Manawatu Standard

Nato at 70 – a comfy but confused club

- Gwynne Dyer

When he took office in January 2017, United States President Donald Trump called the North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on ‘‘obsolete’’.

But he hates all multinatio­nal institutio­ns so that hardly counts.

Just last month, however, France’s President Emmanuel Macron said the Nato alliance was ‘‘strategica­lly braindead’’, which is closer to the truth.

Yet the leaders of the alliance’s 29 member countries are all in the United Kingdom this week to celebrate the 70th anniversar­y of Nato’s foundation.

Brain-dead or just deeply confused, it continues to stumble around and receives frequent transfusio­ns of cash. Why?

Macron was furious last month because nobody in Nato could satisfacto­rily answer his big question: ‘‘Who is the enemy?’’ The alleged Russian threat is still the glue that holds the alliance together, but Macron doesn’t believe in that. His answer is that the alliance’s real enemy is terrorism, but that is equally silly.

Terrorism is amajor nuisance, but not an existentia­l threat, and counterter­rorism is usually a secret ‘‘war’’ in which armies have little importance. The appropriat­e tools for combating it are generally intelligen­ce services and police forces, not armoured brigades.

Very rarely, as in the case of the recently defeated Islamic State, terrorists do control territory and can be fought openly. The recent behaviour of Turkey and the US in northeaste­rn Syria, however, shows the duplicity and cynicism with which those major Nato members now view the alliance.

Trump agreed to let Turkey’s leader, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, invade Syria and attack the Syrian Kurds, who have been close US allies for the past three years in the war against Isis. He also implicitly consented to let Erdogan’s forces ethnically cleanse the Syrian Kurds from their homes and settle severalmil­lion Syrian Arab refugees in them instead.

Neither Trump nor Erdogan consulted with their Nato partners about these potential war crimes. Indeed, Macron found out about it in a Trump tweet, which explains his fury.

But the other European members of Nato said little in public, because Erdogan was also threatenin­g to dump a couple of million Syrian refugees on them instead if they complained.

So what useful purpose, if any, does Nato serve 30 years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the enemy it was created to fight? Nato’s member states often try to revive the glory days by pretending the Soviet Union has been reincarnat­ed in Vladimir Putin’s Russian Federation, but that’s nonsense.

Russia has only half the population of the old Soviet Union and its economy is about the size of Italy’s. It has no Eastern European allies any more – they all joined Nato, or are still in the queue, after their Communist government­s fell in 1989.

Nato’s armed forces were twice as big as those of the Soviet bloc even in the Cold War, but they now outnumber Russia’s four to one. True, this advantage is somewhat diminished by the fact that

Nato’s military power is divided among 29 countries and that two of the more important members, the US and Canada, are on the far side of the Atlantic. But it is prepostero­us to plan on the basis that the Russian ‘‘hordes’’ are itching to invade western Europe. Indeed, it always was.

The former ‘‘satellite’’ countries of Eastern Europe are understand­ably anxious about the risk of another Russian takeover andnato offers them some reassuranc­e. The only European countries actually vulnerable to Russian military interventi­on, however, are former parts of the Soviet Union itself, such as Ukraine and Georgia, which is why Nato does not let them join.

The modest truth is that Nato is a familiar and comfortabl­e club that lets the European members demonstrat­e their commitment not to return to the devastatin­g wars of the past. It gives Canada a safer, broader context in which to discuss securityma­tters with its giant American neighbour. And it lets the US pretend that it still leads the free world.

The participan­ts are mostly old pals and for the most part theywill pass a couple of pleasant days together.

The alliance does not do much good, but it does no real harm either. Let it have its day out.

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