of the Soviet Union
(Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, Georgia and Ukraine), but also in Asia to include
Japan, Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, and possibly admit Israel in the
Middle East. Today the initially 12-member NATO has mushroomed into a 26-member
organization. In the future, if the U.S. has its way, NATO could be a 40-member
organization.
In the United States, both the Republicans and the Democrats
see the old NATO transformed into this new offensive military alliance as a
good (neocon) idea to promote American interests around the world, as well as
those of its close allies, such as Israel. It is not only an idea actively
promoted by the neocon Bush-Cheney administration, but also by the
neoconservative advisers to both 2008 American presidential candidates, Sen. John McCain and Sen. Barack Obama. Indeed, both 2008
presidential candidates are enthusiastic military interventionists, and this is
essentially because both rely on advisers originating from the same neocon camp.
For instance, the rush with which Bush-Cheney recklessly
promised NATO membership to the former Soviet republic of Georgia and American military
support and supply is a good example of how NATO is viewed in Washington, D.C.,
by both main American political parties. For one, Republican presidential
candidate John McCain envisages a new world order built around a neocon-inspired �League of Democracies� that would
de facto replace the United Nations and through which
the United States would rule the world. Secondly, Sen. Barack Obama�s position
is not that far from Sen. McCain�s foreign policy proposals. Indeed, Sen. Obama advocates the use of U.S. military
force and multilateral military interventions in regional crises, for �humanitarian purposes,�
even if by so doing, the United Nations must be bypassed. Therefore, if he ever
gains power, it is a safe bet that Sen. Obama would not have any qualms about
adopting Sen. McCain�s view of the world. For example, both presidential candidates
would probably support the removal of the no �first strike� clause from the
NATO convention. It can be taken for granted that with either politician in the
White House, the world would be a less lawful and a less safe place, and would
not be more advanced than it has become under the lawless Bush-Cheney
administration.
However, it is difficult to see how this new offensive role
for NATO would be in the interests of European countries or of Canada. Western
Europe in particular has everything to fear from a resurgence of the Cold War
with Russia, and possibly with China. The transformation of NATO from a North
Atlantic defensive military organization into a U.S.-led worldwide offensive
military organization is going to have profound international geopolitical
consequences around the world, but especially for Europe. Europe has a strong
economic attraction for Russia. Then why embark upon the aggressive Bush-Cheney
administration�s policy of encircling Russia militarily by expanding NATO right
up to Russia�s doorstep and by placing a missile shields right next to Russia?
Wouldn�t it be better for Europe to develop harmonious economic and political
relations with Russia? Why prepare for the next war?
And as for Canada, under the neocon minority Harper government, it has sadly become a de
facto American colony as far as foreign affairs are concerned, and this,
without any serious debate or referendum to that effect within Canada. The last
thing Canada needs is to go further on that mined road.
In conclusion, it would seem that the humanist idea of
having peace, free trade and international law as the foundations of the world
order is being cast aside in favor of a return to great power politics and
gunboat diplomacy. This is a 100-year setback.
It is a shame.
Rodrigue Tremblay lives in Montreal and can be reached at rodrigue.tremblay@yahoo.com. He is the author of the book ��The New American Empire.� His new book,
�The Code for Global Ethics,� will be published in 2008. Visit his blog site at thenewamericanempire.com/blog.