Friends,
It is privilege to be joining and learning from you here in Sarajevo. I especially want to thank Reiner Braun of IALANA and IPB and the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung for this opportunity.
As I thought about our marking the murderous hinge moment in Western and world history that began here in Sarajevo 100 years ago, a more recent image came to mind: the cellist of sniperās alley. At enormous personal risk, he affirmed what had been known as āthe spirit of Sarajevoā: beauty and that which is most noble in the human spirit. His simple act illuminated the madness and held forth the vision and hope of civilization. My hope is that our Peace Event will be another step on this path, despite the obstacles on our way – among them NATO Secretary General Rasmussenās recent visit here to spur the pace of Bosnia-HerzegovinaāsĀ formally joining NATO. Having failed to learn the lessons of Georgia and Ukraine, Cold War ideologies are being reasserting when we should be pursuing Common Security diplomacy, which provided the paradigm for bringing humanity back from the brink of extinction.
Two other images also came to mind. First was Walter McCleneghan, an older Methodist minister with his white hair, Veterans for Peace cap, and sober demeanor as he stood with us 40 years ago in the scorching Phoenix, Arizona sun to protest the Vietnam War. Rev. McCleneghan had been gassed and was permanently disabled in the trenches of World War I, which explained why he joined us. Second was a statue I saw and which cut me to the quick when I first came to Europe in 1973 and which must still stand in St. Louis France. It depicts a grieving mother cradling her child. The inscription initially read: Les victims enfants de grande guerre.Ā In the early 1970s, additional sās shone more brightly than the other letters, intimating the Second World Warās murder and suffering. Humanity has yet to learn the most fundamental lessons of these wars.
NATOās REPURPOSED AND SERIOUSLY DIVIDED
With the collapse of the Soviet Union, NATO lost its raison dāetre. Rather than move peacefully into a Common Security future, those whose privilege and power had been reinforced by the military Alliance repurposed it.Ā With the specter of international communism reduced to memory, NATO was used to expand what the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations once called the āGrand Area,ā the United Statesā global sphere of influence.
Taking advantage of Moscowās economic, political and social weaknesses, through aggressive diplomacy and war NATO reached Russiaās borders, and the 9-11 Al Qaeda attacks in the U.S. were exploited to cement NATO as a global military alliance. Its āout of area operationsā doctrine underwrote the Afghanistan and Iraq wars and other interventions.
Today, as we hopefully move into the denouement of the Ukraine crisis and with appropriate trepidation approach Septemberās NATO Summit, a ābitter debateā is reportedly raging over the Allianceās future. At its core are questions about whether NATO must again prepare for āpossible Russian attacks,ā or if this crisis is āa mere blip in the Post-Cold War Order.ā The answer will determine if NATO ends the suspension of its multi-leveled cooperation with Russia āas favored by so-called āOld Europeā (Germany, France and Britain, whose economies are deeply entwined with Russia,) or if we have entered (or will spark) a new and non-ideological Cold War by making permanent and increasing NATO deployments in so-called āNew Europeā (Poland, the Baltics, and Rumania.[i]) The option of retiring NATO is not on the table.
My best guess is that NATO will opt for MORE, that even as Europe reels under the iron heel of austerity policies that fuel racist and xenophobic right-wing movements reminiscent of the 1930s, the summit in Wales will likely choose to reinforce NATOās military power across Europe and to increase spending for out of area operations. Once again NATO will be reaffirmed as a nuclear alliance, all of which will reinforce Russian reliance on its nuclear arsenal and spur proliferation.
THE UKRAINE CRISIS
Much will depend on perceptions of the Ukraine crisis.
Not unlike the Balkan States as the Ottoman Empire declined and later collapsed, and again after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Ukraine ā divided by religion, historical experiences and economic interests ā is caught midst powerful historical forces. President Putin may have a black belt in judo, but the U.S. is exploiting the Ukraine crisis by increasing its military deployments and reinforcing NATOās power and influence across Eastern Europe, the Baltics and Scandinavia. Meanwhile, seeking to compensate for the loss of the Soviet Empire, Putin has been working to revitalize a neo-Tsarist state, attempting to reassert Russian influence in its ānear abroad,ā and is now hitching its economy, military and political ties to Chinaās rising star.
Secretary of State Kerry provided us with a textbook example of Orwellian doublespeak when he decried Moscowās āincredible act of aggression,ā adding that āyou just donāt in the 21st century behave in 19th century fashion by invading another country on [a] completely trumped up pretext.ā[ii] Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya are down the memory hole!
Russia, with its campaign to bring Ukraine into a Eurasian Economic Community, its annexation of Crimea and its apparent support of separatists in eastern Ukraine was hardly alone in creating the Ukraine crisis. Ignorant or simply insensitive to the history of Western invasions of Russia and dismissive of the value of international agreements, over the past generation NATO marched east to Russiaās borders ā including the designation of Ukraine as a NATO āaspirantā country. The U.S. and NATO created precedents with their Kosovo and Iraq wars, which were launched in violation of the U.N. Charter. As in other Color Revolutions directed against similarly autocratic and kleptocratic elites, Washington and the E.U. poured billions of dollars into divided Ukraine to develop and nurture allied forces and to turn the former Soviet republic away from Moscow and toward the West. The E.U. dictated an ultimatum to the corrupt Yanukovych government: divided Ukraine could take the next steps toward E.U. membership only by burning its bridges to Moscow.Ā As tensionsĀ built in Kiev, CIA Director Brennan, Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland ā now famous for her āfuck the E.U.ā disrespect of European allies ā and right-wing U.S. Senator McCain all traveled to the Maidan to encourage the revolution. And, once the shooting began, the U.S. and the E.U. failed to hold their Ukrainian allies to the April 17 Geneva power sharing agreement designed to defuse the deadly confrontations in Maidan Square.
This said, and even as we concede that Russiaās origins lie in Kievian Rus, and that since the 1750s Crimea has provided Russia with critically important warm water ports, we need to acknowledge Russiaās violation of international law and what the U.N. Commissioner for Human Rights termed the āalarming deteriorationā of human rights in eastern Ukraine.[iii]Ā The annexation of Crimea violated the Budapest Memorandum of 1994 signed by Russia, the United States, Britain, China and France, which committed the powers to ārespect the independence, sovereignty and existing borders of Ukraine.ā It also required that they ārefrain from the threat of use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of Ukraine. ā[iv]
While their fears are over blown, given Russiaās Eastern European imperialism in the decades following World War II,Ā the over reaction of many in eastern Europe is understandable.
IN CRISIS LIES OPPORTUNITY – NATOāS CONTINUING
Naomi Kleinās āshock doctrineā reminds us that in crisis there is opportunity. Several weeks ago the realpolitik STRATFOR reported that āAs a confrontation with Russia continues to build, the United States feels compelled to reevaluate, reshape and reinforce its web of alliances. From the Baltic Sea to the Carpathians, Washington is already stepping up its involvement along Russiaās periphery.ā SRATFOR continued, āAt the same time, we are starting to see the southern arc of the U.S. alliance form, beginning with Iran, reaching up to the Caucasus through Azerbaijan and then swinging westward to Turkey.ā[v]
This week, in addition to providing economic and lethal military equipment to the government in Kiev, President Obama announced the $5 billion European Reassurance Initiative, the increase of U.S. military deployments in Eastern Europe, the Black and Baltic Seas and military exercises across the region, and the coming review of U.S. military deployments across Europe.Ā Two weeks earlier, Vice President Bidenās tour in Central Europe was designed to reassure U.S. allies and to confirm the U.S. and NATO movement east. Biden announced that the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush would remain in the Mediterranean and a Cold War-like tripwire, initially a minimum of 300 U.S. ground troops was established in Poland, thus moving NATOās center of gravity eastward from Berlin. The Polish government has asked for more, including two battalions of U.S. forces, and although there are concerns in Washington that such deployments will result in reciprocal increases in Russian military deployments, the U.S. deployments could comea result of President Obamaās reviews. In Bucharest, Biden boasted that he advocated Romaniaās early entry into NATO, underlined Washingtonās āsacred obligationā to Romania – Sacred obligation?Ā — and presided over a joint U.S.-Romanian joint military exercise. And, like President Obama and NATO Secretary General Rasmussen, he reiterated that all NATO allies āmustā fulfill their commitments to raise military spending to 2% of their GDP, even with what for many European countries is an economic depression.
Washingtonās strategy, Biden stressed, is not only about imposing costs on Russia in response to the Ukraine crisis. As Biden said, it is primarily about investing in a revitalized NATO that emerges from this crisis and works toward a successful summit in Walesā¦.including finalizing contingency plans for NATOās āBlack Sea allies.āĀ U.S. leaders have highlighted the āstepped upā¦military presence in the air, land and on the sea of NATOās eastern flank.ā Which includes U.S. warships ā including Aegis destroyers ā being deployed to the Black Sea, threatening Russiaās southern underbelly, U.S. aerial missions over Poland and Romania and the plans to deploy missile defenses in Romania.[vi] And the provative twelve-nation Rapid Trident military exercise in Ukraine and the Saber Strike 2014 NATO exercise in Latvia have been reconfirmed for July.
There is considerably more to NATOās ārevitalization.āĀ On NATOās southeastern flank, Georgian military forces have been trained by the U.S. and NATO for more than a decade. In 2008, along with Ukraine,Ā Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro and Macedonia, Georgia was designated a āNATO aspirantā country.[vii] Despite Georgiaās path to full NATO membership having been blunted by its war with Russia, the U.S. recently agreed to deploy so-called ādefensiveā military systems to Georgia and reiterated its commitment to Georgian sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Nearby, Secretary General Rasmussen has reinforced the Partnership Action Plan with Armenia, and there are rumors of possible NATO base construction in Moldova, whose territorial integrity President Obama has also named as a āsacred commitmentā of the United States.[viii]
In Central Europe, as Polandās defense Minister Siemoniak tells us, Poland will play a leading regional role āunder U.S. patronage.ā U.S. ground forces are being deployed there, and details are being hashed out for āintensified cooperation in air defense, special forces, cyberdefense and other areas.ā[ix] An outstanding question is how permanent these deployments will be.
To the North, U.S. warplanes have returned to Iceland,[x] while NATO has tripled air patrols over the Baltic States and launched the STEADFAST JAVELIN 1 war games in Estonia.[xi]Ā Sweden has all but surrendered its ostensible neutrality, having long provided secret military bases and hosted NATO war games. Swedenās āarmed forces are reported to be more NATO-compatible than are those of many NATO member states.ā[xii]Ā Ā Next door, Finlandās defense minister is pressing his government to join NATO, a redundant step given that Finland is entering āinto an Article 5-style partnership with NATO that obligates the entire 28-nation Alliance to enter the fray if Finland is under threat.ā The partnership will also require Helsinki to join NATO in warfighting whenever NATOās mutual defense clause is activated, say in the case of a Turkish-Syrian war![xiii]
HOW GRAND THE AREA?
Another unanswered question is how NATOās āout of areaā doctrine and partnerships will be impacted by NATOās European revitalization. Many still think of NATO as a European alliance, but in the words of Secretary General Rasmussen, its āMediterranean Dialogā āĀ which includes Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Mauritania, Morocco, and Tunisia, and Libya ā was created to contribute to regional āstability and prosperity.ā Stability and prosperity? NATO has named its targets: āterroristsā and the proliferation of nuclear weapons and their delivery systems.āĀ The counter-productivity of this approach was demonstrated in Libya where, as The Guardian recently reported, āThe dire consequences of the westās intervention are being felt today in Tripoli and across Africa, from Mali to Nigeria.ā[xiv]Ā Elsewhere, the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative ties NATO to oil-saturated monarchies in Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates. NATOās other global partners include Afghanistan, Australia, Iraq, Japan, Pakistan, South Korea, New Zealand and Mongolia.
The truth is that from the beginning NATO was about more than the Soviet Union, and throughout the Cold War both NATO and the Warsaw Pact pursued ideological and imperial goals.Ā As we think about the ways NATO functioned during the Cold War and its expansion over the past two decades, it is worth noting that NATOās Charter states that member nations āwill seek to eliminate conflict in their international economic policies and will encourage economic collaboration between any or all of them.ā
After WWII, having suffered twenty million dead and massive devastation, the Soviet Union posed no immediate threat to Western Europe. With the Red Armyās sacrifices and its primary role in driving Hitlerās armies from Moscow to Berlin, U.S. acceptance of the post-war division of Europe was inevitable if not just. Even George Kennan, the author of the containment doctrine, wrote that in the wakes of the Napoleonic invasion and the two world wars, Moscow understandably insisted on having eastern and central European buffers against possible future invasions from the West.[xv]
In the late 1990s, Zbiginiew Brzezinski, formerly President Carterās National Security Advisor, published a primer describing the operating principles of what he termed the U.S. “imperial project.”[xvi] Geostrategically, he explained, dominance over the Eurasian heartland is the prize required for global mastery. As a distant “island power,” the U.S. Empire needs toeholds on Eurasiaās western, southern and eastern peripheries to project coercive power.
NATO, according to Brzezinski, provides the means to ensure “the United States [as] a key participant even in inter-European affairs.” European allies, in his view, are “vassal states” The reward that allied elites receive for providing hundreds of military bases and installations, diplomatic support, co-production of weapons systems, intelligence sharing, and so on is a slice of imperial privilege. And, not incidentally, NATO and U.S. troop deployments have served to cap German military power and influence.
As the Afghan and Libyan Wars illustrate, NATO reduces the U.S. monetary costs and the U.S. casualties of Washingtonās wars. It provides political and diplomatic cover for imperial aggression, while allied partners gain privileged access to development and reconstruction contracts, oil, and relatively low cost guarantees for their military security. Of course, neither the Afghanistan or Iraq Wars nor the Libyan intervention played out as planned. Iran proved to be the big winner in Iraq. China may end up with the lionās share of Afghan resources. And, Libya is anything but secure for European and U.S. energy companies.
Joseph Nye, President Clintonās Assistant Secretary of Defense, provided a complementary lens for understanding these dynamics: “Markets and economic power rest on political frameworks, and American military power provides that framework.”[xvii] Thomas Friedman put it still more bluntly, “The hidden hand of the market will never work without a hidden fist — McDonald’s cannot flourish without McDonnell Douglas, the builder of the F-15. And the hidden fist that keeps the world safe for Silicon Valley’s technologies is called the United States Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps.”[xviii]
Today in Ukraine, we are paying for the Clinton Administrationās arrogance in dealing with Russia as a defeated nation. Rather than retiring NATO after the Soviet implosion, the Alliance was re-purposed, transformed into a global alliance. Violating the Elder Bushās 1990 pledge not to expand NATO a centimeter closer to Moscow in exchange for the Kremlinās acceptance of German reunification on Western terms, NATO was expanded to Russiaās borders. That expansion was also directed against Washingtonās Western European allies, opening the way for the Bush-Cheney, now Obama, divide and rule diplomacy, that has played “New Europe” (in the east) against “Old Europe” (in the west).
NATOās 1999 war on Serbia was a major turning point. Promoted as a “humanitarian” intervention, the war, which brought corrupt elite to power in Kosovo, sought āenlargement of the worldās free community of market democraciesā by reducing Russian influence.[xix] More importantly, as Foreign Affairs reported, the U.S. and NATO “with little discussion and less fanfare … effectively abandoned the old U.N. Charter rules that strictly limit international intervention in local conflictsā¦in favor of a vague new system that is much more tolerant of military intervention but has few hard and fast rules.”[xx]
Prior to the Ukraine crisis, the Pentagonās strategic guidance[xxi] tasked NATO with ensuring control of mineral resources and trade while reinforcing the encirclement of China as well as Russia.[xxii]Ā Toward this end, and to reinforce its war against Al Qaeda, NATO adopted “out of area operations” doctrines, making what Secretary Kerry termed āexpeditionary missionsā in Africa, the Middle East, and beyond the allianceās primary purpose.[xxiii] These commitments were institutionalized with the Afghan war; the New Strategic Doctrine adopted in 2011;Ā and the Libyan intervention which resulted in what the U.S. State Department now terms āa terrorist safe haven.ā
Essential to these āout of areaā operations, and possibly to NATOās future in Europe, have been the Obama kill lists and the U.S. and NATOās extra-judicial drone assassinations. Many of these have claimed civilian lives, as well as those of targeted āterroristsā in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The U.S. has gone it alone in Yemen and Mindanao.Ā Fifteen NATO nations now participate in the Alliance Ground Surveillance (AGS) drone system, which is slated to cost 2.2 billion Euros and is being financed by all NATO member nations.Ā AGS is to be operated from NATOās U.S. base in Sigonella, Italy, with NATOās Supreme Allied Commander Europe to oversee NATOās Global Hawk killer drones out of the Ramstein Air Base in Germany once they are deployed in 2016.[xxiv]
Indeed, the current negotiations to create a U.S.-E.U. Free Trade Agreement should be seen as another dimension of the campaign to maintain and expand the Grand Area. The Obama Administration has sought to create a Greater West, combining the economic resources, technologies and coercive power needed to leverage China and to remain dominant through the 21st century, even as the U.S. is in decline. Obamaās early, failed, efforts to āresetā relations with Moscow were a part of this strategy. Washingtonās aggressive policies, now including sanctions against Moscowās elite, short circuited the strategy, undermined NATOās āpartnershipā with Russia and the vision of a common European house. Instead, Putin has opted for his own Pivot to Asia, establishing strategic economic, diplomatic and military ties with China.
NATO AS A NUCLEAR ALLIANCE
The Ukraine crisis reminded us that NATO is a nuclear alliance, and that the dangers of a catastrophic nuclear exchange did not disappear with the end of the Cold War. Despite calls in recent years for the withdrawal of U.S. tactical nuclear weapons from Europe, we are again hearing that āIn light of the new status quo arising out of the Ukraine crisis, NATO will not be able to leave things at conventional armament. Credible determent will involve nuclear weaponsā¦ā[xxv]Ā This, of course, will only reinforce Russian reliance on its nuclear arsenal. Together the two great powers are returning fear to Europe and to the rest of the world.
You may have read about scandals in the U.S. Nuclear Command: officers sleeping at the controls of omnicidal weapons, cheating on tests, and redeploying the weapons in dangerous and unauthorized ways. Daniel Ellsberg, a senior nuclear war planner for Presidents Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon, says that these shouldnāt be our concern today.[xxvi] Instead, he is certain that U.S. and Russian nuclear forces have been on high alert during the Ukraine crisis. While the intensity of the Ukraine crisis may be abating, given the history of nuclear miscalculations and accidents we should again be working for the elimination of nuclear dangers as if our lives depended on it, which they do! Nuclear war may be more likely today that it was through much of the Cold War.
Ignorant of the history threats and preparations to initiate nuclear attacks during international crisis and wars, most US people believe that the nationās nuclear arsenal is designed primarily for deterrence. In fact, the Pentagon has been clear, stating that deterrence “has never been our doctrine.”[xxvii]
A RAND history of NATO’s nuclear doctrines tell us that NATO’s inability to fulfill a 1954 agreement to match the Soviet Union’s conventional military deployments played a major role in the development of Eisenhower’s “massive retaliation” doctrine. To “deter” possible “Soviet aggression,” NATO’s conventional forces were to serve as “trip wires” to trigger Washington’s “nuclear sword.”[xxviii]
Then, as now with the so-called modernization of B-61 nuclear warheads, the challenge for U.S. strategists was to prevent Western Europe’s “decoupling” from the United States, losing the U.S. western toehold in Eurasia. To prevent Europe from going its own way, the Nuclear Planning Group was created.
Throughout this period, the U.S./NATO nuclear arsenal had purposes other than classical deterrence. As President Carter’s Secretary of War Harold Brown testified, with nuclear weapons as the core of U.S. security systems, its conventional forces became “meaningful instruments of military and political power.” Noam Chomsky explained that this meant that “we have succeeded in sufficiently intimidating anyone who might help protect people who we are determined to attack.”[xxix]
US nuclear weapons in Europe were essential to US preparations for and threats to initiate nuclear war, not only during the Berlin crises of 1948 and ā61, but as the U.S. reinforced its hegemony over the oil-rich Middle East and beyond. Such threats and/or preparations were made during the Suez Crisis in 1956; the Marine incursion into Lebanon and revolution in Iraq in 1958; the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, in which the U.S. threatened human existence in order to enforce the principle that the U.S. could deploy nuclear weapons ā even obsolete nuclear weapons ā in Turkey along the Soviet Union’s periphery, but that Moscow could not do likewise in Cuba. And we shouldnāt forget the nuclear threats made during the 1967 Middle East War and the Iraq wars of 1991 and 2003. As we meet, the “all optionsā nuclear threat against Iran that began with Bush and Cheney, remains āon the table.ā
Further afield, US nuclear forces based in Europe were placed on the highest level of nuclear alert during President Nixon’s 1969 “madman” threats to intimidate Vietnam, and had any of the nine nuclear threats made against North Korea, or one of the four against China escalated to general nuclear war, weapons based in Europe would not have remained in their bunkers.
Throughout this sorry history, preventing European “vassal states” from decoupling has been a constant. Before the Ukraine crisis a growing number of European political leaders called for the withdrawal of all U.S. “tactical” nuclear weapons based in Europe and even for the beginning of the āgood faithā negotiations to completely eliminate the worldās nuclear arsenals, as promised in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Despite President Obamaās stated commitment to work for a nuclear weapons free world, U.S. leaders have repeatedly stressed the importance of maintaining the worldās most powerful nuclear arsenal and urged NATO “Alliance cohesion.”
In 2011, then Secretary of State Clinton (possibly the next U.S. president) insisted that “as long as nuclear weapons exist, we, the United States, will maintain a[n] ⦠effective nuclear arsenal ⦠And we will continue to guarantee the security of our NATO allies.” Nodding in her wake and citing the dangers of rogue states and terrorists, NATO Secretary General Rasmussen pressed that “the alliance continues to need a credible nuclear deterrent ā¦.”[xxx]Ā But, who really believes that nuclear threats deter non-state terrorists or can reasonably deny that the threats encourage non-nuclear states to emulate NATO by building deterrent nuclear arsenals of their own?
Thus the NATO summit in Portugal adopted the āexpertsāā recommendations that “NATO should continue to maintain secure and reliable nuclear forces, with widely shared responsibility for deployment and operational support ⦠Any change in this policy, including the geographic distribution of NATO nuclear deployments in Europe, should be made ⦠by the Alliance as a wholeā¦ā and that “Broad participation of the non-nuclear Allies is an essential sign of transatlantic solidarity and risk sharing.”[xxxi]
CONCLUSION
What then follows for those of us committed to preventing war and to building a more peaceful and just world?
Most immediately, we need to do all that we can to demand that the killing in Ukraine stop and to press for negotiations that can put Ukraine on a more peaceful path ā which would likely include Ukraine becoming a formally neutral nation with considerable autonomy for its different regions, and economic ties to both Russia and the West.
It is long past time to learn the lessons of World Wars I & !! and of global warming which, more gradually than nuclear weapons, threatens the human and other species.Ā The commitment to unending economic growth is killing the planet, and the competition for resources, markets and financial wealth is the driving force of military competition, arms races, and ultimately murderous war. There are profound connections between our struggles for peace and justice and to slow and reverse climate change.
One critically important step along this way to prevent war and exploitation, to secure the financial resources needed to create green jobs, to build sustainable green infrastructures, and to preserve essential social services would be to retire NATO.Ā The Cold War was ended on the basis of the pursuit of Common Security, and this can again serve as our paradigm for peace.
Finally, as Professor Zia Mian recently reminded us, growing out of the excruciating lessons of the First World War, the worldās peace forces won a signal achievement: the Kellogg-Briand Treaty which outlawed war. The Treaty didnāt hold because citizens didnāt demand ā in all the ways that we can ā that it be honored and implemented.Ā If we are to ensure peace, security, environmental sustainability and lives lived with dignity for this and future generations we must live with the commitment of being āneither victims nor executioners.
June 4, 2014
Dr. Joseph Gerson is Director of Programs and Director of the Peace and Economic Security Program for the American Friend Service Committeeās Northeast Region. He serves on the Board of the International Peace Bureau and the Steering Committee of No to NATO/No to War. His most recent book is Empire and the Bomb: How the US Uses Nuclear Weapons to Dominate the World.
[i] Bernd Riegert. āNATO needs to rethink itsā strategyā, Deutsche Welle,Ā http://www.dw.de/opinion-nato-needs-to-rethink-its-strategy/a-17614273/Ā [1]Ā Steven Erlanger. āA Mere Blip in the Post-Cold War Order, or an Allianceās Raison dāEtre?ā, New York Times, May 27, 2014.
[ii] John Kerry.Ā Ā Ā Kerry on Russia: āYou just donātā invade another country āon a completely trumped up pretextā, Salon.com,Ā http://www.salon.com/2014/03/02/kerry_on_russia_you_just_dont_invade_ano…Ā [2]
[iii] Alec Luhn. āYour future lies with Russia, Putin tells Crimeaās Tatarsā, Guardian Weekly, May 23, 2014.
[iv] Jeffrey. āUkraine and the 1994 Budapest Memorandumā,Ā http://armscontrolwonk.comĀ [3], 29 April, 2014.
[v] Geooplitical Diary. āRebuilding the U.S. Alliance Structureā, May 14, 2014,Ā http://www.stratfor.com/sample/geopolitical-diary/rebuilding-us-alliance…Ā [4]
[vi] Richard Rozoff. āRomania: Vice President Biden Says NATO War Clause āSacred Obligation For All Timeā, Stop NATO posting, May 20, 2014.
[vii] Richard Rozoff. āGeorgia: NATO Grooms New Member in The South Caucasusā, May 27 e-mail posting.
[viii] See Stop NATO Posts by Richard Rozoff: āNATO To Consider Military Deployments I Georgia, Itar-Tass, May 1, 2014;Ā Ā āSouth Caucasus: NATO Accelerates Integration of Armeniaā, Public Radio of Armenia, May 20, 2014; āNATO, U>S> Tighten Grip on Georgiaā, Trend News Agency, November 29, 2012; āNATOās Plans for Moldova May Trigger Another Warā, Pravda.Ru, October 19, 2012
[ix] Fred Hiatt. āU.S. ground troops going to Poland, defense minister saysā, Washington PostāNATO, April 18, 2014
[x] Richard Rozoff, Stop NATO NATO Post, āIceland: U.S. Warplanes Take Over NATO Patrol,āĀ May 14, 2014
[xi] The Baltic Course. āNATO to triple air patrol over Baltic States from Mayā, April 10, 2014; Richard Rozoff, Stop NATO Post, āNATO Launches 6,000-Troop War Games in Estoniaā, May 16, 2014
[xiii] Richard Rozoff, Stop NATO Posts: āSweden: NATOās Unofficial 29th Memberā, December 6, 2012; āNATO, U.S. Seek to Consolidate Western Military Blockade of Russia in Finlandā, May 19, 2014
[xiv] Fough Rasmussen. āCommon Solutions to Common Problems: Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the 11th Herzilya Conference in Herzilya, Israelā, 09, February, 2011,http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/news_70516.htm;Ā Ā [5]Ā Seumas Milne. āThe dire consequences of the westās intervention [in Libya] are being felt today in Tripoli and across Africa, from Mali to Nigeriaā, The Guardian, May 22, 2014
[xv] George Kennan. American Diplomacy, 1900 ā 1950, Mentor Books, New York: 1951.
[xvi] Zbigniew Brzezinski. The Grand Chessboard, Basic Books, New York: 1997.
[xvii] Joseph S. Nye, Jr. “The Right Way to Trim”, New York Times, August 4, 2011.
[xviii] Thomas Friedman. “A Manifest for the Fast World”, New York Times Magazine, March 28, 1999.
[xix] Andrew Gavin Marshall. āThe West Marches East: The US-NATO Strategy to Isolate Russiaā, Truthout, 25 April, 2014,Ā http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/23316-the-west-marches-east-the-us-na…Ā [6]
[xx] Michael J. Glennon, op. cit.
[xxi] John Pilger. A World War is Beckoningā, Counterpunch,Ā http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/05/14/a-world-war-is-beckoningĀ [7]
[xxii] Sustaining U.S. Global Leadership: Priorities for 21st Century Defense, January, 2012.Ā http://www.defense.gov/news/Defense_Strategic_Guidance.pdfĀ [8]
[xxiii] John Kerry. āRemarks at the Atlantic councilās āToward a Europe Whole and Freeā Conferenceā, April 29, 2014,Ā http://www.state.gov/secretary/remarks/2014/04/225380.htmĀ [9]
[xxiv] Nigel Chamberlain, āNATO Drones: the āgame changersā NATO Watch, Sept. 26, 2013.
[xxv] Bern Riegert. Op Cit.
[xxvi] Daniel Ellsberg, talk in Cambridge, Massachusetts, May 13, 2014
[xxvii] Department of Defense. Doctrine for Joint Nuclear Operations, Joint Publication 3-12, 15 March, 2005
[xxviii] J. Michael Legge. Theater Nuclear Weapons and the NATO Strategy of Flexible Response. Rand, Santa Monica, Ca. April, 1983.
[xxix] Joseph Gerson, Op Cit. p. 31
[xxx] Hillary Clinton. Secretary Clinton at Tallinn NATO Ministerialā, April 23, 2010.
[xxxi] āNATO 2020: assured security; dynamic engagementā, May 17, 2010,Ā http://www.nato.int/strategic-concept/strategic-concept-report.htmlĀ [10]
Links:
[1] http://www.dw.de/opinion-nato-needs-to-rethink-its-strategy/a-17614273/
[2] http://www.salon.com/2014/03/02/kerry_on_russia_you_just_dont_invade_another_country_on_a_completely_trumped_up_pretext/
[3] http://armscontrolwonk.com
[4] http://www.stratfor.com/sample/geopolitical-diary/rebuilding-us-alliance-structure
[5] http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/news_70516.htm;
[6] http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/23316-the-west-marches-east-the-us-nato-strategy-to-isolate-russia
[7] http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/05/14/a-world-war-is-beckoning
[8] http://www.defense.gov/news/Defense_Strategic_Guidance.pdf
[9] http://www.state.gov/secretary/remarks/2014/04/225380.htm
[10] http://www.nato.int/strategic-concept/strategic-concept-report.html
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