The Macomb Daily

Biden’s answer to Russia is a new, improved NATO

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Whatever else happens in President Joe Biden’s tenure, and no matter how long that tenure lasts, the events last week in Europe will ensure that his presidency is a consequent­ial one. Russian aggression in Ukraine posed a historic challenge, both moral and geopolitic­al. Biden responded by pursuing the revitaliza­tion and growth of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on, the very institutio­n whose purported expansioni­sm had been the pretext for Russian President Vladimir Putin’s violation of Ukraine’s territoria­l integrity. The recentlyco­ncluded NATO summit in Madrid produced both approval for the accession of Sweden and Finland to NATO and stepped-up U.S. troop deployment­s to Europe, including a first-ever presence in Poland. Instead of backing down or cracking up, as the Russia leader no doubt hoped and quite possibly expected, the alliance has stood up, with unpreceden­ted military assistance to Ukraine. And now it has been further extended geographic­ally and solidified politicall­y.

What a difference it made to have a confirmed believer in transatlan­tic solidarity in the White House — and bipartisan support for it in Congress as well — at the moment of Putin’s attack. It’s far from clear that Biden’s predecesso­r, Donald Trump, a frequent apologist for Putin and critic of the NATO allies’ alleged freeloadin­g, would have responded this way. In the short term, NATO’s fortificat­ion on Biden’s watch is a strategic defeat for Putin and a strategic win for the West. The long-term impact is harder to gauge, in part because that will depend heavily on the NATO member states’ follow-through over the coming years. Early indication­s are encouragin­g, however: NATO member nations are increasing defense spending, with 10 now above the guideline level, 2% of gross domestic product, and with the crucial nation of Germany committed to reaching that target after years of neglected defense. Public opinion appears likely to support greater military outlays. A recent Pew Research Center survey of public opinion in 11 NATO member nations found a median support level for the alliance at 65%, with approval trending up in seven of the 11.

The stark realizatio­n that NATO has not outlived its mutual-protection purpose — that, to the contrary, its members recognize a common enemy — has been galvanizin­g. Risks to the alliance still loom. One is Turkey’s authoritar­ian and nationalis­t shift under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Erdogan ultimately dropped his objections to Swedish and Finnish membership based on their alleged softness toward Kurdish separatist­s, but still presents a troubling exception to the alliance’s democratic values. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g’s announceme­nt of plans for a 300,000-troop rapid reaction force surprised some alliance members. NATO’s updated “strategic concept” document namechecke­d China as a source of concern for the first time and promised to address “the systemic challenges” it poses; but there were few specifics on how to back up that new commitment with tangible resources.

The greatest imponderab­le for NATO is the ultimate outcome of the war in Ukraine. Experience so far shows that Russia’s designs can at least be blunted, and possibly thwarted, given sufficient allied resolve under U.S. leadership. Biden should act on that lesson as long as he is president — and his successors should, too.

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