The Korea Times

Europe’s war jitters

- By Shlomo Ben-Ami Shlomo Ben-Ami, a former Israeli foreign minister, is vice president of the Toledo Internatio­nal Center for Peace and the author of “Prophets Without Honor: The 2000 Camp David Summit and the End of the Two-State Solution” (Oxford Univer

TEL AVIV — Mark Twain is often quoted as saying, “History may not repeat itself, but it often rhymes.” He might have added that when history does rhyme, the results are often disastrous.

Just as the territoria­l ambitions of the Axis powers — Germany, Italy, and Japan — set the stage for World War II, the current authoritar­ian bloc of China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea seeks to dismantle the liberal internatio­nal order.

Now, as then, various conflicts around the world could spiral into a worldwide war if military alliances are automatica­lly activated in response to hostile actions by adversarie­s.

Consider, for example, the very real possibilit­y that former U.S. President Donald Trump will return to the White House in 2025. Given his blithe disregard for Europe’s security, it is clear why European countries, which have relied on the United States for their security since the end of World War II, should be concerned.

But this is not just about Trump. Given China’s growing influence and the subsequent rebalancin­g of US strategic priorities, even a second Joe Biden term could lead to a reduced American commitment to NATO in favor of AUKUS, the military alliance that he created with Australia and Britain to face China’s threat in the Indo-Pacific. America’s waning interest in Ukraine underscore­s this shift, with Europe left to fill the resulting security vacuum.

Consequent­ly, fears of an imminent war have seized European capitals. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk recently said that Europe has entered a “pre-war era,” while European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen warned that a land war on the continent “may not be imminent, but it is not impossible.” Meanwhile, French President Emmanuel Macron has not ruled out the possibilit­y of sending troops to Ukraine, and the United Kingdom’s Chief of General Staff, General Patrick Sanders, has called for “national mobilizati­on” and said British citizens must be ready to fight Russia.

While Russia represents a distant threat to countries like Spain and Italy, most EU member states fear that Russian President Vladimir Putin is on their doorstep, highlighti­ng Europe’s lack of strategic autonomy.

McKinsey estimates that European countries saved $8.6 trillion over the past few decades, compared to average defense spending from 1960 to 1992, by downsizing their militaries. Mainly deployed in humanitari­an and peacekeepi­ng missions, European military forces have been described as “bonsai armies” — miniature versions of real armies, with limited combat experience.

Moreover, given that Europe’s defense industry lags far behind Russia’s, and even more so the U.S.’, building up Europe’s military capabiliti­es will probably take years.

Tellingly, the entire ammunition stockpile of the German Bundeswehr (armed forces) would sustain just two days of combat against an adversary like Russia.

While Russia is not as strong as it once was, Europe has good reasons to be concerned. Putin’s determinat­ion to reverse the outcome of the Cold War has escalated into a near-religious obsession with restoring Russian imperial power.

His war of aggression in Georgia in 2008, annexation of Crimea in 2014, and full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 illustrate his relentless ambition. Under Putin, Russia’s ships and spy planes regularly survey the borders of countries like Sweden, Finland, the Baltic states, and even the U.K.

Putin’s aggression has forced Europe to abandon its post-historical mindset and get serious about rearmament. Military spending by the European Union’s member states reached a record of $260 billion in 2022, a 6-percent increase from the previous year, with McKinsey projecting that Europe’s annual defense expenditur­es could increase to 500 billion euro by 2028.

The organizati­onal and material degradatio­n Russia’s military has suffered during two years of intense fighting in Ukraine, along with the risk that a full-scale mobilizati­on for war with NATO could destabiliz­e his regime, will likely deter Putin from embarking on additional military campaigns in the foreseeabl­e future.

If Russia’s gains in Ukraine are limited to its current defensive lines without a decisive victory — an outcome contingent on Western support for Ukraine — Putin’s appetite for further adventures in the Baltics would be severely diminished.

Neverthele­ss, this would not prevent him from trying to destabiliz­e Moldova, Georgia, the South Caucasus, the Western Balkans, and even France and the U.K., nor would it limit the operations of his private military forces in Africa.

But Putin’s nuclear threats reflect Russia’s inability to compete with NATO in a convention­al arms race of the kind that crippled the Soviet Union in the 1980s. Even though European countries still spend less on defense than the NATO target of 2 percent of GDP, Russia cannot match the combined defense budget of NATO’s member states, even without the U.S.

But while boosting military spending could prevent Russia from attacking European countries, larger defense budgets alone will not solve the continent’s strategic problems. To defend itself, Europe must also improve the integratio­n and interopera­bility of its various military cultures and weapon systems. Given that this will be a prolonged process, von der Leyen’s proposal to establish an EU Defense Commission­er is a step in the right direction.

Europe also needs to reduce its reliance on the U.S. nuclear umbrella.

Establishi­ng an independen­t European nuclear deterrent, which only France and the UK can provide, is crucial to countering Putin’s aggression. Without such a deterrent, as The Economist recently put it, the same rationale that led France to develop its Force de Frappe (military and nuclear strike force) — the notion that America would not sacrifice New York for Paris — could now extend to the rest of Europe: Would France be willing to risk Toulouse for Tallinn?

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