Baltimore Sun Sunday

Europe reassesses reliance on U.S.

EU has few options as Trump’s NATO attacks rattle allies

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WASHINGTON — Alarmed at President Donald Trump’s attacks on NATO and the trans-Atlantic relationsh­ip, European government­s are rethinking their reliance on the United States as a strategic ally against Russia, but they are unlikely to make regional security arrangemen­ts independen­t of Washington.

Trump has forced the reassessme­nt in recent days by calling the European Union a “foe,” expressing reservatio­ns about defending other NATO members, and blasting Germany and other allies — comments he said were aimed at strengthen­ing the U.S.-European alliance but that raised concerns across the continent.

“We can no longer fully rely on the White House,” Heiko Mass, Germany’s foreign minister, said last week, a position echoed by other senior European officials and diplomats. “The first clear consequenc­e can only be that we need to align ourselves even more closely in Europe.”

But European allies bewildered by Trump’s seeming hostility for NATO must confront a sobering reality: They have few good alternativ­es for protecting themselves against Russia or other potential adversarie­s.

“I think they have finally come to the conclusion that they have a president of the United States that they cannot count on,” said James Goldgeier, an American University professor and visiting fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. “But what can they really do?”

The dominant U.S. role in NATO was by design when the alliance was created in 1949 — to keep Washington engaged in defending Europe, where it had fought two major wars, to deter Russia by vowing to defend Europe with nuclear weapons if necessary, and to prevent Germany from reemerging as a military threat.

Intentiona­lly or not, experts say, Trump is underminin­g that design.

But his actions are not as severe as his rhetoric.

Trump signed an agreement at the July 12 NATO summit in Brussels, for example, that again condemned Russia’s seizure of Crimea and reiterated the alliance’s bedrock mutual defense provision, which says an “attack against one Ally will be regarded as an attack against us all.”

And despite widespread concerns in NATO that Trump would start to remove American troops, he has continued to send regular rotations of U.S. troops to Central Europe, where NATO is reinforcin­g its defenses.

Trump’s attacks have been “damaging, but, so far, it may not be long-lasting damage,” said Alexander Vershbow, who was NATO’s deputy secretaryg­eneral from 2012 to 2016 and is a former U.S. ambassador to Russia.

Trump deepened European anxieties when he complained recently on Fox News that the newest member of the alliance, Montenegro, could “get aggressive and congratula­tions, you’re in World War III.” Trump had signed off on Montenegro joining the alliance last year.

Latvia’s foreign minister, Edgars Rinkevics, fired back that the former Soviet states are the most at risk of Russian aggression.

Trump’s scenario under which the U.S. could be dragged involuntar­ily into a European war with Russia is far-fetched, not least because Montenegro is smaller than Connecticu­t and has fewer people than Washington, D.C.

Article 5 of the NATO treaty obligates member states to come to the defense of other members if they are attacked but allows each one to take “such action as it deems necessary.” The mutual defense provision has only been invoked once — when NATO joined the United States in Afghanista­n after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

But Trump’s questionin­g of whether he would honor Article 5 and assist member states has unnerved the alliance, fracturing its cohesion and its confidence, especially because Trump continues to offer fulsome praise for Russian President Vladimir Putin during and after their summit in Helsinki.

“No European officials I’ve talked to believes that Donald Trump would enforce Article 5,” said Derek Chollet, a former Pentagon and State Department official now with the German Marshall Fund, a think tank that studies trans-Atlantic relations. “The lack of trust is total, but they can’t say it out loud.”

To admit openly that the U.S. might not meet its NATO commitment­s could invite Putin to probe the alliance’s resolve by invading or seeking to destabiliz­e NATO members on Russia’s western border, analysts said.

“Putin has got to be thinking, ‘Do I test this alliance, because if I just test it a little bit maybe the whole thing breaks.’ ” Goldgeier said.

Moscow also may seek to test how Trump will respond if it steps up its destabiliz­ation of Ukraine, which is not in NATO, Vershbow said.

Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014 and has sent troops and supplies to aid separatist forces fighting in eastern Ukraine, killing over 10,000 Ukrainian soldiers and displacing over 1.6 million Ukrainians.

If Trump were to balk at continuing NATO’s effort to deter Moscow in Central Europe, the damage to the alliance could be substantia­l, experts say.

“Trump seems to be saying not only that Europe has got to defend itself, but that European nationalis­m is a good thing, which is exactly what NATO and the European Union were set up to avoid,” said Daniel Fried, a former U.S. ambassador to Poland who also served as assistant secretary of State for European and Eurasian affairs from 2005 to 2009.

The combined defense budgets of the 28 NATO members other than the U.S. is around $312 billion in 2018. That’s less than half the Pentagon budget but far exceeds the $51 billion that Russia said it is spending.

But other than the United States, Britain and France, most NATO members lack equipment and manpower to fight a sustained convention­al war without the U.S. at their side.

It would take a decade or longer for the EU to develop armed forces that could rival the U.S. military, assuming there was political will to create a standing European army. For now, there isn’t. Germany and other NATO members resent Trump’s public scolding for their failure to meet the alliance’s target of 2 percent percent of GDP on defense, Vershbow said, but some alliance members privately admit that redoubling their effort to comply with his demands is their only viable option.

“They don’t like it. They feel there is an element of blackmail involved, but they want to keep NATO functionin­g,” he said.

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