NATO’s Mission Impossible
By Finian Cunningham
February 18, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - NATO defense
ministers were this week reportedly trying
to thrash out a new, updated mission for the
military alliance. Less charitably, the
organization is desperately seeking to find
a purpose for its continuing existence.
The 30-nation military bloc has a
combined annual spend of over $1 trillion,
with the United States accounting for nearly
three-quarters of that budget, allocating
around $740 billion alone on its military.
The videoconference held this week
is the first time that the new Biden
administration has officially engaged with
NATO allies. Lloyd Austin, the US Secretary
of Defense,
addressed the forum to lay out President
Biden’s supposed priority of reinvigorating
relations with allies, which had become
frayed during the previous Trump
administration.
But the message sounds pretty much like the same
old Washington mantra: NATO members have to spend
more, more, more in order to counter the alleged
threats from Russia and China. It’s like listening
to a broken record or digital loop.
The only difference is one of style, not
substance. Whereas Trump was abrasive and acerbic in
telling NATO members to cough up, the Biden
administration is more polite in its rhetoric,
cooing about the importance of the “transatlantic
partnership” and promising to be more collegiate in
strategic decision-making.
Essentially, however,
it’s the same old
racket of America goading European nations to spend
more money to prop up the military-industrial
complex which is the life-support machine for
defunct capitalism. The Americans
need Europeans to keep buying their warplanes and
missile systems in order to keep US capitalism
functioning.
It’s quite a tough sell though, in this
global climate of economic hardships and immense,
burgeoning social challenges. How to justify
spending $1 trillion every year on non-productive
war machines?
Well, of course, the cheerleaders for NATO –
principally the Americans – have to reinvent enemies
like China and Russia in order to justify the
existence of such an extravagant militarized economy
which would otherwise be rightly seen as an insanely
detrimental drain on nations’ resources.No Advertising - No Government
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Nevertheless, the bogeyman charade has
increasingly serious conceptual shortcomings. First
and foremost it is not true: neither Russia nor
China are enemies seeking to destroy Western
nations. Secondly, the charade does not stand up to
logic. The total NATO military spend is about four
times the combined budgets of Russia and China. Yet
we are expected to believe that these two countries
are threatening a bloc of 30 nations despite the
former spending a fraction on military.
Another conceptual problem for NATO
salesmen is that the organization was born nearly
eight decades ago at the start of the Cold War.
Today’s world is vastly different, reflecting an
increasing multipolar integration of economies,
politics and communications.
Just this week, new trade figures show that
China has
overtaken the United States as the number one
trading partner with the European Union.
China, Russia and the trend of Eurasian
economic cooperation is the future of global
development.
And the Europeans – despite still occasional
deference to Washington – know that. At the end of
last year, the European Union
concluded a landmark investment accord with
China which came about in spite of Washington’s
objections.Indeed, the days are numbered for
America bullying and extorting its NATO allies
through peddling scary stories about foreign
enemies. The world can no longer afford such crass
wasting of resources amid so many other more
important social needs. It is becoming politically
impossible to continue selling the NATO racket.
The “evil
world” depicted by American conspiracists/politicians
does not correspond to the reality that most other
people can recognize. Yes, there are
diehard Cold War mindsets lurking in Europe, such as
NATO’s Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and the
Russophobic politicians of Poland and the Baltic
states. But they a flaky minority on the margins.
Common sense awareness among most citizens is
exposing NATO to be a relic of the past that has no
purpose in today’s world and with all its pressing
social needs. Germany and France, the most powerful
drivers of Europe’s economy, are less
enamored with Washington, even under a seemingly
more friendly Democrat president.
The Biden administration may sound slightly more
plausible and genial compared with its Trump
predecessor. But demanding others to spend more on
useless militarism and to antagonize vital trading
partners China and Russia is mission impossible for
the US-led NATO. The contradictions in NATO’s
cognitive dissonance with the real world are so
palpable it is no longer credible nor viable as an
organization.
Finian
Cunningham
has written extensively on international
affairs, with articles published in several
languages. He is a Master’s graduate in
Agricultural Chemistry and worked as a
scientific editor for the Royal Society of
Chemistry, Cambridge, England, before pursuing a
career in newspaper journalism. He is also a
musician and songwriter. For nearly 20 years, he
worked as an editor and writer in major news
media organisations, including The Mirror, Irish
Times and Independent. -
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