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Wednesday, 11 July 2018
Europeans brace for worst from Trump at stormy Nato summit
Donald Trump during a Nato summit in May 2017.
Photograph: Matt Dunham/AFP/Getty Images
European leaders heading for a Nato
summit in Brussels are not sure which Donald Trump they will have to
deal with – the one who could throw a few temper tantrums but leave the
transatlantic organisation intact, or the one who could provoke the
biggest crisis in Nato’s 69-year history.
They are nervously bracing themselves for the worst. The leaders are
ready for the US president to lecture them for failing to increase
defence spending, but the worry is that he may go further. He could
express his displeasure by cancelling US participation in one or more
Nato exercises or by delaying the deployment of more troops and
equipment to Europe.
He could, without any prior consultation with Nato allies, strike a deal with Vladimir Putin when he meets the Russian president in Helsinki next week.
But even those who are most fearful believe Nato, the most powerful
military coalition in the world, will survive. They argue that the next
few days could be stormy but the organisation is too important to fall
apart. The US military values Nato and would resist any move by Trump to
walk away. And even in the unlikely event that Trump wanted to take the
US out, it would not be that easy.
Douglas Lute, who served under Barack Obama as US ambassador to Nato
from 2013 to last year, played down the prospect of a US withdrawal.
“Most of the policy decisions taken by President Trump in the first
18 months of his administration have been executive decisions. That
means he holds, as the chief executive in our system, the power to do
that, literally with the stroke of a pen,” Lute said.
“Nato is different. Nato is a treaty obligation which was taken by
the nation of the United States. It was ratified by a two-thirds
majority, which is required by our constitution, by the senate of the
United States. And any structural change to that arrangement would have
to go through the same process. So this is not something where any
president – President Trump or any president – can simply sign America
away from a treaty obligation. That would require an act of Congress.”
During the election campaign Trump described Nato as “obsolete”, and a
constant refrain – repeated last week – is that the US is having to
contribute too great a share of funds for the 29-member coalition. He
argues that the US is basically subsidising European countries that
would rather spend more on welfare than defence.
The
US has been and continues to be the dominant force in Nato since the
organisation’s founding in 1949 – the biggest contributor by far in
terms of cash, personnel and equipment. Based on Nato figures for 2017,
the US spends 3.58% of GDP on defence.
European members are well behind, with only five meeting a Nato
target of 2% of GDP set at a summit in Wales in 2014. Greece spends
2.32%, the UK 2.14% and Estonia the same, Romania 2.02% and Poland
2.01%. France comes in at 1.79%, Germany 1.22%, Italy 1.13% and Spain
0.92%.
Looking at the figures as a share of GDP does not necessarily provide
an accurate picture of contributions to military capability, and it can
be hard to make a direct comparison. But the US is unquestionably the
biggest beast in Nato and the UK and France the major military forces in
Europe.
A European Nato diplomat said the best approach to Trump for
the Europeans was to try to show they are listening to his arguments
about increasing defence spending. “The aim is to pamper him more than
Putin does,” the diplomat said.
The Nato secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, will stress that two
more countries – thought to be Lithuania and Latvia – have reached the
2% target this year and others are increasing defence spending. A
further seven have promised to meet the 2% target in the next six or
seven years.
In April, Emmanuel Macron promised France would increase defence
spending by about a third to take it to the 2% target by 2025. Germany
will be a target for Trump’s derision, planning only a modest increase.
When
Trump described Nato as obsolete, it was an overstatement. But Nato
does need reform and to work out what its role in the world should be.
Founded as a counter to the Soviet Union, it has floundered since the
fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. It was slow to intervene in the Balkans
but did so eventually, culminating in the bombing of Serbia in 1999.
Four years later, Nato invoked for the first time article five –
which means an attack on one member will be met with a collective
response by all – on behalf of the US after the 9/11 attack. Nato
intervened for the first time outside Europe, taking command of the
international force in Afghanistan.
The Russian annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014 came almost as a
relief to Nato commanders, who mistakenly believed they were returning
to ground they were familiar with – the cold war, and a country with
nuclear and conventional forces. But Putin has repeatedly wrongfooted
them by engaging in hybrid warfare, an unexpected mix of deniable
operations, disinformation and cyber-attacks.
Nato has been slow to react but on the agenda for the summit are a
series of proposals for countering such hybrid warfare, such as beefing
up its cyber-offensive capabilities and propaganda machine. It will
continue to deploy battlegroups to the Baltic states. Although Nato has
largely pulled combat troops out of Afghanistan, it will extend funding
and troop deployment to the country – there are 16,000 there at present –
to help train Afghan forces. The summit will also agree a new training
mission to Iraq.
Nato
has continued to expand, with the Republic of North Macedonia set to
join. The Kremlin will not be relaxed about the prospect of Georgia, on
Russia’s southern flank, becoming a member. Nato, anxious to avoid
another flashpoint, is far from ready to agree to Georgian accession but
it will give the country an acknowledgement of the progress it is
making.
Trump could justify a move away from Nato as a strategic shift away
from Europe to the Pacific. The US administration, and most European
governments apart from those in the Baltic states and others bordering
Russia, view Russia as a declining power, incapable on an invasion
eastwards. The US sees China as a power on the rise, a potentially
formidable economic rival, with lots of potential flashpoints in the
South China Sea and elsewhere.
But Nato is still central to US military strategy, not only in Europe
but for its potential to intervene elsewhere around the world, as it
has in Afghanistan.
The Australian former prime minister John Howard, one of America’s
staunchest supporters during his premiership, shares that assessment. In
response to a Guardian question at the Policy Exchange thinktank in
London, Howard said: “Everyone can try and anticipate what President
Trump is going to do. I don’t think he is going to walk away from Nato. I
think that is a ludicrous proposition.”
A former Nato secretary general, George Robertson, agrees. He has
watched other US presidents – Bill Clinton and George W Bush – come into
power, like Trump, sceptical about Nato, only to eventually recognise
its value.
“You can have plenty of ad hoc coalitions, coalitions of the willing,
but nothing beats the permanent coalition that happens to be the Nato
alliance,” Lord Robertson said.
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