By Radhika Desai
July
18, 2023:
Information Clearing House
--- "Counterpunch"
--
The proxy war on Russia is the centre piece of
Biden’s foreign policy of uniting the world’s
‘democracies’ against ‘autocracies’,
particularly China and Russia. He boasts
repeatedly of uniting US allies, most in NATO,
as never before. Though the real unity is spotty
at best, until recently, the rhetoric seemed to
work. No longer. At its recent Vilnius Summit,
NATO’s disunity bubbled over, though not for the
reasons most discussed in the press. The real
reasons are rooted in developments that threaten
to unravel not only Biden’s strategy, but also
NATO.
Discordant strains
were amply discussed in the run up to the
summit. Members could not decide on any
successor for Jens Stoltenberg. While the
leaders of Australia, Japan, New Zealand, and
South Korea attended the summit for the second
year, and while the final communique reiterated
NATO’s concerns about ‘the systemic challenges
posed by the PRC to Euro-Atlantic security’ and
its commitment to ‘boosting … shared awareness,
enhancing … resilience and preparedness, and
protecting against the PRC’s coercive tactics
and efforts to divide the Alliance’, President
Macron led (a not inconsiderable) opposition to
establishing a permanent NATO presence in the
East Asian region with an office in Tokyo.
Though Finish membership was approved, President
Erdoğan opposed Sweden’s membership until Biden
offered him not only F-16s but also an IMF loan
from aboard Air Force One.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
Most spectacularly,
while members once again promised to increase
defence expenditure and production, and while
the alliance made various commitments to
supporting Ukraine in its war with Russia, not
only did the clamour to induct Ukraine into NATO
fail, but NATO proved unwilling even to commit
to a timetable for entry. President Zelensky
called this ‘absurd’ and the US administration
called him ungrateful in return.
Though this serious
spat ended in Zelensky’s expressions of
gratitude, a sense of foreboding could not be
avoided. Atlanticist commentators still worried
about the prospect of a
disengagement between the US and Europe in
case of a Trump victory or disagreements over
China. However, even these worries do suspect
how close such a disengagement is today or the
reason for it: that Biden is about to lose his
military wager in Ukraine. That is bound to end
Biden’s project of uniting US allies, the
closest thing there has been to a Biden
Doctrine.
Always a
work-in-progress, NATO unity has got more
difficult as US power has declined. In recent
decades, its chief glue has been US military
power. If it too ceases to bind – as is clear
from the string of military failures culminating
in the humiliating exit from Afghanistan – then
the self-sacrifice Biden has demanded, and some
extent received, from the Europeans on Ukraine –
is the dime on which the future of US leadership
over what remains of its allies and of its chief
instrument, NATO, will turn.
The Weak Ties
that Bind NATO
Understanding such
imminent fundamental change requires a return to
fundamentals beneath the appearance of NATO
unity.
The much-vaunted
Article 5 may state, famously, that ‘an armed
attack against one … shall be considered an
attack against … all’. However, if you think
this obliges all members to rush to the defence
of attacked members with all they’ve got, think
again. The article specifies further that each
ally will ‘will assist … by taking forthwith …
such action as it deems necessary
[emphasis added]’. So, allied solidarity turns
out to be a moveable feast, meaning only what
each member country ‘deems necessary’.
On the matter of the
US commitment to Europe, which NATO is held to
powerfully instantiate, even the early Cold War
commitment to defend Western Europe against the
big bad Soviet Union, amounted, practically, to
schemes that were ‘always
far-fetched and recognised as such’.
If you are shocked,
consider this: the US ‘aided’ Europe during the
two World Wars on a more or less commercial
basis, vastly increasing its economic and
financial clout at the expense of ‘allies’.
Ruinously for them, it
demanded repayment of its war loans after
the First World War and, equally ruinously,
demanded
policy alignment after the Second.
Europe can thank its
stars that the critical aid and immense
sacrifices of Soviet and Chinese forces ensured
victory in the Second World War, and that the
alleged threat of an imminent Soviet attack on
Western Europe was little more than a figment of
the very hysterical US imagination that has kept
its military industrial complex is such fine
fettle down the decades.
What the US
Wants from NATO
Some argue that NATO
was primarily directed against the ‘enemy
at home’, left and popular forces and NATO
certainly sports a disingenuous record of this.
However, it leaves out the international
dimension.
Long and hard as US
leaders wished to dominate a capitalist world,
history unfortunately gave them the opportunity
to attempt it just when such domination had
become impossible: with the rise of Germany, the
US itself and Japan, the capitalist world had
already become multipolar by the early twentieth
century.
No single power could dominate it. Worse,
the Russian Revolution, soon followed by the
Chinese, took vast swaths of the world out of
the capitalist world entirely.
Undaunted, the US
persisted, using NATO in attempts to dominate
Europe. In the apocryphal words of its first
Secretary General, Lord Ismay, it aimed ‘to keep
the Americans in, the Germans down and the
Russians out’ of Europe.
During the Cold War,
the US was reasonably successful, though not
without considerable European stroppiness: the
Europeans demanded gold over dollars throughout
the 1960s, eventually forcing the US to break
the dollar-gold link in 197; De Gaulle removed
France from NATO’s integrated command in 1966;
and Brandt engaged in his Ostpolitik of
better relations with the Eastern Bloc. Though
many think inter-imperialist rivalry died after
the Second World War, it seems to live on such
European behaviour.
The Cold War ended
neither in unipolarity not in any ‘peace
dividend’. US economic decline became visible
soon thereafter and the US sought to compensate
for economic decline with military aggression.
In the circumstances, Europe proved increasingly
open to creating autonomous security structures
which, inevitably, involved improved economic
and security relations with Russia.
With its aims
unchanged even as its capacities declined, the
US had to thwart such European impulses. It
succeeded with its military intervention in
Yugoslavia, chiefly by demonstrating the
effectiveness of its superior air power and this
success ensured that henceforth eastward EU
expansion would normally be accompanied by NATO
expansion. However, this was no stable
arrangement.
Why the US can’t
get it
No mere ‘realist’
assertion, the European impulse towards autonomy
stemmed from historical differences between the
continental European and the Anglo-American
economies, the one productively rather than
financially oriented the other financially and
commercially rather than productive orientated.
Four decades of neoliberalism found the latter
productively emaciated and more reliant on
predatory and speculative finance than ever.
These differences
had already made NATO unity hard to contrive and
US economic decline only made it more so. As it
lost economic attractiveness for Europe (while,
moreover, China and Russia gained it), as the US
relied on military projection only to fail more
and more spectacularly, European impulses
towards autonomy were re-surfacing, with
President Macron calling NATO brain dead at the
alliance’s 2019 summit.
This was the context
in which Biden wagered on winning the proxy war
in Ukraine as a prelude to then waging one on
China. Knowing that Europe, already reluctant to
go to war with Russia, would be even more
reluctant (for sound economic reasons) to join
any anti-Chinese venture, Biden sought so
resolutely and completely sunder Europe from
Russia and bind it to the US through the Ukraine
war that it would have no choice but to go along
with the US on China later.
However, this
enterprise got off to an unpromising start and
is now unravelling.
Marshalling unity
even against Russia was hard, involving as it
did inflicting a great deal of economic pain on
Europe. Even with the Biden Administration’s
historical luck of having astonishingly
compliant leaderships in so many capitals,
pre-eminently Berlin, NATO unity over Ukraine
conflict has been more a show than a reality,
with a minimum of real and maximum of show
compliance. Sanctions have generally been
confined those that hurt the least, leaving
so many western companies still operating in
Russia one wonders what the fuss is all
about. Weapons supplies have focused on those
that are easiest to spare, often obsolete,
leaving Ukraine with a ‘Big
Zoo of NATO equipment’ that is hard to
deploy or repair efficiently.
Why Defeat in
Ukraine will Unravel NATO, and Biden
Both prongs of
Biden’s strategy – sanctions and military action
by proxy – were, it is now clear, delusional.
The first, famously expecting to reduce the
ruble to rubble and to push the Russian economy
‘back to the stone age’, had become a manifest
failure by the end of 2022 if not earlier. As
for the second, despite the billions in military
assistance, despite exhausting Western weapons
stockpiles, despite discovering the
quantitative and
qualitative limits to Western weapons
production capacities despite astronomically
expensive military industrial complexes, despite
ever more deadly weapons now including cluster
bombs, despite reliance on neo-Nazi battalions,
despite US and Ukrainian willingness to incur
macabre levels of Ukrainian and mercenary
casualties, it has been clear for some time that
Ukraine is losing and has no prospect of
winning.
President Biden
acknowledged this in his turnaround on offering
Ukraine membership of NATO or even giving it a
timetable for the same and his new-found
insistence that not only should things not be
made easy for Ukraine to join, not only should
Ukraine demonstrate progress on requisite
reforms, but it should conclude a peace treaty
with Russia before it can join NATO, a point
repeated more than one by Jens Stoltenberg at
Vilnius.
This is the Biden
administration’s off-ramp from the Ukraine
conflict, one he also needs thanks to the
unpopularity of war at home amid an election
campaign about to do into full swing.
In the face of this
military defeat, patching up no other
differences in NATO will matter. The US has only
military might to offer allies. So, Biden’s
impending military failure in Ukraine is likely
to prove the effective undoing of NATO. If the
US cannot ensure military victory, its utility
to Europe can only be limited. And if Biden’s
has failed in this intermediate Russian stage,
it can hardly go onto its final, Chinese one.
Radhika Desai is Professor in the Department
of Political Studies and Director of the
Geopolitical Economy Research Group at the
University of Manitoba,
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