The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

NATO exists to ensure we don’t have to defend Montenegro

- Marc A. Thiessen Columnist

Fox News host Tucker Carlson recently asked President Trump, “Why should my son go to Montenegro to defend it from attack?” It is a fair question — one that many Americans were asking following Trump’s performanc­e at the NATO summit — and it deserved a better answer than the president’s musing on the “aggressive” nature of Montenegri­ns.

Instead, Trump should have recalled the words he spoke last year in Poland praising the heroes of the Warsaw Uprising, the 74th anniversar­y of which is being marked today. In one of the most powerful speeches of his presidency, Trump recalled the terrible price that millions paid for the West’s failure to deter Nazi and Soviet aggression. “Under a double occupation, the Polish people endured evils beyond descriptio­n,” Trump recalled: “the Katyn forest massacre, the occupation­s, the Holocaust, the Warsaw Ghetto and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the destructio­n of this beautiful capital city and the deaths of nearly 1 in 5 Polish people. A vibrant Jewish population — the largest in Europe — was reduced to almost nothing after the Nazis systematic­ally murdered millions of Poland’s Jewish citizens.”

The reason NATO was created out of the ashes of World War II was precisely to make certain such destructio­n never happens again. In 1938, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlai­n famously dismissed Germany’s threats to Czechoslov­akia, declaring that Britain should not get drawn into war “because of a quarrel in a far-away country between people of whom we know nothing.” The result was 50 million people dead, a continent in flames and the gas chambers of Auschwitz.

The lesson we learned from that experience is that weakness is provocativ­e. When adversarie­s believe you are weak, they are emboldened to act — and prone to miscalcula­te.

Trump believes in peace through strength. But to have peace requires not just military strength.

As Trump said in Warsaw, “Our defense is not just a commitment of money, it is a commitment of will.”

Why did Russian President Vladimir Putin believe he could invade Ukraine and annex Crimea without consequenc­e? It was no mere coincidenc­e that Russia’s interventi­on happened just six months after President Barack Obama failed to enforce his red line in Syria. Putin saw that Obama imposed no costs on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s defiance, unwilling to launch strikes that a U.S. official said would be “just muscular enough not to get mocked.”

There is a reason Putin despises the NATO alliance so much — and has fought to prevent further integratio­n of the countries of Eastern Europe into it.

He knows he may be able to bully his unallied neighbors, but he can’t bully a NATO ally — because that ally is backed up by 28 others, bonded by a mutual commitment to each other’s security and led by an American president who, while seeking friendship with all, is unafraid to flex U.S. military muscle.

That is why Putin opposed the admission of Montenegro into the NATO alliance, reportedly even backing a plot to assassinat­e Montenegro’s prime minister in an effort to stop it.

That is why Putin wants Trump to fail in his effort to get the NATO allies to meet their commitment­s and spend 2 percent of gross domestic product on defense. He understand­s that a weak NATO cannot deter him but a strong NATO can.

As Trump said in Warsaw, “As long as we know our history, we will know how to build our future. Americans know that a strong alliance of free, sovereign and independen­t nations is the best defense for our freedoms and for our interests.”

The whole point of NATO is not to defend Montenegro; it is to make sure we never have to defend Montenegro — or Warsaw, or Paris, or London again.

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